At a time when our trust in the banking and political systems has all but been destroyed, and major retailers are struggling to meet City expectations, we are at a place where the letter rather than the spirit of the law defines business relationships, with the ‘small print’ confirming for many that we are all now on our own.
In an age of uncertainty, we therefore have to be mindful of both the letter and spirit of our agreements in formalising any initiatives. In other words, we need to establish basic business trust in an atmosphere of unprecedented suspicion and even fear…
The need for robust contracts
It goes without saying that in order to observe the spirit of a supplier-retailer ‘fair-share’ agreement it is critical to have a robust written contract as a basis for monitoring any inadvertent straying from what each party thought they were buying into when the deal was struck…the ‘gentlemen’s agreement’ has perished not for want of gentlemen, but because business stakes and costs have now reached unprecedented heights…
Why trust saves money
Essentially, if we do not invest, build and maintain a minimum level of ‘trading trust’ in the early stages of a supplier-retailer relationship then the extra work involved in second-guessing our trading partner’s intentions comes straight off the bottom line. In other words, like networking in these unprecedented times, the current business climate does not allow for the gradual, instinctive building up of the necessary levels of trust. Instead, taking trust as a desirable and essential outcome, we need to methodically accelerate the process, upfront.
Just the beginning…
Thus, from a position where trust started as a means of avoiding wastage of time and money in the early stages of the relationship, a way establishing our trust-credentials, mutual trust becomes an increasingly important, indeed vital ingredient over the lifetime productivity of the supplier-retailer partnership...
In fact, in my first brand management job, I appointed a Belfast firm as our agent in Northern Ireland for our only product, K2R Stain-remover. Following intensive negotiation, we agreed on a comprehensive Agency Contract and commenced trading. One night a few years later, the agent rang me mid-evening to let me know that a liquidator would be appointed at 0900 the following morning, but meanwhile, if I could organise some transport….?
Even I knew that the liquidator’s first act would be to chain the front gates, at which point everything inside would belong to the government.
I made a few phone calls and managed to have our £4,500 stock picked up before midnight.
There was nothing in our Contract covering early warnings, but implicit was an understanding that we would trust one another to do the right thing, when necessary…I have remained forever grateful for the insight...
In other words, by investing in the spirit of the relationship, the resulting overall Return on Investment in trust can provide a real payoff for all stakeholders.
Trust me, folks, it works…
More here
How to build business trust with major retailers here
No comments:
Post a Comment