Saturday, August 20, 2011

Late Summer


This time, the smell was different. It was no longer scented with the blooms of spring or early summer.  Musty, it was perfumed with wet earth, and rotting leaves.  The four days of late season thunderstorms had subsided.  I was finally able to venture outside for some sunshine.  This was the time of year that I loved most growing up, but I also hated it.  You see, like most kids I hated giving up my freedom to go back to school.  I know, it’s hard to believe that a nerd like me hated school, but I did.  I think we all are inherently upset at the season’s change.  We look at autumn’s arrival as though we are staring down the barrel of a shotgun. 

But it is time to get back to school.  Not only the children, but the adults as well need to continue their educations.  How about you?  Have you ventured out of your comfort zone?  We decry the lack of training and knowledge in our industry, but rarely invest our time to better ourselves and the business at large.  I was surprised at the lack of my peers at a recent end-user conference (even though it meant that I personally had better networking opportunities).  There are also tradeshows, seminars, webinars, blogs, Twitter feeds, E-mag’s – we have more avenues for learning than ever before.  Do we take full advantage of them?

Learning opportunities abound.  We give great lip-service to education, but usually don’t “walk the walk”.  An investment of our resources will invariably pay great dividends to ourselves, our businesses, our communities and our industry.

The corn is tasseled, the leaves are mostly still on the trees.  We still have time to enjoy the rest of the summer.  The great recession still affords us ample opportunity to re-tool our skills, to get back to school, to learn a few new tricks.  But we’ll need to give up some of our freedom, to get out from behind our desks, venture out and attend some events.  Who knows, you just might learn something.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Late Summer


This time, the smell was different. It was no longer scented with the blooms of spring or early summer.  Musty, it was perfumed with wet earth, and rotting leaves.  The four days of late season thunderstorms had subsided.  I was finally able to venture outside for some sunshine.  This was the time of year that I loved most growing up, but I also hated it.  You see, like most kids I hated giving up my freedom to go back to school.  I know, it’s hard to believe that a nerd like me hated school, but I did.  I think we all are inherently upset at the season’s change.  We look at autumn’s arrival as though we are staring down the barrel of a shotgun. 

But it is time to get back to school.  Not only the children, but the adults as well need to continue their educations.  How about you?  Have you ventured out of your comfort zone?  We decry the lack of training and knowledge in our industry, but rarely invest our time to better ourselves and the business at large.  I was surprised at the lack of my peers at a recent end-user conference (even though it meant that I personally had better networking opportunities).  There are also tradeshows, seminars, webinars, blogs, Twitter feeds, E-mag’s – we have more avenues for learning than ever before.  Do we take full advantage of them?

Learning opportunities abound.  We give great lip-service to education, but usually don’t “walk the walk”.  An investment of our resources will invariably pay great dividends to ourselves, our businesses, our communities and our industry.

The corn is tasseled, the leaves are mostly still on the trees.  We still have time to enjoy the rest of the summer.  The great recession still affords us ample opportunity to re-tool our skills, to get back to school, to learn a few new tricks.  But we’ll need to give up some of our freedom, to get out from behind our desks, venture out and attend some events.  Who knows, you just might learn something.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Many Unhappy Returns


Okay, we’ve all been here before – the knives that are “too sharp” and the char broiler that is “too hot”.  And we’ve probably heard the “I’m throwing ‘your equipment’ out onto the street if you don’t resolve this” line more times than we’d like to admit.  What happened to the individual responsibility of the purchaser for the choices that were made?  Is our disposable culture of the “no quibble warranty” so pervasive that there’s no other way to resolve issues than to send the E&S back in exchange for new?

The market has certainly matured for foodservice equipment and supplies. Years ago, I recall a dealer telling end-users who were concerned with scratches on the stainless steel on equipment that he was delivering “what were you expecting, jewelry?”  But that was then and this is now.  The consumer empowerment contagion of the big box retailers, and websites that are all too willing to accept returns – no questions asked – has spilled over into the commercial arena.  The expectations are unmanageable.

A certain celebrity ordered a half size convection oven to roast his Thanksgiving turkey in his Manhattan apartment.  Neither he, nor the dealer bothered to check if there was enough power, space to mount the unit, or of a way to deliver it (I’m sure that the celebrity’s building doorman was thrilled).  Given the fact that, oh by the way, the cavity of a commercial half size convection oven is actually smaller than a domestic oven, Mr. Hollywood now wanted to return the oven.  My partner saved that particular voice mail message for many months. 

What dealer showroom or rep facility isn’t filled with the OOPS inventory of salesman errors?   What service agency doesn’t have the dead inventory of yesterday’s (or this morning’s) outdated solid state components?  In a society rushing headlong towards the latest, greatest, state-of-the-artest, we’ve seen controls that are obsolete before they make it into production after being introduced at a trade show.

Get it right the first time?  With all of the variables in utilities, sizes and options, thousands of possible permutations for each model can be configured.  Mistakes happen despite the shop drawing procedures that most factories have in place, and the configurators that many more have on-line.  Take the school cafeteria line-up that was signed off on, produced and delivered, only to be rejected because it was the mirror image of what was called for.  

Can you say “restock” and “charge back”?  I personally know of no words that are more dreaded in the dealer community than these (except maybe “freight charge”).  There is no-one that wants to absorb these fees, no matter how justified they may be.

With razor thin margins, how can we afford to continue on this path?  Without the benefit of the good will that it engenders, how can we not?