Business Optimization

A Simple and Effective Approach for Acheiving Ongoing Business Success

Business & Finance, Business Reference, Business Communication
Cover of the book Business Optimization by Jon Warner, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jon Warner ISBN: 9781483532509
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: July 1, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Jon Warner
ISBN: 9781483532509
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: July 1, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English
Hundreds if not thousands of business books have been written advising businesses on what to concentrate their attention in order to achieve long-term profitability. Suggestions include how best to prioritize focus on any one of a range of business areas including customers, employees, processes, quality, return on investment, etc. Moreover, organizations are often urged to not just focus on functional areas such as marketing, sales, operations, and finance but also to almost obsessively take measurements at every level of the organization for the purpose of more effectively increasing the chances of attaining their goals and targets. These prescriptions for success, some of which are valuable in part, all share one major flaw – they lack a coherent and holistic perspective. That is, the advice tends to pull mainly on only one or, possibly, two of the business levers and ignores other levers in the business that may also need small or large adjustments in order for organizational balance to be maintained. This book aims to break the mold by proposing a simple but powerful model describing the four major levers or realms present in any enterprise and what it means for these to be “optimal” with respect to overall and sustainable organizational health. “Prospects” is the first of the four realms because an organization needs to know where its future sales prospects are coming from. “Processes” are the means by which a business manages its internal operations so as to deliver the product or service it has promised its customers. “People” are the individuals and teams who work in the business, directly and indirectly, on a part- or full-time basis, to appropriately address the prospect, process, and profit realms so that they perform at their best. “Profit,” the final realm, determines whether or not a business not only has enough liquid capital to supply the products or services it sells to its customers but can also earn a profit.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Hundreds if not thousands of business books have been written advising businesses on what to concentrate their attention in order to achieve long-term profitability. Suggestions include how best to prioritize focus on any one of a range of business areas including customers, employees, processes, quality, return on investment, etc. Moreover, organizations are often urged to not just focus on functional areas such as marketing, sales, operations, and finance but also to almost obsessively take measurements at every level of the organization for the purpose of more effectively increasing the chances of attaining their goals and targets. These prescriptions for success, some of which are valuable in part, all share one major flaw – they lack a coherent and holistic perspective. That is, the advice tends to pull mainly on only one or, possibly, two of the business levers and ignores other levers in the business that may also need small or large adjustments in order for organizational balance to be maintained. This book aims to break the mold by proposing a simple but powerful model describing the four major levers or realms present in any enterprise and what it means for these to be “optimal” with respect to overall and sustainable organizational health. “Prospects” is the first of the four realms because an organization needs to know where its future sales prospects are coming from. “Processes” are the means by which a business manages its internal operations so as to deliver the product or service it has promised its customers. “People” are the individuals and teams who work in the business, directly and indirectly, on a part- or full-time basis, to appropriately address the prospect, process, and profit realms so that they perform at their best. “Profit,” the final realm, determines whether or not a business not only has enough liquid capital to supply the products or services it sells to its customers but can also earn a profit.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book Annihilated in the Alleghenies by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Storage Foundations by Jon Warner
Cover of the book To Wake in Tears by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Trainwrecks by Jon Warner
Cover of the book How To Sand Your Own Timber Floor by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Every Man Is Not a Husband - Every Woman Is Not a Wife by Jon Warner
Cover of the book A Judge, an Irishman and a Hot Dog Vendor go into a Bar... by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Then To Now by Jon Warner
Cover of the book A Powwow Summer Across North America by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Mischievous in Mendham by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Sad Girls Guide to Fitness by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Don't Weight Around by Jon Warner
Cover of the book Fantasy Football Draft Report 2013 by Jon Warner
Cover of the book The Feasts of Memory by Jon Warner
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy