Do the Math and Grow Your Business

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

Last week, Rebecca Knight, business journalist and contributor to Harvard Business Review, wrote “How to Improve Your Finance Skills (Even If You Hate Numbers).” It’s worth the read. Here’s a snapshot of what she covers. We’ll apply her findings more specifically to entrepreneurs, and provide additional resources below.

Takeaway #1: Without Basic Financial Know-How You Limit Your Opportunities

Knight cites Harvard’s Richard Ruback, who asserts that knowing the language of money leads to greater success. More specifically, when presenting on products or strategies, “decision-makers… want to see a simple model that shows revenue, costs, overhead, and cash flow… why it’s a good idea.”

Takeaway #2: “It’s not rocket science”

So again notes Richard Ruback, who likens business finance to keeping score in a ball game. “It’s mostly addition and subtraction and occasionally some multiplication and division.”

Takeaway #3: Dive In

Knight suggests finding a mentor or enrolling in a community college course. Anything to get you started down the path of learning how business numbers work is helpful. (Even Google is cited as a resource).

In our experience, it’s never enough to simply have that finance guy/gal cover all the details. You need to understand your numbers, and for these reasons:

  1. Increase the profitability of your business
  2. Explain your business with greater confidence (to employees, investors, and customers)
  3. Make calculated decisions

Read Rebecca Knight’s complete article here.

More Online Financial Resources to Help You on Your Way

HBR Blogs Finance and Accounting. Harvard Business Review consistently provides solid resources for your business. Their finance and accounting articles will serve you well

Financial Metrics and Ratios. Fidelity provides explainer videos on several key metrics.

4 ways to assess your business performance (BDC). The Business Development Bank of Canada is a good resource of knowledgeable articles for any company. When those they help succeed, their programs are available to greater numbers of entrepreneurs. Whether Canadian, American, or international BDC resources will help businesses do well.

Nasdaq Company Financials (e.g. HP). This is an example link to HP, as one of America’s largest technology companies. Change the URL to reflect any Nasdq-listed company ticker number. You’ll see their key financial metrics. Even if your company is not publicly traded, these figures will give you good insights into what makes these firms thrive or dive.

5 financial metrics you should know. Mary Ellen Biery is succinct and explains how to know whether your company is successful, providing five metrics important to entrepreneurs.

65 Questions Venture Capitalists Will Ask Startups. This Forbes list is a great one to go over in your next strategy meeting. How would you answer these questions? More specifically here, look at how many of them require some basic financial acumen. Use these to determine how far you need to go in learning your numbers.

Image by Getty/iStockphoto

How to Find a Great Domain

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

Entrepreneurs know the importance of choosing a good business name, but that doesn’t make the process any easier. Even when you do come up with that zinger of a moniker, chances are someone has already snatched up the associated domain name, right?

Well, maybe not. With a proper strategy the process will be more enjoyable than frustrating. Many of the ingenious domain names you think of will already be taken, to be sure. However, I’ve often found domain names for customers that are easy to remember and unused by other businesses. You can have good success and greatly benefit your business if you work at it.

Remember these points to find a great domain name:

1) Research, research, research.

You may already have great ideas, but your great ideas without due-diligence could be second-best compared to your competition. List the 10 brands and names in your industry that you admire most. Don’t just concern yourself with the biggest or most profitable. You’re the one who needs to be passionate about your brand so you’ll want to compare your ideas to your most respected competitors.

2) Search Creatively and with Purpose.

Be creative and begin your domain name search. Don’t be discouraged if your initial choices are already registered to someone else. That’s common. The trick is to search every possible iteration of your name, looking for key words and combinations of terms.

3) Don’t buy on impulse.

If you find a domain you like, ask yourself why nobody has registered that name. It certainly could be because you were the first to think of it, or it could be that the name is not a very good one. Make a list of all available domain names as you search. Once you’ve built a list of numerous available names, select your candidates, registering only the very best of the bunch. Your favorites should be comparable to the names on your respected competitor list.

4) Enjoy the process!

This is not a school project. This is for your business success. Domain name buying can be a great adventure in itself. The bottom line however, is that the value of a domain name in most cases will be the value you assign to it as an address or name for your business. If you find domain names you believe are going to be useful in the long-term for your needs, that is the single most important determiner at the time of purchase. Don’t buy domain names you cannot use or reasonably sell in the future, but enjoy the search as you look for those untapped gems.

