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While
the typical firm has struggled, a few firms have enjoyed strong
profitability levels. For 2002, the top-performing group of SEDA
members had an ROA of 8.1%, a
profitability level that was 4.6
times the results for the typical firm. In short, the industry has become
two-tiered. That is, a lot of firms produce modest profits and just a few
produce strong results.
The
disparity between typical and high-profit results should serve as a
warning for typical firms. While very few firms are sanguine about the
profitability gap, they frequently do view it as the inevitable result of
a stagnant economy. The feeling is that as the economy improves, the
rising tide will lift all ships.
A
look at recent results and some realistic projections regarding the future
suggests that economic recovery alone will not close the profit gap.
Instead, the disparity between winners and losers may continue to the
point that it challenges the very existence of some firms.
This
article reviews the longer-term impact of a two-tiered industry. It does
so by looking at two specific issues:
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A
Five-Year Projection—Most
firms are not fully aware of the extent to which differences in
current performance multiply over time and result in significantly
larger differences in only a few years. This section will examine just
how important the difference between typical and high-profit really is
from a growth perspective.
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The
Improvement Challenge—Moving
from typical to high-profit performance calls for improved results on
several key measures. Surprisingly, the magnitude of the required
changes is not large. However, changes need to be made in several
areas of the firm simultaneously. This section will examine the
factors to be targeted for performance enhancement.
A
Five-Year Sales and Profit Projection
Theoretically,
every firm can grow as fast as it can find customers. While sales growth
may require an increased investment in inventory and accounts receivable,
that investment can be financed through additional debt. In reality,
though, the availability of capital for growth rests upon the ability of
the firm to produce a profit and reinvest that profit back in the
business. High-profit firms possess a pronounced advantage in the quest
for capital.
Exhibit
1 compares the current financial performance for two equal-sized SEDA
members—one typical and one high profit. At present the high-profit firm
produces higher profits, which gives it a short-term advantage. In
addition, the
exhibit
looks at the two firms five years hence when the advantage has been
dramatically multiplied.
In
order to address the impact of profit on growth, the exhibit makes a key
assumption about profit reinvestment. Specifically, the exhibit assumes
that both firms reinvest all of their after-tax profits back in the
business. It also assumes that the firms continue to operate as
profitability and as productively in the future as they do today.
Both
assumptions can be challenged. After all, recessions do eventually end.
When this one does, the typical firm certainly will do better, but so will
the high-profit firm. As long as there are two tiers of results, the
high-profit firms will always have an advantage. This is true in good
times and bad.
The
exhibit suggests that the short-term advantages are magnified in the long
term. By the fifth year, the high-profit SEDA member has increased its sales by 23.8% using only internally generated funds. At
the same time, the typical firm can only grow by 6.3%. Over time, the high-profit firm is not only
increasingly successful in generating profits, but is also more successful
in building a stronger market position.
Again,
the typical firm could borrow the additional funds required to maintain
sales parity with the high-profit firm. Ultimately, that strategy will
fail, for two important reasons. First, an increasing percentage of
profits must be used to pay interest charges and an increasing percentage
of the cash flow produced by those profits must go to pay back loans.
Second, debt eventually becomes so large that there are simply no more
lines of credit available to the firm, even from the most aggressive
lenders.
In
short, the difference between typical and high-profit results is important
today. Of much greater consequence, it is critical in the future. Firms
must commit to making the journey from typical to high-profit. The
question is how?
The
Improvement Challenge
In
most firms there is a prevailing perspective that if profit is going to be
improved substantially, then the firm must make some dramatic changes in
its operations. In motivational guru parlance, it must commit to 1,000%
improvements. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. For
several years, Profit Planning Group has espoused the philosophy that
small changes in some key areas of the business can produce big results.
The
latest SEDA PROFIT
report identifies the factors that drive higher performance. While nobody
does better on everything, high-profit firms have several two advantages,
listed in order of importance:
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Operating
Expenses—The
high-profit firm has an operating expense ratio of 23.8% of sales, compared to 25.3%
for the typical firm.
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Inventory
Turnover—The
high-profit firm turns its inventory 7.7 times per while, the typical firm achieves a turnover rate of
only 6.2 times.
These
factors must be central to the planning activities of every SEDA
member. Every one on the management team must be focused on these factors.
They must also be fully trained on how these factors impact results.
Finally, every employee must be aware of the specific actions required
that will lead to improvement on the key factors.
Moving
Forward
High-profit
firms have an important profitability advantage over the typical firm
today. If the performance differences continue, the high-profit firm will
have an insurmountable advantage in the future. The typical SEDA member must
start today to close the profit gap.
Dr.
Albert D. Bates is founder and president of Profit Planning Group, a
distribution research firm headquartered in Boulder, Colorado.
©2003
Profit Planning Group. SEDA
has unlimited duplication rights for this manuscript. Further, members may
duplicate this report for their internal use in any way desired.
Duplication by any other organization in any manner is strictly
prohibited.
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