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Sarah Worsham / Sep 23, 2008

Tom Wilson, CEO of Palace Sports and Entertainment on "The Palace Way"

basketballlaffy4kTom Wilson, CEO of Palace Sports and Entertainment, spoke about “The Palace Way” at a local networking event last week.  Palace Sports & Entertainment operates The Palace, DTE Energy Music Theater, The Detroit Pistons, The Detroit Shock and Meadow Brook Music Festival.  “The Palace Way” is about winning and striving for excellence but it is also about taking care of your two most important assets – your customers and your employees.

The Palace has been voted Arena of the Year eight times by Performance magazine, twice by Pollstar magazine and is listed annually among North America’s top-grossing arenas. Voted “Best Outdoor Concert Venue” in Pollstar’s 2000 Readers’ Poll, DTE Energy Music Theatre has been listed as the nation’s most attended amphitheater by Amusement Business/Billboard each of the 17 years of PS&E ownership. – Reuters

Striving for Excellence

Obviously winning is important to professional teams, but also is important to any team.  The Palace showed their employees (not just their atheletes) that they were consistently doing ok, but not excellent.  They put it to their employees to be part of the solution and to strive for excellence in everything – sales, marketing, maintenance, customer relations – everything.  This has created an environment which helps the atheletes perform and a place where customers want to be.

Listening to customers

The Palace is always asking their customers what they like and don’t like.  Most people will say everything is ok, but even with 1/10 giving you places to improve, it will help improve the experience and environment for everyone.  Customers talk to each other and every customer who has a great experience will share that experience with their friends and coworkers.

It’s a Team Effort

Along with the accolades listed above, The Palace has been listed as one of the best places to work in metro-Detroit and about half of the employees have been there for 10 years or more.  Employees are treated as team members with a part to play in the overall goals of the organization.  They are encouraged to come up with ideas and, more importantly, given the opportunity to fail.  By failing, employees learn valuable lessons to improve their overall performance and care about the company’s future.  You may have noticed that all of the awards and accolades have been won by groups of people based on the opinions of their customers.  It takes a team working together to provide customer service so excellent that the customers are willing to give positive ratings in a award survey.

Don’t be Afraid to Take Risks & Think Outside the Box

When The Palace was being built, the architect and engineer involved had never built a sports facility of this magnitude.  They didn’t know when to say no, so they were willing to take risks.  The Palace was the first facility to put corporate boxes so close to the floor.  This allowed them to provide an amazing experience for their corporate customers while keeping ticket prices low for general admission.  The result was a unique and rewarding game experience that both corporate and regular customers wanted to be a part of, which, incidentally, creates an excellent game situation for the atheletes.

Do What’s Right

It’s important to make decisions that are moral and ethical and are right for the long term.  Sometimes it is hard to make the right decision for the long run, but it is important to “stick to your guns” and make your case heard.  Mr. Wilson spoke about the period in Piston’s history known as “the teal era”.  The team wasn’t winning and ticket sales were hurting.  The right thing to do was to lower general admission prices so that more people could attend the games.  While this cost the company money in the short term, it allowed them to create a winning atmosphere that paid off in the long run – both for winning games and making revenue.

Summary

Often businesses get caught up in making “business decisions” without taking into account their most important assets – employees and customers.  Sometimes “business decisions” should also be “people decisions” to further the long term health of the company.  No one said doing business is easy or fun, but making the right decisions for the future can be very rewarding.

(photo by laffy4k)

Sarah Worsham / Sep 22, 2008

Internet Business Strategy – What is the Current Situation?

situationargenbergBefore beginning to strategize, you need to create goals for your business.  In order to create goals you need a solid grasp of your current situation on the Internet (your current web presence). To get an idea of your current internet situation take a look at:

Website – Ideally your website is the hub of your Internet presence with customer-centric design and content.

