Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Starbucks and Toyota: How They Messed Up


There once was a coffee shop where people could come and pay a little more than it cost in other places for a truly great cup of coffee made just the way they liked it by people who really knew how to make it just right (they wore black aprons displaying the title "Coffee Master" and they completed the Coffee Master course, which educates employees in coffee tasting, growing regions, roasting, and purchasing). And they trained their employees to deliver that great coffee with great service, great style and a kind of special attitude. They named the company Starbucks.


And there once was a car company that had a tradition in the company called "kaizen" which meant "continuous improvement". And they built a reputation as a company that made cars that were very well built, with practically zero flaws and which lasted a long time with no problems. Dependable, trustworthy quality was what everyone knew about that company's cars. The company was called Toyota.


But then something happened.


Starbucks decided that they had to be everywhere and outsell everyone and they started to open stores all over the place – hundreds and hundreds of them. A newsletter called the Onion sarcastically wrote that Starbucks just opened a Starbucks inside a Starbucks rest room! And they got spread pretty thin. They hired lots and lots of new counter employees to work at the hundreds of new stores. The new employees were not trained and experienced like the old ones and they did not know how to make that wonderful coffee like you couldn't find anywhere else. And they didn't have that special pride and attitude that the older ones had. The quality and the service dropped off and people quickly figured out that they could get just as good coffee in other places, like Dunkin' Donuts. And sales dropped and hundreds of stores had to close.


Toyota decided to get huge. They greatly increased their manufacturing capacity and dealer network. And they outsold all other car manufacturers. But they forgot what got them there. They got sloppy and serious flaws started to show up in their cars. And they hid those flaws and didn't respond to them promptly. And they got caught. And now everyone knows about the brake, accelerator and steering problems Toyota is having and Toyota's reputation has been destroyed.


What's the moral of all this? It's this:


A company has to decide and understand what its mission is. Is it to be the busiest and most convenient, to have very low or even the lowest price, to give the customer an average or even less than average product and grow like crazy and have the most customers of anyone?


Or it is to focus on delivering superb quality to customers who are seeking exactly that, with wonderful service that is hard or even impossible to find anywhere else and charge what it takes to deliver that time after time, dependably and flawlessly to that smaller base of customers?


Starbucks and Toyota chose to deliver quality and superb service to a group of customers who treasured that but they wanted to grow and grow and grow. So they had to compete with the coffee shops and car manufacturers who cared way less about quality and way more about having their shops and cars on every corner at a medium or low price.


And they found out that you can't have it both ways.


So what's the lesson for Smart Dental Patients? Here it is:


You gotta choose what kind of dental office you want to deliver your care. What kind of environment do you want? Fast, cheap and open 6 days a week? Or personal, thorough, committed to excellence, dedicated to personal attention and delivering superb care by superbly trained people for a fair fee?


You can't have both. Even though you want it.


We know who we are here in Dr. Steve Ross' office. And our patients know why they chose us to create and guard their dental health.


We won’t make the Starbucks-Toyota mistake. We promise.


Sunday, February 7, 2010

Valentine's Day 2010


Sally Field, playing the character of Nora Walker in the TV series "Brothers and Sisters", said that she wanted to feel like she was enough, all by herself, just like she is — enough for the man in her life.

I think there is tremendous wisdom in that thought. How wonderful it would be if we each knew totally that with all our faults, with our failings, regardless of our age, our job or our current health, that the person we love feels the same way about us.

Falling in love is easy. Showing that love, helping the people we love feel like they are special, that they are the most important thing in the world to us ... that’s harder.

People have busy lives. Work, children, keeping the home together, the stress of a schedule packed to the minute, all get in the way of reserving some time just to be together.

We can't look great all the time. We certainly can't compete with the people we see on TV and in movies and magazines. But those people, those images, don't love you. They won't be there when you're down, they don't share your tears — or your triumphs and joys, either. They won't be there for you through the good years and the not so good ones.

Young people sometimes think they will look, act, feel and function the same when they are "old" as they do today. Some adults still think the way they did when they were 20.

But eventually everyone looks in the mirror and sees that time and mileage take a toll on us physically. We might begin to wonder, like Sally Field, if we are enough any more.

I'm one of the lucky ones. I found my soul-mate and after all our years together I still love her dearly. I know I'm very lucky and I'm thankful every single day.

Do something nice for your partner on Valentine's day. You don't have to spend a lot of money, you don't have to buy diamond jewelry that goes out of style, or flowers that die, just do something to make him or her smile.

Let your partner know that he or she is not only enough for you, that he or she is everything to you.

And if love hasn't smiled on you yet, don't give up on it. When it does, and it will, don't be afraid. Let it in. Love is the best, the very best thing in life.

Happy Valentine's Day.