The main requirement for acquiring great domains is a lot of creativity with an even greater measure of patience.

 

Now you can search more intelligently with Swivel Domain Search.

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Ask Away

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

New this year, Swivel is taking your questions for the blog. Do you have an idea you’re trying to get off the ground? Have a customer problem you’re trying to solve? Drop us an email and let us know your challenge.

Get In Touch

While we can’t write on every inquiry, if your problem is applicable enough to a broad audience we’ll consider it for upcoming articles. Send us your entrepreneurial challenges, requests for innovative solutions, and new problems arising due to the changes in your market. When we choose a question, the research and response is provided at no cost. We’re keen to receive your input as it helps us learn what our customers and followers are grappling with.

Enjoy the journey with us as we seek out new ways to beat the odds and grow better companies. Ask away!

World Class Manufacturing Made Simple

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

While most business methodologies are found in periodicals, news sources or journals, All I Need to Know About Manufacturing is a novel, written with the intent of contrasting traditional and low-waste approaches to manufacturing.

We meet three characters who draw our attention for the duration of the story. Joe is the expert in the old way; Sandy is one of his manufacturing engineers; and Ralph is a worker in a lean factory.

A Lean Message to Convey Lean Ideas

The novel’s function is to convey basic concepts of manufacturing and production efficiencies to a wider audience than those typically working the factory floor. After reading this short book, there is little wonder those endorsing it recommend it to anyone making any product. It makes its points clearly and succinctly, with little waste of its own, in 90 pages.Joe's Garage Review at SwivelBlog

Summary of Lessons Learned

Early in the day, Sandy is proud to show Ralph, an outsider, how his boss works. They watch as Joe begins to conduct a driveway full of volunteers who have arrived to assist in making shelves for his garage.

The approach to the task is a large-scale mass production setup in the backyard. At first there is a level of anticipation. Everyone has come to learn something from Joe. But Sandy soon finds there is more to gain by listening to his new friend Ralph as he comments throughout the day.

Ralph’s observations center on the inefficiencies, waste and poor quality controls of Joe’s leadership. At each opportunity he offers better ideas, which make more sense as the clock ticks and the workday progresses. Sandy defends Joe initially, but myriad problems eventually culminate in a change of view at the end of the day after illusions of quality, volunteer morale, and basic dignity vanish under Joe’s command.

The reader could come to an alternative judgment on the scenario but little room remains to do so. The story is quaint, but incisive enough to make clear the need for a current approach.

SOURCE: Miller, W.B., Schenk, V.L. (2004). All I Need to Know about Manufacturing I Learned in Joe’s Garage. Bayrock Press.

Innovation and Reason in The Outsourcing Decision

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

In The Outsourcing Decision,1 author Ralph E. Drtina demonstrates that in a globally competitive economy the prospect of outsourcing is increasingly relevant in management accounting. He also suggests that there are deficiencies in how most accounting professionals and academics evaluate the opportunity cost of hiring an external firm to acquire internally controlled activities. 

Rather than leave us with a broad critique of existing methods, Drtina recommends a straightforward methodology by which managers can make better decisions.

Evaluating Options

Drtina presents an example where maintenance for the delivery fleet of a manufacturing company is considered for outsourcing. Initially, he suggests a firm must determine the importance of controls for the service, especially when considering confidential documents or proprietary technology, and whether the firm considering outsourcing can deliver the service to the highest standards in-house.

On the latter point, Drtina adds, “A determination must be made whether the firm can achieve a world-class level of delivery. If it is not possible to accomplish benchmarked standards of performance, the activity should be outsourced. To reiterate, the firm should concentrate only on those core activities that enhance its unique marketplace advantages.”

Long-term Planning

Ultimately he contrasts two cost analyses and shows the need for additional accounting information to assist decision-makers. In the first example (see Panel 1, below) Drtina presents a typical five-year planning sheet to determine a straightforward differential cost to outsourcing.

He does this by subtracting the net cost of servicing vehicles in-house by the net cost of outsourcing vehicle maintenance.  The number of vehicles increases by 25 per year and training increases accordingly over time by growth estimates. In year 1, the differential cost to outsource is seen as $7,920 in favour of outsourcing.

