
Keeping
Your Alliance Alive & Healthy
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
(892 words)
If every fool wore a crown, we should all be kings.
-Welsh
Proverb
Let the sword decide after stratagem has failed.
-Arabic
Proverb
I have heard it said that in an
ideal marriage one partner is blind and the other deaf. There may be some
wisdom in this old saying. To keep your strategic alliance alive and healthy,
each must overlook some of their partner’s misgivings. This chapter, if you
heed the advice, will help you to avoid many of the relationship challenges.
It will help you keep your alliance relationships on the smooth road to
success.
Regardless of how you view the
world, (the glass is half-full or
half-empty), if you enter into a strategic alliance relationship you must
focus on survival of the alliance in good times as well as bad. It can be
mutually expensive, in costs, time and emotions to break up an alliance. Your
goal is to build Outrageously
Successful Relationships (OSRs) with your alliance partners. If you build relationships that are so successful, neither
would ever consider breaking them up.
Your Total Value Package (TVP) that you offer your partner, and your
partner offers you, is crucial to the alliance success. When you understand
what, your partner needs, and then give it to them, you in return can also ask
for extra value. The best way to
do this is through regular Relationship
Value Updates (RVUs). Quarterly
RVUs are preferred, but semiannually are acceptable if you are serious about
building OSRs.
The idea here is to limit the
negative conversations you, or your partner, have about one another when
expectations are not met. Unfortunately, unrealistic expectations are common
in alliance relationships. Think for just a minute, would you, about the worst
boss you’ve ever had. See him or her having one of their famous temper
tantrums. You know what I’m talking about, when their face turned bright red
and the veins in their neck popped out. See them in your mind’s eye. Now!
Here’s the question, is there a chance that boss could have been a decent
human being? Your answer, is the conversation you are having with yourself
about them. Who knows? Maybe they
were just taught old X Theory management (where one treats their employees
like mindless idiots) when they were young and it stayed with them. Your
alliance partner and their organization have regular conversations with
themselves about you and your organization. You can limit the damage and take
care of things early with RVUs.
The most effective way to
administer RVUs is for you, and your partner, to (hopefully quarterly)
complete the RVU and send it to the other. For alliances of larger
organizations and/or with several departments involved, each department should
do the same. This will help both sides to understand the conversations that
their partners are having with themselves about them. Additionally, when you
realize that some of the things you are doing for your partner create
high-level value for them and it costs you little, you may be inclined to do
more of that. Conversely, when you realize that some of the things you are
doing for your partner creates little value for them and costs you a bundle,
you’ll quickly cut back in that area.
Relationship Value Update (short form)
1. The value I believe my company has received from our
strategic alliance:
2. The value I believe you have received from our strategic
alliance:
3. Improvement action steps we plan to take to improve our
performance in our alliance relationship.
4. Improvement action steps we would like to see you take to
improve our alliance relationship.
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Relationship
Value Update (long
form)
1.
The value I believe my company has received from our strategic alliance:
a. Have helped my company’s
core competency.
b. Have created valuable
synergies for my company.
c. Have helped us reduce costs.
d. Have helped us in reducing
duplication of effort.
e. Innovations discovered with
your help.
f. New markets you have helped
us to access.
g. Competitive situations (both
established and emerging competitors) you have helped us to overcome.
h. Other valuable benefits we
have received.
2. The value I believe you have received from our strategic
alliance:
a. How we have helped your
company’s core competency.
b. How we have created valuable
synergies for your company.
c. How we have helped you reduce
your costs.