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Below, are a series
of five short Partnering articles adapted from my recent book, PartnerShift—How
To Profit from the Partnering Trend. Association editors are hereby
given permission to reprint these articles at no charge. Please include
the bio below with each article.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
Article #1 of 5
Total
Organizational Partnering for Your Success
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
Are you tired of adversary business relationships draining
your energy? If so, it's time to consider a new way of conducting
business. In this, and in future articles, my goal is to share with you
the Power of Partnering. Partnering, as I define it, is the process of
two or more entities coming together to create synergistic solutions to
their mutual challenges. To adopt Total Organizational
Partnering as your
management strategy, you'll need to understand the Partnering Pentad
(group of five). To give you a visual, see in your mind a five-leg star
and each of the areas below represent a leg.
1. The Synergistic
Alliance is what many consider Partnering and simply stop here. This is
the leg of your business where you develop external alliances with
others. These could include: purchasing, R&D, manufacturing,
employee sharing, distribution, marketing, advertising and the list
continues.
By sharing your
core strengths with others and theirs with you, both can create an
environment of synergy.
2. Partnering with
your suppliers is essential for companies wanting just-in-time
manufacturing (JIT) and electronic data interchange (EDI). I frequently
here suppliers making this comment about their customers, "They're
talking marriage but acting one night stand." Whether you're a
dealer, distributor, or manufacturer, you had better start developing
long-term relationships.
3. Partnering with
your customers is the leg of outward focus. You must be customer/market
driven rather than product/service driven to understand what your
customers want. Your customers will spend if they feel they're receiving
good value. This is crucial if you are interested in Integrated Supply.
4. Partnering with
your employees, to many businesses is a non-issue, meaning that they
don't. If you want your employees to have Emotional Ownership in the
success of your business, you must create a climate of empowerment for
them. Empowerment means giving authority and encouragement.
Then, employees
will accept the responsibility.
5. You, the Owner
or Executive as the Optimal Partner. This is the final and arguably, the
most important leg. Not from the perspective that all revolves around
you, but rather that you determine your company's culture. The coveted
center of the star you are visualizing is reserved for the relationships
that bind all the legs of the Partnering Pentad.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
Article #2 of 5
The Ten Critical
Qualities in Selecting an Alliance Partner
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
If you think
partnering might be for you, selecting the right alliance partner is
generally the difference between alliance failure and success. Be
certain your alliance partner exhibits most of the following qualities.
- Wants
to win. There is no reason to partner with a looser. A weak
relationship will only bring you down. You and your partner must
have a desire to win, to want to do better, to be useful in creating
a synergistic relationship.
- Know
they are ultimately responsible for their own success. Look for
partners who understand the value of synergistic partnering
relationships. While accountability goes both ways in partnering, in
the end, we are each individually accountable for our own success.
- Is
an active listener. To keep an alliance healthy, active listening is
important. This helps each partner to know what the other needs.
Alertness from both sides equals mutual success.
- Understands
and cares about what drives their partner's businesses. Each partner
must do things that consistently give value to the relationship and
their partner. The only way you can effectively add value to your
partner's business is to know what your partner considers valuable.
- Responds
well to, and acts on feedback. To move forward, leaders must be
willing to accept counsel. None of us know it all. Just think how
special your partnering relationship would be if your partner never
acted on your ideas.
- Flexible,
especially when events or circumstances are not what was expected.
If you, or your partner, don't have the ability to change direction
when the road ahead is washed out, failure is certain.
- Trust
and integrity. Once the fabric of trust is ripped apart, although it
may be repaired, the blemish will always show. You will always have
it in your mind that it is not if, but when, they will do it to you
again.
- Seeks
win-win arrangements and solutions. You and your partner must
believe that you are working toward a bigger pie, not just a bigger
piece of the pie.
- Understands
that partnering is a relationship of interdependence. It's not about
dependence or independence? Visualize your partner and yourself as
partially overlapping circles.
- Great
chemistry. If you like each other, you’ll work hard to overcome
conflict and make your alliance work long-term.
Now grade your
potential partner in each area on a 1 to 10 scale, add it up and now you
have a baseline potential partner grade. By the way, they should do the
same on you. The greater the circles of interest overlap, the greater
the value each sees in the relationship.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
Article #3 of 5
Partnering
Pitfalls, Land Mines & Roadblocks
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
Alliance mortality
rates hover at about half. Be realistic with your expectations of
others. As with a spouse, partnering alliance members don't change with
time. If you suspect core problems at the onset, you probably are
accurate in your assessment. Do not try to build relationships on a
foundation of quick sand. Watch out and try to avoid the downside of
partnering. Let's look at some partnering killers you'll want to avoid:
- Underestimating
the complexity of coordinating and integrating corporate resources,
and overestimating your partner's abilities to achieve the end
result.