  • Analytics – How well is your website performing?  Basic statistics such as page views, visits and uniques are useful.  But more importantly, how many leads and conversions are you getting?  Where is your traffic coming from?  How useable is your website?  Are people getting frustrated?
  • Usability – Can visitors find what they are looking for on your website?  Is it easy to use?  What could be improved?
  • Content – Great content provides your customers with the information they need to succeed.  Creating content should be a continual process.  What content do your customers want to see?  What expertise can you provide?
  • Design – Your website needs to be easy to use (usability), but also should be eye-catching and professional.  Are the fonts need to be easy to read and does the layout should draw visitors into your message?

Community & Brand Reputation– Your customers are talking about you both online and offline.  Find where your customers are and join the conversation to get key insights into improving your business.

  • Blog – If you have a blog, what feedback have your readers given you? What are other bloggers saying?  Who has linked to your blog and what have they said?
  • Forum / Discussion Boards – If you don’t have discussion boards on your website, find places where your customers frequent.  Listen to concerns and join the conversation with suggestions for improvement.
  • Social Networks – Your customers are probably on social networks already (if they aren’t they probably will be soon).  Find social networks where your customers frequent and see what they are saying.  Join the social networks to give them an opportunity to connect.
  • Reviews – Have there been any reviews of your products and services?  What can be improved?

Search Engines – Many potential customers will find your website through search engines so it is important to understand how search engines currently crawl and index your site.

  • Keywords – What keywords do the search engines see on your site?  Where does your site rank for various keywords?  It can be helpful to pick the top 100 to monitor at first.  There are a number of free tools available to help (Google Webmaster tools, Rank Checker for Firefox, SEO Quake for Firefox and Internet Explorer).
  • Indexed Pages – How many pages on your website (and blog) do the search engines include in their indices?  (SEO Quake and Website Grader can help).
  • Incoming Links – How many other sites are linking to your website?  What are they linking to?  What are they saying? (SEO Quake and Website Grader).
  • Outgoing Links – What other websites are you linking to? (Google Webmaster tools, SEO Quake).
  • Cache – What pages are the search engines displaying in their results?  What do they have saved that may be old content?  (Google Webmaster Tools).

Marketing – What is your company trying to say to customers and potential customers?  What are the current marketing messages your company is using?  What is the status of any advertising or sales campaigns?  What is the return on investment (ROI) of any campaigns?

  • Advertising – It is important to understand how any advertising is impacting your bottom line and helping to reach your goals.  Besides budgets, clicks, and impressions, it is important to measure leads, conversions, or sales – what return you are getting on your investment (ROI).
  • Competitors – Who are your competitors?  What are their web presences?  What marketing and advertising are they doing?  What are their strengths and weaknesses?  What opportunities and threats exist?

There is quite a bit of information to gather, but once you have it you’ll be able to get a good overview of what your current Internet presence is.  You should be able to find opportunities to improve and be able to formulate some business goals. As you can see, Internet business strategy merges into traditional business strategy by using the Internet to collect information and feedback and to further business goals.  Next we’ll talk about vision and goals.

(photo by argenberg @ Flickr CC)

Related Posts:

  • How to Create an Internet Business Strategy – Introduction
  • How to Create an Internet Business Strategy – Methodologies
  • Vision & Goals for your Internet Business Strategy
  • What are the Requirements for your Internet Business Strategy to Succeed?
  • Creating an Internet Business Strategy – Implementation

Technorati Tags: internet business strategy, internet strategy, internet strategic planning, internet strategic plan, internet strategy consulting, internet business consulting

Sarah Worsham / Sep 16, 2008

Measuring Business Goals

Page views, visits, uniques, bounce rate, etc.  These are all good statistics to help you understand how your website is performing.  However, more importantly is measuring how your website is obtaining your business goals.  To do this you first need to come up with goals for your site.  Occam’s Razor has a good post on key performance indicators (KPIs) to help measure the success of your website in terms of your business goals.

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Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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