How You Can Save Your Company $2,000,000 in Just 5 Minutes
In my last article, I wrote about kaizen, a Japanese business philosophy of constant improvement. I'd like to follow up on that discussion with a brief demonstration of how even seemingly small changes can have a huge effect on your business.
How can you save your company $2,000,000 in just 5 minutes? Follow along to see how.
It takes my laptop 14 minutes to startup. That's from the moment I press the power button to the time I am able to launch my first email in Outlook. Even if you subtract for XP itself, that's a long time. I am not your typical user: I defrag my machine often, explicitly shut off non-essential services, map only one network drive, have wifi explicitly disabled, and put nothing in my startup folder except for the aforementioned Outlook. Oh, and I've done most of the recommended tweaks to get XP to boot faster. So where does the rest of the time come from? All the stuff my company does to make sure my laptop is secure, has its updates, and whatever else is in the standard image.
Don't get me wrong, this is important stuff and I support it whole-heartedly. But consider this, what if a VP walked over to the IT department and said: “Guys, find a way to shave 5 minutes off the system boot times while keeping the systems secure and I’ll pay you a $5000 bonus.” Watch how fast those minutes disappear.
14 minutes. Big whoop, right? Chillax, press start, go grab a cup of coffee, and when you come back you're ready to go. Okay, smart guy, what if I'm in the middle of a critical 30-minute meeting with the CFO and my laptop requires a restart? 'Cause that never happens on Windows, right? So there goes half my meeting there.
What would happen if IT just shaved off 5 of those minutes?
Embed the Kaizen Calculator on your site by copying the code below:
That's what 5 minutes means. Backup for a second, Serge, that’s great for large companies but what about smaller companies? Okay, take a 25-person outfit, with an average of $15/hr:
- Cancel one unnecessary 30-minute meeting each month ($2250)
- If half are parents who usually leave 15 minutes early to pick up their kids, provide onsite daycare (still at the employees' expense) ($11250)
- Save 2 minutes by reducing just 5 emails ($3000)
- Provide computers that boot just 1 minute faster ($1500)
That's $18000 right there.
Yes, yes, it's a bit of a leap to say that this saves the company in real terms because you won't actually see that in the bottom line. Okay, so quantify for me how much work-related stress does cost the company. What are the recruitment and training costs of retaining and having to re-hire talent due to attrition? What is the value of being recognized as one of the best companies to work for? Measure for me the lost opportunity costs of all those minutes added up when said employees could be working on other things in a state of peace and tranquility.
That is the point of kaizen. A relatively simple idea of reducing the amount of time it takes for a computer to restart can create a culture capable of constant improvement. This is the type of environment that nurtures employees who will think of that huge cost savings or that next multi-million dollar revenue stream.
Have time-saving ideas for your company? Share in the comments section below. Play around with the Kaizen Calculator to see how much your company could be saving.
Oh, and you probably could have read this article 8 times in the time it took me to restart my laptop.
Kaizen, The Japanese Art of Continuous Improvement
It seems I've been thinking a lot lately about my time in Japan. Usually it comes about when I'm thinking about technology or gadgets. But lately, I've been reflecting a bit more on Japanese culture and specifically the culture of the workplace.
In the early 1980s, Japanese business was the dominant global player, easily trouncing the US and its western brethren on profits and efficiency. The seemingly impossible advances and pace set by the Japanese automotive industry and electronics manufacturers became the blueprint that many companies tried desperately to duplicate.
In fact, many modern practices in business find their roots during this period of business growth and change. During our current period of economic difficulty, business uncertainty, and low employee morale, I've been thinking about one practice in particular:
kaizen (改善) - Japanese for improvement; comes from the words kai, meaning to change or break and zen, meaning good or better Kaizen is a system of employee-driven suggestions to improve every aspect of the business. But even this definition falls short. Kaizen is a state of mind, it is ingrained in Japanese business culture. It asserts that all employees are responsible for the quality and profitability of a company. Masaaki Imai is known as the father of Continuous Improvement (CI) in the workplace and recognized as the inventor of kaizen. This practice of employee suggestions dates back much further though, when in 1721 the shogun Yoshimuni Tokugawa issued the following proclamation: "Make your idea known. Rewards are given for those that are accepted."
