Growing the Top Line. Cliff Farrah

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true, but it’s never without extraordinary challenge. For sustainable success there is always a balancing act that you find best represented in the profit equation:

      You will always hear the critique from reviewers that a plan is “pie in the sky.” By that, they really mean that the resourcing to achieve the plan isn’t reasonable, or available, or within plan. We will come back to the cost side later, but what’s important to realize is that cost cutting is a finite game. You can only cut cost to what is required to produce the good or service being offered. Revenue, however, is infinite, limited only by imagination and determination.

      That’s how you think about it, right? Entrepreneurs understand this well, as do newly minted general managers (GMs) or even those like Harrison, tasked with taking point on an annual plan. You can literally do anything to drive growth! It’s overwhelming. Hell, everyone today wants to be visionary, a disruptor, a magical leader of change in the markets. Consistent growth strategy development takes time, focus, effort, and knowledge.

      I grew up in technology as an engineer early on and then really went into project management and program management. And then I took over a group. So now I had a “business” to run. This was the first time I had to think – “Okay, well, I’ve got this thing, now what in the world do I do with it? Where do we go? Where do we invest money? What business do we want to be in?” It may have come naturally to me because of my dad. He had retired from the Air Force and started his own couple of small companies and I remember what we would usually argue about was where we should invest money. So strategy was an early thing to me. Since maybe in my teens I’ve thought about how you grow a business and so it’s been a part of me for a long time, but probably reduced to practice when I first took over as a director of an organization.

      James is a master of growth strategy development and execution. He’s pretty rare. You come across people who can think about how you could grow, but very few of them are capable of driving that growth. I really enjoy his recollection of where he started:

      Early on… I was at TI (Texas Instruments) and I took over the space business. We were trying to decide what we had. We had started the space business on one very particular set of products, and we said, “now that we’ve got this, how do we expand it? Where else do we go?” So the first thing for me was just try to look at, what did the market look like, and it is particularly hard on the defense side to understand markets. What are we good at? What were the markets? How big could we be? What did we need to invest? And we went through that process. Now you know at TI and other large companies that usually have some guidance, you fill out these charts and so you get a little bit of guidance on how to move forward. But I would say it was really trying to understand what the market looked like and how did that intersect our technology.

      I am a really big James Klein fan. And he’s representative of the people I sought out to participate in this book.

      This book is meant to serve as your playbook to develop clean, clear, effective, pragmatic, and executable growth strategies. It’s for both new and existing practitioners of our art who aspire to become scientists of the discipline. Through the use of parable, framework, and process, my goal is to educate you about the method used by some of the most successful companies in the world. This method includes organic and inorganic growth, regional and global footprints, large‐scale enterprise, and entrepreneurial ventures.

      The truths of growth are physical laws that we are all bound by. Ideally, you read this because you want to learn, but even if you’re being forced to read this for class, you’ll learn something that could create a market of billions for you someday. So, open your mind, be ready to think, and enjoy learning from some of the best and brightest business minds in the world as they tell you their story. This is incredibly fun stuff, and if you are lucky enough to be responsible for this function, then you know it’s pretty rarefied air and should be savored.

      Growth is an infinite game, with the revenue line limited only by your ability to convince new or existing customers to buy the products or services you currently or will produce.

      Ever think about how to bound the question of growth? I’m a growth strategist, so I worry quite a bit about the sources of growth. Where does growth come from?

      Turns out the question has a simple answer.

      All revenues come from two variables: (1) customers and (2) the goods/services they buy. Full stop. It’s really that simple: who buys and what they buy. Every business, from the first fish seller bartering his daily catch for salt to the world’s biggest consumer goods company, grapples with these two fundamental questions. Let’s talk about customers first.

      Kevin Watters is blazing fast in every sense. Physically, he’s a marathoner who is a top competitor for his age group. He processes information quickly and insightfully. He is quick to offer his help, and his fast‐tracked career is an incredible success story. Currently retired and an adjunct professor at Tulane’s Freeman School of Business, Kevin started his career in consumer packaged goods working for Proctor & Gamble, where he received his “MBA on top of an MBA” through their training program. He then went on to dip his toe in entrepreneurial waters, got married to his amazing wife, Fern, had their first child, and then he needed to go back into the corporate world. He found his way into the world of online banking in 1999 and never looked back. He joined Bank One, and was noticed by Jamie Dimon, who asked him to take over as President of their Consumer Internet Group. From there Kevin took over wholesale banking. When Bank One was acquired by JPMorgan Chase, he took over as CEO of business banking and grew it to over a billion‐dollar business. Being one of the few businesses that managed credit well through the Great Recession, he was asked to fix the wreckage that was the mortgage portfolio, which he did. In his final role at JPMorgan Chase, Kevin took over as CEO of their credit

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