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Business Services


A man of his word



How to keep from growing yourself out of business

By Abby Cymerman


Smart Business Akron/Canton | April 2008

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Bob Vitale<br />CEO, Midwest Industrial Supply Inc.
Bob Vitale
CEO, Midwest Industrial Supply Inc.

To illustrate the need to continually evolve your business, Bob Vitale tells a story >about the men who worked on coal-fired locomotives.

“All of a sudden, the guy shoveling the coal would stop and lean on the shovel. When you saw that happen, you knew that train had already started to slow down,” says Vitale, founder and CEO of 70-employee Midwest Industrial Supply Inc. “Never lean on the shovel.”

Vitale says executives must always embrace change —-both in their company and in their customers’ companies — or their business will lose strength in the marketplace and, ultimately, grind to a halt.

Smart Business spoke with Vitale about how success at his $15.3 million company — which provides dust control and anti-icing solutions — depends on the success of his customers.

Q. What are your keys for growth?

Focus on the customer. Look through the customers’ eyes to determine what it is that they need and what are their business issues. Then, combine your skills and strengths in a sustained way to solve the customers’ business issues and create value.

Provide customers with a solution, something of value over a longer period of time — years, not just a month — and work to retain and build those high-value customer relationships.

Q. How do you build customer relationships?

You have to know something about the customer’s industry and talk to them in terms of how they would judge the success or failure for the kind of service and product package you are providing them.

Ask what is changing in the customer’s world. Also, ask the customer and yourself, ‘What can we do to bring more value next year?’ You have to be prepared to change or improve what you do to better serve them.

By allowing customers to turn over the management and problem-solving in a particular area, they can focus on their core business. They can confidently know that they have the best possible steward working to manage an important area that might have all kinds of consequences and problems if it was not handled properly.

Q. How do you earn the trust of your customers?

It is absolutely important that we do what we say we’re going to do, that we deliver to our commitments and that, in effect, we accept responsibility for our conduct and work.

And, if we ever fall down and don’t do something as well as it should be done, we accept responsibility for that and immediately correct what needs to be corrected and always strive for a high-quality performance.

Q. How do you communicate that customer-service vision to employees?

Our road map to success is a 14-page booklet that goes to employees. It is the complete statement of our mission and core values; it prescribes all the attitude, behavior and character of our organization. The road map shares our vision of where we want to go and what we want to become in the next five years. Then we have our scorecard, which allows us to check to make sure that we are achieving the things that we have set out as being the most important things for us as a company to do.

When you’re smaller, it’s easy to communicate what you’re trying to do. As more people come in who are new, it’s very important that all of the things you’re doing — your mission, vision and values — are communicated to everybody.

When you go from two people to 70 people, the order of complexity in communication is such that without one clear road map, it becomes very hard to keep everybody going in the same direction.

Q. How do you establish a road map?

It is very hard to do. We started five years ago, and we keep it alive and fresh with a once-a-year review. It’s got to be a real, living document. The fundamental mission and values don’t change, but you have to address all of the things that have changed in your world and your customers’ world and reflect the current values that the customers expect to get from the money they’ve spent with you.

There’s an old saying I’ve had above my desk for probably 30 years, and it says, ‘Most people grow themselves out of business.’ They either can’t manage it, or they can’t finance it. That’s the whole point. As you grow, you’re always going into unexplored territory; you’ve got more things that you’ve got to do well, and you have more people.

Everybody in the business needs to grow and learn. You need to maintain and improve your individual skills, capabilities and expertise every single year.

It’s a good reminder never to put your feet up on the desk. Keep them on the ground and moving; don’t relax. There is too much opportunity and possibility out there in your world.

The minute you stop growing and stop working for improvement, you are starting to slide backward, and you’re going in the wrong direction.

HOW TO REACH: Midwest Industrial Supply Inc., (800) 321-0699 or www.midwestind.com

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