Posts Tagged Stone

The Value of a Good Reputation

When I was younger, my parents instilled the importance of having a good reputation. We were taught that personal status was not only a reflection of ourselves, but of our family as a whole. We learned to live our lives knowing that how we present ourselves in every situation would be a direct indication of our upbringing. Today, one of the most valuable assets of my company is our excellent reputation. Having good standing among our industry and existing customers is directly related to earning referrals and securing new customers.

I started writing this blog on a flight to attend glasstec, our industry’s premier event held in Dusseldorf, Germany. Weather delayed the flight for several hours and I found myself talking “shop” with a couple of colleagues on the same flight. They relayed stories regarding a particular glass fabricator with a well-deserved bad reputation. This company had been slow to pay their suppliers and was generally disreputable. Hearing these stories made me wonder how one could allow their companys’ reputation to become so sullied. Does the owner not realize that his companys’ reputation is a direct reflection of his own?

I know that every product we produce and every interaction with our customers is a reflection on us, our brand and, by extension … on me. At Galaxy, our employees have made a fundamental commitment to providing customers with quality products and education. They know that doing so is directly tied to their own reputations. It is simply a matter of pride. When you have pride in everything you do, it shows. The reward is perpetuating your good reputation for another day.

Building a good reputation takes time, effort and a group commitment. It is not achieved overnight and it is not something that can be done alone. Also, it is something precious that can be upset or lost in an instant.

There are many ways through which I ensure my company builds and maintains a good reputation. These include hiring the best employees, working with reliable vendors and generally surrounding myself, and our brand, with others who take pride in their work and are equally aware of the value of a good reputation.

We know that our customers have a choice when it comes to selecting custom glass, metal and stone services. And while we are confident that we provide the highest quality products and services, we understand that our customers may rely on our positive reputation to distinguish us from competitors. For this very reason, I can’t underscore the importance of engineering our good reputation by maintaining the very highest standards.

Reputation management isn’t just a matter of building a respected brand to increase sales and profits; it’s something I take very personally. After that conversation on the flight, I reflected on how I believe my company is regarded by our industry and was pleased with where we stand. Our commitment to service and quality has been the foundation upon which our reputation has been built. This perception has cultivated trust among our clients. It serves as a barometer of where we are and where we want to be, and it inspires us all to continue striving to be the best in our business.

I will continue to build, shape and protect the reputation of my company as staunchly as I would protect the reputation of my family. As you can see, I took my parent’s advice to heart back then and have applied that spirit across my business, and to our customers, the specifying community and our many industry friends.

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Some of the Worst Advice I Ever Got

For many years after hearing his words of wisdom I thought I understood the meaning. It went something like this: “never fall in love with your inventory.” The man making the statement ran a factory that made parts for water filtration systems. His filters, quickly exchanged for currency, brought more inventories and more profit with each turnover.

That perspective has one significant flaw that I believe separates the most passionate of today’s leading companies from the commodity makers that proliferate most industries. In those days, you could be disconnected from the product and competition wasn’t nearly as intense.

As a glass fabricator and manufacturer, we have explored so much about the abilities and constraints of glass as a platform for creativity. Our own personality truly resides within our brand and is realized in everything that leaves our plant.

We don’t think you can do that without falling in love with your inventory! You only have to look at products of significance like the Apple ibook, the Polaroid camera or the cure for polio to know that these achievements could only come from a passionate drive and thrill of the challenge. Love, passion, achievement, drive:  All have similar properties.

How do I bring passion to my products and what does it all mean to my customer?

Don’t get me wrong, I do thoroughly enjoy running all aspects of my company, but the real fun is bringing together several otherwise conflicting aspects of my personality into my products. Artistic expression and professional discipline are not always attributes that coexist with the best results.

Glass, stone and metal are versatile media for artistic expression. In my view, realizing true form and function using these materials is a relationship between great design and design execution, with superlative detail. I just don’t think a company can do that kind of work consistently without loving what they produce. A new color, finish effect or pattern can stimulate a complete design, while the steps required for a flawless production run are just as important or the project will fail to meet expectations.

Most of the designers and architects we work with have hundreds of details at the top of their minds. Their expectations are without compromise.  Every item, every decision is usually made to the same high standard. Love and passion create a reputation that expands one’s following and creates more passion; our customers want to work with people who think like they think.

These are the people we most want to work alongside. They really like the projects they accept and put much of themselves into the outcome. They count on us as content experts, secure in the knowledge that we share their appreciation for both the design and the integrity of every project.

What gets you going every day? We don’t expect everyone in the glass industry to have the same connection with their products or services as we do. We found this special segment and think we do what we do better than any competitor in our category. The success and future of our industry depends on other business leaders that have something in their product offering that makes what they do important to their customers.

Ask yourself “why do my customers buy from me?” Then ask them why they buy from you. Now, make sure the answer is powerful enough to survive a competitive challenge. Fall in love and be passionate about something your customers will feel is important about the relationship you share. Once you are sure it is strong and portable, make it your value proposition and an integral part of your business personality. You will find you can build a powerful and lasting business on the tenacious pursuit of fulfilling this requirement.

Thank you for your interest in my blog, I am eager for your feedback as well as the opportunity to build new business relationships. Please contact me at  polishededges@galaxycustom.com.

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