When a Company Gets “Too BIG”!
Please indulge me for a few minutes. I really need to rant about a project from last week.
Now, I have no intention of naming names. However, I think this story has merit for being told, if for no other reason than to highlight what I hope Classic Exhibits never becomes, i.e., a company “Too BIG.”
Some background . . . We are currently working on a large interior retail project. It’s for the Flagship Store for a very well-known cable provider in the US. This Flagship location will highlight its services and is set to open the second week of March. If successful, the company will replicate this look at locations across the US. It’s a very exciting project that commands a lot of creativity, patience, and dedication not only by the team at Classic, but also by all the supporting vendors.
Unfortunately, this is where we hit a bit of a hitch in our giddy-up last week, and the story behind this blog entry.
You see, there is a small (by comparison to the rest of the project) accent material that we are incorporating in the project. This product is not only innovative, but really adds a distinctive design element to the entire project.
One element in the design calls for this accent piece to be formed or bent on a very slight radius. So, we reached out to the vendor to inquire about bending or forming the product. We were told it could but only if the vendor did the forming. Time, unfortunately, does not allow for them to do the forming, so we asked if they had a sample sheet so we could try forming it at Classic. Thankfully, they had a sheet in stock that we could buy, so we placed the order this past Friday.
Now, it is important to mention that this vendor is within a three-hour drive from our main manufacturing facility in Portland.
The answer — “I am sorry but clearly you do not understand that we are a BIG company, and within BIG companies, certain processes and timelines have to be met and/or followed.”
Really?!?!?!
We asked what being a “BIG” company had to do with their ability to go out and grab a sheet of material in their warehouse and place it on their shipping dock for our carrier to pick-up. We again were told that they were a “BIG” company and were sorry if we did not understand what “BIG” companies have to go through in the way of processes and procedures.
As you might imagine, the encounter left me both angry and perplexed about their company’s processes, practices, and procedures — especially when the vendor knows how this material is being used and how lucrative the project would be over the coming months and years for them. Not to mention the visibility it would give them to hundreds of thousands of consumers across the USA.
Think of policies, processes, and procedures like the white and yellow lines on the highway. They are there for a reason — to manage traffic flow. But if there are no opportunities to pass or to exit left or right, then at some point when a car is moving too slowly, too fast, or when there’s an accident, the entire traffic flow comes to a halt.
I’m smart enough to recognize that this is not the practice and vision of larger companies because at the end of the day that sort of mindset serves to only prohibit sales growth, not promote it.
Hopefully, we all stay “small” regardless of the growth our companies experience!
Thanks for letting me rant. 🙂
Be well and have a great week ahead.
–Kevin Carty
http://twitter.com/kevin_carty
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kevin-carty/3/800/32a