Focus on the word "accepted." In the West, we tend to reward ideas that are "implemented." In Japan, merely making a suggestion is met with a reward, albeit a very small financial one (something like $5 per idea). A large reason why suggestion programs tend to fail or are ineffective is this emphasis only on ideas that are implemented. Management has the most significant impact on whether an idea is actually implemented, and yet the individual employee only gets recognized (rewarded) if Management actually does something with the idea. Pretty soon, you train the employee to not bother.
Yes, yes, we can talk about establishing programs that empower the employee to take action, but that will be the subject for another article. I leave it for now with the assertion that such an approach is all well and good, but it has to start from the top, from defining the system, allocating the budget and time, and actively engaging in the program. This is one instance where "delegating" or "empowering" downwards is a bit of a cop out.
The National Association of Suggestion Systems (NASS), now known as the Employee Involvement Association (EIA), reports that the average employee suggestion returns about $7000 to the company in profit or savings. In the US, the implementation rate for employee suggestions is about 35%. In Japan that number is more than 70%. The total savings/earnings for companies and state agencies which have employee suggestion programs is in the billions. That's billions with a "b." Yet only 3% of companies in the US even have a suggestion program. Successful and sustainable ones are a fraction of that.
There are many spectacular stories of employee suggestions--American Airlines bought a Boeing 757 from the $55M in savings its annual IdeAAs in Flight program delivered--but thinking small in this instance has another positive effect...it creates access. From the Managing Director all the way down to the housekeeping and maintenance staff, anyone can submit an idea. A Managing Director may not be bothered with $5, but a janitor will submit tons of ideas if it means it'll pay for lunch. Shoot, I'd submit an idea every single day!
Consider what just a few of the following ideas might save your company:
- switch to mugs instead of disposable coffee cups
- change to long-life lightbulbs
- change printer defaults to double-sided printing
- meeting moratorium Fridays
- onsite car wash (vaccinations, oil change, etc)
- workplace dry cleaning and laundry delivery services
- onsite child daycare
Do any of these ideas directly impact your product or service? Probably not. But ask your COO or CFO if they care about their impact on operating margins (they will). Also consider that these handful of suggestions alone mean employees can focus on their work instead, which does impact your product or service. It also instills a culture that every employee has a chance to make a difference and it encourages creativity, which will translate in the way your employees approach their work.
Estimating the impact of such a program on morale and employee retention is extremely tricky and not likely to convince Management on the value of the program. So let's say such a program retains just one employee. One single employee. I don't think you're asking anyone to make too much of a mental leap in accepting that this sort of program could save one employee. Estimating very conservatively, the cost of interviewing, hiring, and training an employee would easily be $50,000. For $50,000, you could fund 10,000 ideas (at $5 each). If ideas average about $7000 back to the company, that's an additional $70,000. That's already $120,000 right there.
Here's my proposal, start an employee suggestion program at $5 an idea. Reward implemented ideas with an additional 0.5% of the total return back to the originating employee. Don't be greedy, give a half percent back to the employee. You'd rather have 100% of 0? (that's still zero) Or would you rather have 99.5% of the more than $2B which came from employee suggestions last year? (that's still $1.99B).
For more reading on kaizen, check out these presentations:
--- This post was inspired by an article forwarded to me by one of my team members. Thanks for jogging my memory, K.
Proteus Part Three: 3rd Party Content and Services
Be sure to read Proteus Part One and Proteus Part Two. Last time I wrote about the eBay Commerce Engine pushing content and services from the eBay Inc. family. The value of the ecosystem grows further when you start inviting third party apps and services back in.
Here's the beauty...plug any of these apps or services once into The Cloud and EVERY eBay Inc. property plugged in has instant access.
eBay Motors starts offering CarFAX and Experian reports? Now so can Mobile.de, Bilbasen, and Marktplaats Autos (contracts pending, of course). Muze can now provide music catalog content for all eBay Classifieds media categories. UPS pickup and ship services are available for all Sellers no matter what eBay Inc. site you're on.
Don't need it? Don't use it. Simple.
Cloud Services can even help orchestrate long-latency service providers so you don't endanger each platform's SLA requirements. Asynchronous I/O makes The Cloud do all the work so each platform doesn't consume resources waiting for a response from the service provider.
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P.S. Remember that "The Cloud" is my own poorly-chosen name for distributed computing that manages services federation and content syndication. Other low-level infrastructure components can also run in The Cloud so each eBay property can offload that work. Before you uber-Architects flay me for technical imprecision, I'm trying to explain this as simply as possible to my non-techie audience. 
