I was asked the question ‘what did you learn from the turnaround of the GPD‘ a while ago, and was persuaded to present on it.
The GPD was the ‘General Products Division’ of the Dairy Farmers Co-Operative Ltd. It produced all the dairy products you manufacture with milk, which were at the time (mid 80’s) unregulated, while the stuff you put on your cereal in the mornings was regulated to the wahzoo. The GPD was spun out of the much larger milk business so it could be run as a business, and not an outpost to absorb the milk not required in the regulated market.
Various aspects of that journey have been in these pages before, but I had never contemplated the question in depth and from a height, at the same time.
I started with the business just after it had been set up, then called the ‘By-Products Division’ and in the early stages of building a new ‘state of the art’ factory in Western Sydney.
The division was commercial road kill. I know that as I did the first P&L by hand, (calculator, 18 column ledger sheets, pencil and rubber) from scraps of information gathered and constructed from a variety of sources, and a lot of observation.
From that position, turning over $32 million, losing somewhere between $6 & $8 million, with the heavy commitment of the half finished high tech plant nobody knew how to run, 8 years later it was turning $162 million and making good money, with much improvement still to be done. It was a very substantial turnaround, not without its share of drama and missteps, moments of joy and ‘what the hell just happened’. It was a journey that involved everybody in the business, at first reluctantly, then enthusiastically, had built astonishing momentum that was really only obvious to those on the inside.
Then it was stuffed up by a stupid decision to re-incorporate the business back into the milk business in order to ‘spread the successful commercial DNA‘ in preparation for the inevitable deregulation of white milk.
Over the first 6 years I carried responsibility for the Logistics, and part of the sales, in addition to the marketing role I was hired for, and for the last 2 years that the GPD was a separate entity, I was the GM. My ideal job at that time in my life.
Over the eight years, the business and its processes was totally reorganised, the culture completely turned around, and we launched a string of successful market leading products, all of which contributed to the success.
So what did I learn, in no particular order?
- You have to engage all employees, at all levels in the journey. They must understand their role and importance in that journey and to each other.
- When you make a blue, recognise it early, correct and move on. Chasing a sunk investment that is not working is a terrible mistake to make.
- Never look back with nostalgia, just for the lessons as input for what is next.
- Price is not a measure of customer value, it is simply a means to express it that is understood, and unfortunately, usually misunderstood. Price only really matters when all other things are equal.
- No business can be all things to all people.
- Look after your small customers, one day they might be your big ones.
- Standards of performance and behaviour have to be both present, well understood, transparent, and meticulously followed by those who set the tone.
- The greater the general level of transparency the better. Hiding bad news never works, and brushing over problems just lets them fester and get worse. ‘Nip it in the bud’ is always a good piece of advice.
- A managers job is to support the efforts of their staff, not the other way around. Successful companies extend trust to all employees at all levels, and deals with those who breach that trust openly, and absolutely consistently.
- Breaching trust is very different to making a mistake. ‘Good’ mistakes are the result of initiative, trial and error implemented with due diligence, and are essential for learning.
- Continuous investment in product and brand development is necessary, and even more important when times are tough. A great mistake is to see this investment as an expense item in the P&L, available to be managed to deliver a short term result. A powerful brand does not happen overnight, is the outcome of many thousands of small actions and improvements, as well as the obvious external marketing activity, and it is the greatest asset any business can have.
- The culture of the place is very hard to describe to an outsider, but clear to an insider. It is a mix of rules, experiences, stories, relationships, habits, and is more complex than any family.
- Have in place a robust and well understood strategic process which serves as a framework for all decision making at all levels. When an opportunity presents itself, no matter how attractive it may seem, if it is outside the framework, leave it alone.
- Have in place a robust but simple set of KPI’s intimately connected to the strategy, cascaded through every level, and proactively managed.
- Never compete with a stronger competitor on their ground.
- As far as possible, fund growth from cash flow. Long term debt is sometimes necessary, but can turn toxic when the best interests of the lender and the business diverge.
- Be prepared to kill your favourite children and sacred cows, just be careful to ensure they are not golden geese in disguise.
- Look for diversity in the thinking styles of people, and encourage that diversity of thought to bubble through and influence the whole business.
- Treat employees as you would a trusted associate, not a piece on a chess board to be moved around at will. That trust will pay huge dividends in morale, productivity and loyalty
- Institutionalise regular interaction and conversations across functions and up and down the company, without the impediment of formal roles.
- Continuous improvement in everything should be so ingrained that people feel its absence keenly.
My final two years in Dairy Farmers were as GM Marketing of the much larger entity that now included the former GPD. While the business continued to be successful, the pace of change and improvement stalled under the dead weight of the still regulated milk business. After two years, the MD of the business reached the end of his tether with me, constantly being a thorn in his side demanding change, and I with him, so one morning we parted company. The irony is that during this time, I (and the marketing team) launched the single most successful product I ever launched, the last in a long list of successful product launches as an employee. However, the means by which I had to subvert the ‘rules’ to do so were the nail in my corporate coffin.
Another two years on after my exit, the business was flogged off, ultimately to a Japanese brewer, at what I regarded as a fraction of its long term value. A sad end indeed to an iconic Australian food manufacturing business, and perhaps a metaphor for the whole food industry.
I am sure the Japanese live the access to raw material if gives them, although the drought will have hammered the profitability, already depressed by Coles and Woolies milk war.
However, long term a great investment, one that could have and should have remained in Australian hands if we had the mindset.
Its such a shame what happened to Dairy Farmers, and Oak.