As is seen in the table however, efficiencies in operations in-house begin to emerge by year 4 and the differential cost to outsource shifts with it resulting in a negative figure by year 4 of -$6,270 and by year 5, the cumulative differential over the period is -$3,960.

By estimates using this method, the clear decision would be to maintain the fleet maintenance service internally.

Innovation

Not satisfied with this approach, Drtina decides to apply a figure, which takes into consideration the time value of invested capital (see Panel 2, below). Drtina discounts the cash flows by 16% and finds that the net present value for the 5 years is in fact positive, at $1,101 (see also Panel 3, below).

At the end of the day it is likely more useful to apply his methodology, however, decision-makers at all levels may need support and education to see the value in what he proposes. Management accounting as a discipline is extremely important, and yet, not for the faint-of-heart.

Summary of the Outsourcing Decision SwivelBlog
Panels 1-3: Based on Drtina’s work in “The Outsourcing Decision”

Conclusions

Drtina appears to be influenced by his own philosophy around outsourcing and not strictly by his numbers. For example, he says, “Before making a final decision… management must consider the less tangible, more uncertain benefits… These qualitative factors may prove significant and may take precedence over results favored in the discounted cash-flow analysis.”

This does not suggest that he has misunderstood the influence or lack of influence in his accounting innovation. Rather, it shows that the forward-thinking managerial accountant must take into consideration more than the short-term data we have on hand, and certainly more than quantitative data alone.

[1] Ralph E. Drtina. (1994). The Outsourcing Decision. Management Accounting, 56-62. McGraw-Hill Education.

Financial Innovation Through Inventory Driven Costs

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

The study Inventory Driven Costs by Harvard Business Review was written a few years after Hewlett-Packard fundamentally transformed its supply-chain logistics, based on accounting data it was previously incapable of tracking.[1]

Writing Team

HP insiders, Gianpaolo Callioni, Xavier de Montgros and Linda Wright along with Insead faculty Regine Slagmulder and Luk Van Wassenhove, show how effective implementation of timely and relevant accounting metrics has lead to successful profit management by the PC maker.  The team’s expertise is in operations (supply chain directors Callioni and Montgros at HP, and Van Wassenhove, professor of operations at Insead), and accounting and performance metrics (finance manager Wright of HP’s Personal Systems Group, and Slagmulder, management accounting and performance expert at Insead).

At Issue

The article details problems Hewlett-Packard was having with its PC business.  No small concern, the article informs that, “by 1997, margins on its PCs were as thin as a silicon wafer, and some product lines had not turned a profit since 1993.” The commoditization of the PC industry was affecting all manufacturers, but HP sought opportunity to gain advantage over its competitors.

Key findings of HP’s Strategic Planning and Modeling (SPaM) group led to the company’s supply chain transformation, division by division. SPaM initially found that the nonalignment of supply and demand for the entire PC business was to blame for surplus inventory. Executives were insufficiently informed by antiquated management-accounting metrics, which “had failed to keep pace with the evolution of its supply chains.”

Inventory Driven Costs Breakdown

SPaM parsed at least five inventory-driven costs (IDC), four of which had not appeared on radar before as significant. Holding Cost was named as the most obvious, but one less significant in scope than the others.  The four previously evading detection were:

1. Component Devaluation

First and foremost, Callioni and team show that devaluation was responsible for the largest portion of overall inventory costs.  Decreases in component prices from suppliers, while inventories were high, meant that HP was eating losses.

2. Price Protection

Due to the nature of the PC business’ rapidly declining costs on items such as CPUs and RAM, HP was forced to reimburse channel partners holding stocks that had not sold. The article elaborates, “A channel partner might buy a product from HP when the prevailing market price was $1,000. But if the item sold five weeks later at a new price of $950, HP had to reimburse the $50 difference.”

3. Product Returns

Similar to price protection costs, product returns were entire reimbursements by HP of its distributors on products they were unable to sell.

4. Obsolescence

Incredibly short lifecycles for PC products meant that in cases where demand and supply were poorly aligned, HP was forced to multiply write-offs.

