Intercompany divisions, often pursue goals, and objective specific to their operational structure. However, lost in the shuffle, is tying all the divisions together, so that everyone works in a harmonized effort to satisfy the customer. Are your internal divisions pursuing divisional success over total customer satisfaction? It’s a fair question that many companies need to answer. How about your company? Support the show
All content for SimpleBiz360™ Podcast is the property of Jeffrey Mason and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Intercompany divisions, often pursue goals, and objective specific to their operational structure. However, lost in the shuffle, is tying all the divisions together, so that everyone works in a harmonized effort to satisfy the customer. Are your internal divisions pursuing divisional success over total customer satisfaction? It’s a fair question that many companies need to answer. How about your company? Support the show
Are you humble enough to accept the necessity for change? OMOQ #112
SimpleBiz360™ Podcast
2 weeks ago
Are you humble enough to accept the necessity for change? OMOQ #112
When it comes to faulty behavior, societal trends often suggest we adopt a blame-shifting mindset over a self-ownership model. However, in business it is quite the opposite because the orders usually stop flowing when a customer is dissatisfied. In business we have to buck the societal leanings, eat some humble pie, and then accept the fact that we need to improve to get the orders flowing again. This takes a mindset of humility. Are you will to eat some humble pie in order to serve your cust...
SimpleBiz360™ Podcast
Intercompany divisions, often pursue goals, and objective specific to their operational structure. However, lost in the shuffle, is tying all the divisions together, so that everyone works in a harmonized effort to satisfy the customer. Are your internal divisions pursuing divisional success over total customer satisfaction? It’s a fair question that many companies need to answer. How about your company? Support the show