The Paradox of Success
By Vilis Ozols, MBA, CSP
Published in Sales and Marketing Executives Of Colorado newsletter, Resource,
March 1994. Published in Progressive Rentals Magazine (APRO), 2004. (click
here for information about reprinting these articles)
A study by
Xavier University shows that every single day more than 1,000 new businesses are
started in the U.S., and of those, 930 will eventually fail. A Dun and
Bradstreet report states that only one out of every three men or women who start
a business will still be in business four years later. That same report goes on
to say that a good number of the business owners will never know why their
businesses failed.
One of the biggest obstacles any business must deal with, is the "Paradox of
Success." The "Paradox of Success," ironically enough, is the reason that most
new businesses are started. At the same time it is responsible for anywhere from
20%, to as high as 80% by some accounts, of the business failures we see in
America today.
The "Paradox of Success" is very simply, the point at which your distinctive
competence becomes your greatest liability. The foundation of failure in many
companies lies with a very developed area of expertise. Too often the continuum
of skills needed to succeed in a business endeavor has a high concentration at
one point and an undeveloped range of needed skills outside that area of
distinctive competence.
Thus the label, the "Paradox of Success," emerges. In order to start a business
and to ultimately succeed, you had better be differentiated from the
competition. You must be better at some aspect of doing business than the next
gal or guy. Unfortunately, the benchmark of success (for both new and existing
businesses alike) is not how well you exceed your rival in your selected area of
expertise. It really comes down to how well have you developed your ability to
excel in the other facets of your business, outside of your comfort zone.
Examples of the "Paradox of Success" abound. We've all encountered salespeople
who are great at "getting" the sale, and horrible at following up with service.
Or, companies that are wonderful marketers, identifying a benefit and drawing in
customers by the boatload, who then can't deliver the quality product needed.
Someone with a flair for color, design and creativity may start their own
interior design business, but goes out of business because they don't have the
selling skills necessary. Or, in today's deep discount environment, someone who
can sell and market against the competition, but who's margins are too thin to
survive over the long run.
The first step in overcoming "The paradox" lies in identifying it. Give
yourself, your department, or your company, a "Strengths and Weakness" analysis.
Rank yourself in terms of sales skills, marketing ability, customer service,
business management, finance, production, creativity, speed, efficiency, and any
other category that makes sense. Then take that list and have a trusted
customer, confidante or mentor rate your skills as well. Identify discrepancies
in your assessment. Set up an improvement plan, write it out, assign deadlines
and, most importantly, determine ways to measure if you've attained the goals.
Is it possible that the most visible strength of your business is also its
greatest limiting factor? As with any medical procedure, diagnosis predicates
the treatment. Know what you're good at and get better at the rest! That's how
to combat the "Paradox of Success."
***
Vilis Ozols, MBA, CSP, (www.ozols.com) president of the
Ozols Business Group in Indian Hills, CO, is a motivational business speaker and
leadership consultant. He is the author of 3 books, he's
a former pro beach volleyball player and he has spoken
to businesses in all 50 U.S. states. (800) 353-1030.
|
Information about reprinting Vilis' articles
for your publication's use:
We do encourage you to reprint
these for your own use if you are interested, but we do ask that you follow
these guidelines:
-
Please
e-mail us (or use our internet form)
and we will gladly provide written permission.
-
You will be asked to include
attribution information at the end of the article with Vilis' contact
information.
-
We also request that you forward
us a copy of the final publication with the article.
Thank you for considering these
works for your organization.
Vilis Ozols
|
Return to Articles Main Page
|