Evaluation

When elements of inventory costs were taken together, it was difficult to know where to focus attention.  In the article, the authors provide examples of the clear picture that emerges once costs are separated out.  When three products are evaluated side by side (See Table 1), “the highest costs for product A are coming from goods whose prices have dropped after they’ve been shipped to retailers.  But the greatest problem for products B and C are drops in component prices before the products ever get out of the factory.”

Table1: Inventory-Driven Costs (IDC)

Analysis

With this new information, SPaM was able to work with HP business units, starting with the Mobile Computing Division (MCD).  Former accounting metrics were exchanged for measurements operating on a more granular level of detail. MCD eventually opted to centralize manufacturing and configuration at a single location based on an opportunity comparison using the new metrics (See Table 2).  The success of the initiative was so far reaching that the program was eventually standardized, and adopted enterprise-wide.

Table2: Inventory-Driven Costs (IDC)

SPaM made known their findings about the true drivers of HP’s inventory costs in 1997.  In 1998, after implementation, margins were already increasing for MCD. By 1999, the unit returned to profitability.  In May of 2002, HP and Compaq merged and the new metrics were maintained.

Focusing on RONA

According to Inventory-Driven Costs, HP has catapulted forward through its shift in focus from a strategy of return on sales, to return on net assets (RONA), a change supported by new accounting metrics.

Applicability Beyond HP

Though the article focuses on HP, aspects of the full scope of changes acted upon by the company mirror that of others in the industry. Dell’s success through the 90’s, for example, was due in part to a strategy of minimizing the steps in its supply chain and managing the variability of supply and demand[2]. Dell has utilized return on invested capital (ROIC), which similarly focuses on “high returns at very low asset intensity.”

While Inventory-Driven Costs points to IDC metrics as the catalyst for HP’s change, it’s possible to arrive at the general conclusions of management by other means. In fact, the authors concede, “Product group managers may well have known before, on an intuitive level, what they needed to do, but the IDC metrics have made it easier for them to convince senior managers that their particular situations require particular solutions.”[1]

Management Culture

In light of this, another factor emerges—that of managerial culture and decision-making. In an organization such as HP, where management decisions are evidently more closely linked to accounting metrics, the inventory-driven cost method goes a long way to ensuring management objectives are carried out. This is especially true if managers are not otherwise empowered to make decisions based on what they know to be true. IDC has contributed to that empowerment, where previously a manager might have been reprimanded, even for making the right decision.

Carly Fiorina

When Carly Fiorina was installed as CEO, she sought to bring about major change to HP culture.  Prior to HP’s acquisition of Compaq, she was convinced that dramatic improvements were still needed.  “Only a major acquisition, she concluded, could disrupt entrenched routines and catapult HP into a commanding lead in the personal computer industry.”[3]  Indeed signs of successful changes at all levels continued with the merger. Susan Bowick, of the management team formed to lead the company’s integration of people, said of the experience, “To my knowledge, no global company of HP’s size had ever integrated their organization, all HR practices and HR technology in less than 12 months. Many of us felt that it was one of the best projects and best teamwork examples of our career.”[4]

Exceptional Discipline

When speaking of the conditions for success at Dell, Thomas Stewart and Louise O’Brien wrote that “High expectations and disciplined, consistent execution are embedded in the company’s DNA.  Dell is more than an efficient factory—it’s an organization that can turn on a dime and that has demonstrated impeccable timing in entering new markets.”[2]

A Model for Other Companies

In addition to accounting efficiencies, any company must work to develop teamwork, management instinct and adaptability. It’s important to note the many changes leading to HP’s leadership in the PC business, of which a very critical element has been IDC. Providing managers with latitude along with the right tools to enact change is imperative.

In times of economic instability or recession, the IDC method, in the right management conditions, gives business units a lever to persuade senior managers of required changes, even dramatic supply chain restructurings like HP’s. Such adaptive strategies would hardly find favor in a poor climate based on intuition alone.

HP has won the battle to manage profits and inventory in several circumstances, but there have been challenges. In the first quarter of 2009, the company announced its profits would decline as much as 5% from the previous year.[5] It will surely maintain its metrics and closely monitor results, ensuring that excess costs are avoided. Any organization evaluating inventory-driven costs however, would do well to contextualize HP’s success and recognize the compound drivers of effective decision-making.

