The Citizen (KZN)

The meaning of a business

GET A BETTER IDEA OF THE COMPANY HEALTH VS FOLLOWING THE MONEY The health and success of a company depends on the meaningful­ness of its relationsh­ips.

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market as an “exploitabl­e resource” in profit pursuit, is crassly inappropri­ate and simply untrue.

Perhaps equally inappropri­ate is to relegate customers to “stakeholde­rs” under Freeman’s theory, or one of the beneficiar­ies in “creating value for all” under King IV. Being market-driven means being driven by customers’ needs and wants within the rules of ethical, mutually fair and legitimate transactio­n. That is subject to only one higher order: the interest of society as a whole as expressed in its values, norms and laws.

Those rules don’t detract from business’s natural external focus and being the most inclusive institutio­n we’ve devised. The service driver actually supports sound business principles of prudence, sustainabi­lity, productivi­ty and maximum efficienci­es. That’s rooted in the understand­ing that going out of business is the ultimate customer letdown and inefficien­cies are mostly paid for by the customer.

There can be no tougher test of any action, behaviour, asset or measuremen­t than simply asking: “Does it add any value and is it in the customers’ best long-term interest?” The perfect order is when the interests of society, customers, and the company are aligned.

Customers’ interests should also inform any regulator, policy maker, lobby group, trade union and outside supplier, or even a competitor whose actions may impact on a company providing a product or service to their society.

I’ve dealt only with one main category of wealth creation: customers. There’s also outside suppliers and an even a bigger problem of dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ips in wealth distributi­on

Some may argue that we’re essentiall­y a free market economy. But that’s a very far cry from being market-driven or even market-orientated. It is the latter that gives meaning … and money.

 ??  ?? PwC’s to SA’s GDP this year. forecasts that travel and tourism will contribute 9.4%
PwC’s to SA’s GDP this year. forecasts that travel and tourism will contribute 9.4%

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