![]() |
|
|||||||
| What is on your mind, thinker? Open discussion - inspiration, chit chat, news, politics, economy, suggestions and RSS feeds from Thinkers... |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
|
||||
|
My RSS Feed is a Thinker and Has Just Posted the Following:
Customers Second, Customers First. Customers in the "Marketplace." "Customers" in the Firm Who Serve the Customers in the Marketplace. [Some of you said, in Comments, that I've gone too far in this "customer 2nd" stuff. Probably true—but I still contend that there is a fundamental correctness, which addresses a characteristic imbalance, to Matthew Kelly's, "Our employees are our first customers, and our most important customers"—from The Dream Manager. Let me get personal about "all this ..."] I luuuuuuuv great customer-"end user" feedback! I am competitive to a fault in that regard and a slave to the market—"after all these years." At a higher level of marketplace engagement, I love a hearty business backlog, especially if it's based on repeat business—and I carefully measure it against year-to-date 2007, 2006, 2005, etc. And I love a fee-per-event yield that exceeds last year, the year before, etc. And so on. And on. And yet ... And yet ... in an important way ... I indeed put the customer-"end user" second or third or ... Second or third to what? Simple & crystal clear (to me): To give a high-impact, well-regarded, occasionally life-changing speech "to customers" I first & second & third have to focus all my restless energy on "satisfying" ... myself. I must be ... physically & emotionally & intellectually agitated & excited & desperate beyond measure ... to communicate & connect & compel & grab by the collar & say my piece about a small number of things, often contentious and not "crowd-pleasers," that, at the moment, are literally a matter of personal ... life and death. I crave great "customer feedback"—but in no way, shape, or form am I trying to "satisfy my customer." I am, I repeat, trying instead to satisfy me, my own deep neediness to reach out and grab my customer & connect with my customer over ideas that consume & devour me. Hence ... my "Job One" is purely selfish & internally focused, to be completely captivated by the subject matter at hand. That is, to repeat in slightly different words, Job One is ... self-motivation. Warren Bennis, my primo mentor, in On Becoming a Leader, said, "No leader sets out to be a leader per se, but rather to express him- or herself freely and fully. That is, leaders have no interest in proving themselves, but an abiding interest in expressing themselves." So I'm back to my somewhat disingenuous message: To put the marketplace customer first, I must put the person serving the customer "more first." (Myself, in the case of a speech, the frontline employee for Rosenbluth International's Hal Rosenbluth in days past or for RE/MAX'sDave Linegar—see yesterday's "customer second" PowerPoint re Hal, Dave, et al.) Excitement & self-stimulation first. "Service" second. That's my cause & effect scheme. TrackBack (0) | Posted by Tom Peters | Comments? Click here to read more from and support Tom Peters! and his interests
__________________
David Sandusky like an ad agency, but for people w/ the Strategic Career Plan and Personal Board of Advisors LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | call 303.325.3225 "The greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it" - Michelangelo |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|