Cause and Effect

Lastly, it is important to remember what the authors point to almost from the outset. That “Mismatches between demand and supply” are the cause and surplus inventory, the effect.[1]

As long as IDC metrics are focused on decreasing that elasticity, it should continue to be effective. Overall, Inventory-Driven Costs is an impressive look at one very helpful tool for the 21st century manager of any “highly price-competitive industry.”[ibid]

 

Resources

1. Callioni, G., de Montgros, X., Slagmulder, R., Van Wassenhove, L. N., Wright, L. (2005, March). “Inventory-Driven Costs.” Harvard Business Review.

2. Stewart, T. A., O’brien, L. (2005, March). “Execution Without Excuses.” Harvard Business Review.

3. Nadler, D. (2007). “The CEO’s Second Act.” Harvard Business Review.

4. Pomeroy, A. (2005, June). “Orchestrating a Mega-Merger.” HRMagazine, 50(6), 58-59.

5. Vance, A. (2009, February 19). “Hewlett-Packard Will Cut 24,600 Jobs.” New York Times, p. 5.

6. Byrnes, J. (2003). “Dell Manages Profitability, Not Inventory.” Harvard Business School Working Knowledge.

 

Michael Dell in Vancouver

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

FLASHBACK: March 31st, 2003—As the war on Iraq entered its third week, with business people everywhere watchful of the effects the mid-east conflict will create economically, chairman and CEO of Dell Computer Corporation, Michael Dell delivered an encouraging address to the Vancouver Board of Trade.

In what was essentially a lesson in the history of the company, Dell used his experience in overcoming difficulties and meeting customer needs to present a clear path to enterprise success. He noted that five out of the top ten companies in North America were founded during economic downturns. Dell started in 1984 with $1,000 and now has revenues of about $35 billion.

Dell pointed to three key factors in his company’s (and any company’s) success:

  1. Operational efficiencies: Passing savings on to customers
  2. Relevant high-value products & services: Customers determine direction
  3. Expanding into new geographies: Unmet areas
  4. Operating costs for Dell Computer are roughly 10%. Dell spelled that out by explaining that for a $1000 computer, the company spends about $100 in design and manufacturing costs, as compared to competitors IBM (22.8%) and HP (22.5%), whose operating costs are magnifying as Dell’s subside. He attributed his competitors’ growing operational expenses as a problem of revenues receding faster than costs are dropping.

Dell spoke of the nature of the company’s e-commerce model and informed that it is not based on a push system whereby a product is created, warehoused, then sold, but rather, is based on a pull system. A product is sold; the suppliers are contacted; the system is built; then delivered. At this juncture the company has about ninety hours of inventory. “And it all runs on Dell servers,” he quipped. “Dell’s model virtually integrates customers and suppliers.”

Dell Computer now operates the largest e-commerce engine in the world, with more online revenues than Hilton Hotels, Amazon.com, and Starbucks combined. Typical orders are built and delivered in 3-5 days. The company owns completely its entire supply chain, which Dell said attributes to a 6% cost advantage over outsourcing.

“Operational efficiency drives customer satisfaction”. Dell displayed graphs showing that the company has lead in price/performance, and cost of ownership satisfaction for many years.

Delving into current areas of interest, Dell spoke of emerging trends toward wireless communication, and hailed Linux as “the new UNIX”. He noted that his company now supports 802.11 wireless, and ships more Windows and Linux systems than any other system manufacturer. He also spoke of a shift in the direction of “high performance clusters” rather than the pricey supercomputers of the past.

To illustrate that the company’s business model works in any economy, Dell pointed to recent growth statistics such as those of sales in China (72% growth last year) and Germany (46%) among others.

The event was held at the Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre.

Google in China

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

Recently, it was reported that Google has threatened to end its operations in China if the government continues to censor search results. Summarizing the situation, Normandy Madden shows the beginnings, and possible endings of Google’s attempts to conquer the Chinese search space.

Google’s largest competitor in the country, Baidu, handles more than twice the search business, and remains strong. Madden points out that “Google has never been a big believer in traditional marketing anywhere, including China…”

On the other hand, “Baidu is an active advertiser in TV, out-of-home and digital media”. Other issues referenced include that Google’s strategic execution in China was poor, and that it was not seen as truly Chinese, in contrast to the competition.

