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Overcoming Your Fear of Disclosure: Part I

May 6, 2019 by Jack Stack 0 Comments

Overcoming Your Fear of Disclosure

 Excerpted from The Great Game of Business.

How do you get to the point where you can even think about democratizing the workplace—about being a transparent business that gives people access to the numbers and, in addition to that, the means to control their destiny? Not by swallowing your pride and admitting that you don't have all the answers and can't make all the decisions. No, it's by swallowing your fear.

The Great Fear #1 What If Competitors Get Hold of Your Numbers?

Opening up the company's books strikes terror in the hearts of many CEOs, who shudder to think that the numbers might fall into the wrong hands—like their competitors. I have to admit that, in the beginning, our numbers were so bad it didn't matter whether or not our competitors saw them. Then, as we began teaching people the numbers, we could see our company getting stronger, and so we worried less about our competitors because they weren't strengthening themselves in the same way.

Question MarkQuestions about opening your company's books? Learn what financial information you should share with your employees.

 

Imitators never worry me as much as innovators. By sharing the numbers, we were developing something our competitors couldn't match. They could see every single one of our numbers, but unless they adopted our methods, unless they started using their numbers to build morale and motivation, unless they enlisted their own people in the struggle to keep costs down, they weren't going to take us out.

 

The Impact of Sharing Financials With Employees

HubSpot Video

 

This is not to deny that it's possible to use a company's numbers to compete against it. We try to find out all we can about our competitors' numbers. We always buy stock in any competitor that is publicly traded. You'd be foolish not to. The more knowledge you have about a competitor, the easier it is to decide what course of action you should take in a particular situation—when you should compete when you should back off, where you might have a particular advantage or weakness.

 

Community Membership (2)It's also true that a company, particularly a private one, can hide certain things, although a lot less than most people think. For openers, you can get a lot of information from easily accessible sources, such as Dun & Bradstreet and the other credit bureaus. If you compete in the same arena as another company, you're going to find out a lot about it just by being streetwise. When you lose a quote, you can usually figure out why. If you're getting material from the same sources, your material costs should be the same as your competitor's. That leaves labor and overhead. It doesn't take much to find out another company's labor rates—you ask someone who works there or the neighbor of someone who works there, or you hire somebody from your competitor's organization. Then you're down to overhead. So let's say we bid $10, and our two competitors bid $9 each. It won't take long for us to figure out where we lost $1.

But the main point is this: in the long run, knowing a competitor's numbers doesn't mean anything unless you are the least-cost producer or have something nobody else has. You have to go back to those two basic principles. Yes, a competitor may use our numbers to underbid us on a particular job, but then he has to deliver, he has to provide quality, and he has to stand behind the product. Knowing your competitor's financials is at best a short-term tactical advantage, one that pales alongside the benefits of educating your employees about the numbers.

Besides, it's sometimes better to let your competitor get that particular job or account. If it's very complicated, very costly, and if he's really hot to get it, you almost hope he does. In the first place, he may bid so low that he loses money on it. He may also put himself behind in the race for the next job. So you quote high and hope the other guy wins with a very low bid.

Stay tuned to learn more about overcoming the next two fears of disclosure in part II of this series.  

 


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Topics: Open-Book Management, Transparency

Jack Stack
Written by Jack Stack

Jack Stack is President and CEO of SRC Holdings Corporation, which remanufactures gasoline and diesel engines for the automotive and off-highway markets, distributes engine kits, manufactures power units and remanufactures electrical components, and conducts seminars and training programs specializing in all aspects of teaching people how to implement open-book management. He is also the author of three books, The Great Game of Business, A Stake in the Outcome, and Change The Game: Saving The American Dream By Closing The Gap Between The Haves And The Have-Nots.

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Our approach to running a company was developed to help close one of the biggest gaps in business: the gap between managers and employees. We call our open-book approach The Great Game of Business. What lies at the heart of The Game is a very simple proposition: The best, most efficient, most profitable way to operate a business is to give everybody in the company a voice in saying how the company is run and a stake in the outcome. Let us teach you how to develop a culture of ownership, where employees think, act and feel like owners.