In the supply chain, every member adds value until the last link presents it to the target retail market in such a way that it will sell. Small businesses tend to be positioned down towards the end of this chain because
that's where the specialized niche markets, low volumes and diverse needs are.
Small businesses will buy from suppliers, add value by changing or adding to the product and sell to their target market at a profit. While larger businesses can achieve profitability by adding little value across high volumes of product, small businesses
have to add considerable value to make money on the relatively low volumes that they can handle.
And there's the problem. Many small businesses don't add enough value to justify the price they have to
charge. Ask yourself this question: "If my customer bought his products directly from my suppliers, could he
save money?" If the answer is yes or even maybe, you have a problem. The foundation of your business is not
greater efficiency, saving your customer money. It is knowing where to buy - not a great base for long term
business success.
The solution is to increase your value added; to increase the value of your product to your customer.
This can be achieved in two ways.
1. You can do more and charge more.
If you can identify something which your customer will value greatly but which will not cost you a lot to do, you
can add to your product, charge a little more and increase your value added substantially.
2. You can do less and charge less.
If you can identify something which is of no great value to your customer but which costs a lot to provide, scrap
it and charge a lot less. This will increase the value of your product to your customer (essentially the same
product as far as he is concerned but much lower cost).
Many small businesses have never done such an analysis and are spending lots of their money doing
things their customers don't really value. On the other hand, they aren't doing things which could make their
products much more valuable to their customers while costing comparatively little. Many small businesses have
the ability to do such an analysis on an individual customer basis while most large corporations can't. Just one
more thing which puts small businesses ahead of their large competitors if they put in the effort.
FIRST PUBLISHED AT SUITE101.COM