Manage Your Reputation

You have high quality support services and polices, and your employee satisfaction surveys show that your
employees are happy.  Are your customers actually experiencing service that matches your brand promise?  Does
the culture of your employee team match the values of your company?  Are different employee groups delivering
different experiences to your customers?  Do sales and service speak a different language?  

These variations confuse customers.  They will always be adjusting to your company’s different styles, behaviors,
standards of performance, and promises.  They will have difficulty developing a sense of affinity and loyalty with
your company.   

The Service-Profit Chain developed by Heskett, Sasser and Schlesinger (1997) from Harvard Business School
connects profit, customer loyalty, employee satisfaction, and productivity.  The model suggests that
profit and
growth result mostly from customer loyalty, which comes from customer satisfaction
.

Satisfaction is greatly influenced by the value of service provided to customers.
Satisfied, loyal, and productive
employees create value
. Employees become satisfied from high quality support services and policies that enable
employees to deliver results to customers.  

The Service-Profit Chain model offers a vital base to assure that your employees deliver results to customers.  
However, focusing simply on employee support services and policies does not mean employees will delight
customers.  Nor does it assure they deliver on your brand promise.  

You need
a defined employee culture, and reward and recognition system that aligns actions with the brand
promise of your business
.  This alignment will grow the bond of loyalty with your customers, lower the cost of
support, and accelerate operating efficiency and sustained profitability.  

In financial terms, the
value of a brand can be a major part of the value of the company.  The price paid to
acquire businesses is often substantially higher than the appraised value determined from the tangible assets of
the company.  According to a study in 1995, "the average market value of American-based publicly traded
companies was 70% greater than their replacement cost (e.g., their tangible net asset value.)" 1  

Assessing the actual brand value of a B2B services company should
include the customer facing processes.  Are
the various functions and people delivering performance consistent with the brand promise of the company?  
Brand value tied only to market awareness and market share can drive unrealistic prices.  The real capability of
the company to perform to its reputation may not be clear.  Consider also significant variances between the
company and its customers’ expectations for the future.  Discounts should apply to brand value from elements
that fail to deliver effectively.  

In the case of Philip Morris:  "In 1989, Philip Morris paid $12.9 billion for Kraft, six times its net asset value.
According to Philip Morris CEO Hamish Maxwell, his company needed a portfolio of brands that had strong brand
loyalty [i.e., customer relationships] that could be leveraged to enable the tobacco company to diversify [i.e.,
financial relationships], especially in the retail food industry [i.e., trade relationships]."2  Philip Morris paid
billions for a set of relationships.  They expected that those relationships would enable them to conduct business
in entirely new ways in the future.

In addition to the purchase price of a company, the value of the brand and brand equity directly affects
stock price of the company
.   A Cap Gemini Ernst & Young report issued in 2000 said, "…brand power can
account for 5 to 7 percent of the change in a company's stock price." 3  A study of 220 companies identified that
corporate brand image could be measured as follows:

    Advertising spending 30%
    Size of company 23%
    Low dividend 10%
    Earnings volatility 7%
    Stock price growth 8%
    Other factors* 22%

    *(includes marketing events and publicity, industry relationships,  product categories, message quality, etc.)4   

Fifty two percent of the factors influencing the brand image relate to defining and communicating the message
and promise.  Creating a company-wide brand strategy will contribute greatly to the value of the company.  

The well-defined steps to accomplish this can apply to any business.  Measure the results in the improved
performance of every function of the company.  This leads to
improved sustained profitable growth and
continuing growth in stock equity
.  

    1,2  Tom Duncan, Driving Brand Value, pg. 4.
    3     "Name Brand Calculus or Imaginary Numbers?" US Banker, Volume 113, Number 6, Page 26, June 2003.
    4     Ad Value, Leslie Butterfield, ed., Butterworth Heinemann, Oxford, 2003, "How advertising impacts on share price," James Gregory.

Patrick Smyth is a trusted business advisor and mentor.  He improves business performance through effective
change management, leadership, and marketing.  His focus on business outcomes, growth, objective setting,
team building, and communications builds sustainable productivity and growth.
www.innovationhabitude.com
Your True North Business Navigator