Even in terms of branding, the Chinese had difficulty pronouncing and spelling the name. Several cultural factors, and even arrogance are listed as factors that diminished Google’s chances in China. Even so, Madden cites Kaiser Kuo as saying Google’s success was “nothing to sneeze at…. 80-plus million people.”

The conversation over what seemingly went wrong is important, but certainly, Google did not utterly fail in China. They are currently second place. Still, on the surface it does appear that the company could have garnered more market share, if correcting some of its blunders.

How much more is uncertain. “Why Google Wasn’t Winning” does outline briefly several problems and reasons Baidu is winning. However, it’s not clear whether the issues mentioned, in sum, equate to the difference between Google and Baidu.

Whatever the core reasons for Google’s potential departure from China, the distinctions between the two firms in the article are reason to pay close attention. As new American businesses enter the Chinese marketplace and indeed any culturally distinct market, understanding how local firms operate is essential. Being ready to compete requires this much at least.

More importantly, operating ethically and free from human rights concerns is imperative. What the government does in response to Google’s pleas for free speech will be key, and may determine whether we see the next leg of a competitive race, or simply an exit, stage left for the tech giant.

Madden, N. (2010, January 14). “Why Google wasn’t winning in China anyway.” Advertising Age. http://adage.com/article/digital/digital-marketing-google-winning-china/141493/

The NHL and its Tech Savvy Fans

by Mike Chalmers Mike Chalmers No Comments

According to Mike Shields, NHL fans are an under-served market, starved for hockey. He points to NHL sales and marketing executive Keith Wachtel who said, “If you ask the average fan where they get their NFL information, they’ll say ESPN.com or the local paper… For our fans, they start on NHL.com.”1

Market Analysis

The implications from this are twofold. First, other sports fans find more of the details they need through major media outlets, whereas hockey fans are not as fulfilled in this way. Second, the NHL has found a way to address this shortcoming through its digital offerings.

In 2006, the league determined to improve its digital services. It hired a former NFL executive, whose research revealed that hockey fans were “younger, more affluent and tech-savvy than fans of other major sports.”

The figures were telling. Ninety-two percent owned computers, and thirty six percent had digital cable. The NHL introduced innovations online, redesigning its website to deliver more content—and in particular, more video.

The success of the site has been evident in its traffic analytics, with thirteen million unique users for the season. Nearly half of those are from the US.

High-Tech, Media-Rich Approach

Beyond serving the needs of fans better, new partnership opportunities arose with companies such as Electronic Arts and Timberland. Both featured custom video series to showcase NHL athletes, and linked the sport with the respective brands. The league expects to do four or more such deals with partner brands annually.

The NHL receives far less attention via US media than here in Canada. What that means in terms of brand reach outside of our Northern hockey paradise is important. With so many teams in the US it’s easy to see how many fans could be frustrated in this day of free-flowing information, not having easily accessible hockey news and statistics.

Hockey fans can go to ESPN.com and elsewhere to find some of the NHL experience. But the league has determined that its fans are not as well served as other sports through the usual outlets. By offering a richer hockey experience, NHL.com has reaped rewards, primarily through sponsorships and happier fans.

Early Results, Further Developments Needed

The site has generated distribution contracts with iTunes, YouTube and Yahoo! Sports, among others. The NHL identifies hockey fans as young and affluent. That’s a fact that raises more questions that will be important to answer in the coming years. It also demonstrates that one sport may be very different from another in terms of demographic features.

It’s no secret that to play hockey requires significantly more capital than say, soccer. Is there a strong link in hockey between those who grow up playing the sport and those who watch it as adults? Another question that arises is whether the NHL can reach less affluent fans and increase its market share, or if media limitations might hinder such an effort. The league may not want to do so, which is a different matter altogether.

Turning Weaknesses into Strengths

What the NHL appears to have done with its flagship website is turn a serious service deficiency for its fans into an opportunity to increase market reach and attract special deals with major global brands. Shields’ article speaks more generally to the notion that as as marketers we must always seek to uncover weaknesses in our strategy.

As the case has been for the NHL, challenges in systems in which we may have little control can be overcome by turning a weakness for other industries into a strength with great dividends.

With discovery of weaknesses come potential areas of improvement and opportunities for growth.

[1] Shields, M. (2009). On Thick Ice. MediaWeek, 19(36), 6.