- Situations
where a customer is the driving force behind a partnering
arrangement. Be sure to examine each proposal in the context of your
company's overall partnering strategy.
- Not
having access to the employees of your alliance partners. The closer
the planned relationship between the two companies, the greater the
importance of the linkages between them.
- When
a large company partners with a small, the interaction between
companies becomes a challenge. Representatives of the small are
usually top executives, but representatives from the giant must take
a proposal up the chain of command. This policy can become
frustrating for the small company.
- One
partner not completely embracing the principles of partnering at the
top level or even in departments, divisions or regions while the
other does.
- Partners
have different core values like trust and integrity or there are
corporate culture clashes, employee turf protection, and resistance
of some employees to new ideas, these issues can wreak havoc.
- Partners
internal reward structure. In partnering with customers or suppliers
traditional reward for buyers comes with wringing out concessions
from the seller and by showing that their efforts had achieved cost
reductions. On the flip side, sellers usually reward for sales
performance.
- Having
a third party that is not willing to playing ball. All the members
of a partnering agreement will have to "give a little" for
the agreement to work.
- If
a partner receives unfavorable media coverage you are pulled into
the picture. Real or perceived, image and reputation are critical to
a company's success.
- When
sitting down at the partnering table a partner might find the
partnering seat uncomfortable. It could be that your partner has a
different level of emotional and physical comfort, or sometimes it
is simply a change in corporate strategy or a restructuring which
leads away from a partner's product and/or technology causing the
partners distress.
- After
making a partnering commitment, a partner may have a hidden agenda
or decide they don't like or want to follow through with that which
they committed, or does not have the capability to do what is
necessary.
- Contracts
with an overseas market, for instance, often take a long time to
finalize. By the time you get going, in the technology industries,
your competition may have already started.
- There
can be difficulty in communicating across various time zones.
Solving problems quickly when your partnering factory is located
halfway around the world is hard enough when you speak the same
language. Add the increased difficulty of language barriers, and
major challenges can emanate from the alliance.
- The
disloyalty that can occur when you try to partner with a potential
or current customer and have them renege on the promise of
purchasing from you after you have delivered complementary or
introductory training.
- When
unequal dependence in a relationship occurs, the partner with the
least dependence could be less likely to compromise and expend
energy into the relationship.
- Complacency
is an insidious relationship-killer. Continuously ask questions in a
way that encourages partners to relate problems and shortcomings.
Ask, "What have we not done lately?"
- Meanings
assigned to words by different cultures can cause serious problems.
Does quick delivery mean today, this week, this month or this year?
- Unrealistic
expectations of any partner's capabilities these areas include:
technology, research, production skills, marketing might, and
financial backing.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
Article #4 of 5
Shall We Start
The Partnering Process?
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
Both external and
internal Partnering are necessary in developing a complete management
strategy. I call this Total Organizational Partnering. The Partnering
Pentad (alliances, suppliers, customers, employees, and management) is
the conduit, and will assist you to accomplish your partnering goals.
Follow these steps to successful partnering.
Step 1: Monitor.
Study your
business, observe, and identify areas for improvement. Also, take
inventory of core strengths that might be valuable to a potential
alliance partner. Specifically, define what it is that you want and help
others to define what they want and help them to achieve it as quickly
as possible. Study other industries that have embraced partnering along
with the individual companies that have been successful with partnering.
Study what worked and what did not.
Step 2: Educate.
Learn about
companies you might consider for partnering arrangements. Look for
arrangements that create a win-win result for all who participate. Ask
yourself and your management team these questions: What are their
strengths and weaknesses? What effect would they have on our business
and vice versa? Be sure that the company cultures are complementary and
that the people who will be in charge of the relationship can get along.
Step 3: Select.
This is the
critical step. All your future efforts will be built on your selection.
Search for the strongest alliance members for your partnering
foundation. Customer-oriented culture is critical to the success of the
partnering alliance. The greater the sophistication of a company and its
officers, the more likely a company will enter into partnering.
Keep this in mind when making your selection. Embrace long-term
thinking. Partnering is rarely a quick fix, but a sound long-term
business strategy. Target companies, large or small, that can aid you in
rapidly and efficiently, reaching the goals of research, technology,
production and marketing.
Step 4: Organize.
Now you're to the
point of identifying, understanding, and putting together the
possibilities for your alliance. Work with internal and external
personnel to develop not only your partnering structure, but also your
road map. Success in blending of cultures is pivotal. Take great pains
to insure this achievement. Access is crucial! Create a convenient
communication system for all partners, especially decision makers. Plan
procedures to keep relationships between key people of partnering
companies open and constantly alive.
Look into the
future, plan for the long-term relationship and encourage strategies
that will sustain the relationship through to its conclusion. Phasing in
the partnering relationship could be a preferred strategy, as this
method will allow partners to have a "get acquainted" time.
This can assist in the identification of reaching milestones,
successfully or identify the need to reassess before moving on to a
higher level in the relationship.
Step 5: Charter.
This is the
agreement, whether it is a handshake or actual contract. Even so, I
strongly urge all partnering alliances to put their agreements on paper.
Having each alliance member's commitment to the other on paper will
smooth a path through the potholes of partnering. Also, your charter
should explain conflict resolution. Being ready for conflict will make
resolution more timely and amiably.
Develop a clear
agreement on what your goals are and make sure they are measurable. Have
a formal mechanism for alliance members to identify the goals,
milestones, and turning points crucial to the success of the
relationship. Devise some form of evaluation that will measure how well
plans have been implemented. Additionally, consider having the
partnering agreement include forms of dispute resolution for more formal
arrangements, along with exit strategies as partnering safety valves.
Step 6: Post
Agreement.
Regularly review
your partnering efforts through value updates. Discuss the value you
receive, the value you believe your partner receives and vice versa from
the relationship. This will help in determining if relationships should
be upgraded, maintained, or downgraded. Discuss opportunities for
improvement and ways to enhance performance.
What you really
want to build is Outrageously Successful Relationships (OSRs) in all
five Partnering Pentad areas. Again, this is Total Organizational
Partnering. The benefits generally outweigh the pitfalls if you're
careful. The ability to successfully adopt the partnering paradigm
philosophy is the first challenge of partnering. And, Partnering is only
for the mature.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
Article #5 of 5
The Necessary
Core Values To Build Outrageously Successful Relationships (OSRs)
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
Outrageously Successful Relationships (OSRs) in business are
based on the desire to create synergy between multiple entities. Five
Partnering Core Values support the foundation of such relationships. To
build OSRs, integrate the following five core values into your paradigm
of operation and you will experience wizardry for yourself and others!
1. Trust. This is
having confidence, reliance or resting of the mind on the integrity,
veracity, justice, friendship, or other sound principle of another
person or thing. It's also the glue that binds a relationship. For
successful business relationships, trust is necessary to move from
inertia to action. Trust is that wonderful, mystical and cherished
virtue hoped for and shared among practitioners of what I call the
Partnering Paradigm.
In trust, you're
continually putting yourself at risk. It's the process of taking risks
necessary in building relationships. At times you are certain to be
disappointed, but hopefully these disappointments will be few, compared
to the availability of beneficial experiences.
2. Tolerance &
Understanding. It's unfortunate, but the words tolerance and
understanding, have become a cliché that too easily rolls off the
tongue in business conversations. For business OSRs to work, this core
value must be cherished and practiced by all. When you can accept the
value of an idea rather than be concerned by whose inspiration it was
conceived, you would truly exhibit tolerance and understanding.
3. Cooperation
& Growth. In my relationship seminars, I lead an exercise where
several people are standing in a circle, facing center, blindfolded, and
holding a rope. Then I tell them to make a square. I use this exercise
to show how much more is possible when participants work together rather
than separately. This is only possible when they adopt an attitude of
cooperation. During the rope exercise, it is always interesting who
shows up as the leader to make the square. It's not always the person
who signs the paychecks. Growth is the natural outcropping of this
exercise because participants see each other in a new light.
4. Caring &
Commitment. Caring about a business relationship is essential in making
a commitment to its success. This is what will usually smooth out the
potholes on the road to OSRs. It's this element that allows others to
voice their opinion and remain safe from criticism. Additionally, there
is also the commitment that is necessary to the function of leadership,
and at times, the ability to follow when another is currently leading.
Another important
aspect of caring is to welcome and accept responsibility. Rather than
saying, "You really should . . ." in OSR building it would be
better to say, "This is what I think we need to do." Then say,
"If it is ok with you, I'll take care of it." In many
businesses, idea people are a-dime a-dozen, but those who can implement
are immeasurably valuable.
5. Synergy &
Mutuality. OSR building must be an institution of trust, tolerance,
understanding,
cooperation, growth, caring, and commitment. This results in synergy and
mutuality, similar to that of a successful marriage. Business OSRs have
much in common with the institution of marriage. Both require all of the
above, and both offer benefits that outdistance the possibilities
available singularly. Build your OSRs and enjoy the benefits.
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Adapted from PartnerShift-How
to Profit from the Partnering Trend by Ed Rigsbee, CSP, published by John
Wiley & Sons, New York, October 2000. All of Rigsbee’s books are available from
Amazon.com.
Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
author of PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances and The
Art of Partnering and has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit. Ed travels internationally to deliver strategic alliance keynotes
and workshops. He can be reached at
800-839-1520, ed@rigsbee.com or visit www.rigsbee.com.
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