Issues 35: The times they are a changin'Housing associationsHousing associations, you might imagine, aren't the most dynamic of organisations. After all, they're only landlords, whose job it is to look after their tenants and the stock of dwellings. Given that, these days, lots of them are merely ex-local authority officers, holding down their jobs - the only difference being the senior ones get a company Merc and a fancier job title.Not so. Far from it, in fact. Mergers and acquisitions are very much the name of the game, with small associations clubbing together as Housing Groups, so as to avoid the risk of being swallowed up by some of their more aggressive colleagues.
When technical reps ring round their contacts, they need to listen very carefully to the first words they hear on the phone because, as often as not, the name's been changed. And it's not just a name because, once the rationalisations are done, and the staffing levels revised (downwards), offices disappear and the Response Repairs Manager has become the Asset Director. It's the senior people who make the big decisions, and the big decisions are all about getting on in the world. Twenty grand more for doing the same job is an attractive proposition to most of us. Doing the same job from home, instead of commuting thirty miles every morning, doesn't go amiss, either. Nothing is static any more. Nothing. If we're not moving forward, we are moving backwards. You need decision-makers to know about your latest news but you also need to know where they all are this week. And next. It's a full-time job, making sure you're up to date. Of course you might need to advertise, to ensure your brand name is still to the fore but, when Desi Dewars has been replaced by Connie Ferris, and is ringing round employment agencies, your advert might be in a mag that goes straight into the bin. So reps can spend as much time ensuring their list of contacts is accurate as they do selling your product, and that's very expensive Down Time. Easier, and cheaper, then to get your information about who's working for whom from someone who knows what's happening, day in, day out. That way, your reps aren't also looking for an easier life, a nicer car and better money. North Country BluesUsing up-to-date informationWord on the streets might be that Gordon Brown's economic forecasts are hopelessly optimistic. Spend your working life on the road, up north, and you discover that huge numbers of companies have disappeared without trace.
“The ones that we sent a couple of mailing to.” “And when did you send these mailings?” “Off and on,” she says. “Well..." (grudgingly), “three mailings, over the last couple of years, probably.” Mary's mailing list turned out to be the original, dated March 2002, so maybe things aren't quite as black, up north, as they're painted. Mary's boss hired a good rep called Wayne, handed him a soft copy of the mailing list, and told him to get out there and bring in some orders. Strange to say, his first week was spent driving from one industrial estate to the next, from one end of the M62 to the other, only to find a depressing amount of empty premises. Being new to his job, he asked the neighbours in the next-door units. "No, mate, they went down ages ago." and, of course, it was the same old story, again and again. If that wasn't enough, even the Little Chefs were closing. A grim story to take back to the office. It's like a ghost town out there. No wonder we aren't doing the figures. Mary's list didn't have phone numbers, or even contact names, because she just used to send stuff addressed to the company. Someone's bound to read it, and all that. One in a hundred, they say. Yes, well it has to be one in a hundred of companies that still exist today. Wayne couldn't save himself a few thousand miles by ringing, because there were no phone numbers. What Wayne couldn't know is that a good proportion of the companies were, in fact, so successful that they'd moved out of their little starter unit, onto a sparkling new technology park, and might have been glad to hear from someone. But not Mary's company. Nobody's desperate to hear from a new supplier that's incapable of coping with today's market, whose products might well be as ordinary (to be kind) as their approach to selling them.
So, if someone tells you it's slow out there, do be certain where they got their information.
When The Ship Comes InRegular updatingOne of our biggest databases is updated quarterly. We make it as easy as possible to build new records into a Microsoft Access database but we can't stop it being a bit tedious. It's your data, you're paying for it. Our job is to keep it as accurate as possible. What we can't do is ensure that you develop your own system for updating it. If you're the boss of your department, you clearly need results but, sad to say, you can't take short-cuts. It's no good complaining to us that some of our records are out-of-date if you haven't ensured you're using the right ones (as someone obviously did). He picked the phone up, irate and determined to tell us what was what, then discovered that it was someone in his own department who was letting him down. Well, that's how we tried to tell him -easier than saying how he should have been taking charge of his own organisation. If you're the boss, all we can ask is that you do set up a reliable system - that gets quicker as the quarters come and go. If you're not the boss, and only doing as you're told (doubtless with 101 other more pressing things to deal with), how about making a note that your database gets updated on something like a particular Friday afternoon, every quarter. Come on, it's only four times a year, but what you get in return is the country's most accurate data. Take a look through the separate databanks of who's come and gone because in there will be names that ring a bell... or don't. Try to remember that your quarterly update is a Hot, Hot, Hot News update, reminding you that you needed to call someone and see what's happening. After all, in what looks like a boring little database could be the name of someone who's going to be a new customer at the end of the week.
If you think you could sharpen up a bit, ask Mike Davis for a Fact Sheet on the subject. Of course, you could read the notes that come with your data, but nobody does that!
When Issues is written, the target reader is probably someone with a decent job title and everything that goes with it. We don't mail people like Sophie, in somebody or other's Accounts Department. Maybe we should. Sophie isn't always busy-busy, so she has some spare time, occasionally, to do one or two jobs for Sales. (Small company, we have to be flexible.) The Sales Manager - who does receive Issues, but doesn't read it - already knows all he needs to know about keeping in touch with his prospects. He even hands Sophie a disk, now and again, and asks her to mail a letter to the people on it. It isn't really what Sophie does, so she quickly finds other work and, somehow, the mailings never quite happen. She can even chalk up a little victory for her own department because that's another £600 saved this month. What's the point, as Sophie sees it. The last time she actually did do a mailshot, nobody kept a record of when it went out, who it went out to, whether there was any follow-up, or who replied. A complete waste of time, she reckons, and so does the Financial Director. The Sales Manager is also starting to lose faith in mailshots, because they just don't seem to work. He deals with more or less the same number of enquiries a month and there's never any discernible peak, two or three days after he asked for a mailing. Sophie doesn't reckon much to the Sales Manager. Nobody does in her department. Her boss is good at his job, keeps the company's overheads down, and pays for a nice little Christmas shindig out of his own pocket. That's rather a lot of power for Sophie, if only she knew it, for it's she who decides whether or not things are actually going to get done. It's she who, if she cared, could look at an occasional request for a mailing and ask, if she cared, if it might not be better to do this or that. Why should she bother? She has a nice, easy, safe job, in a nice, easy, safe department and it's not her job to suggest improvements. That, Sophie reckons, is what the bosses get paid to do, only they'd do a damn sight better if they spent less time with their feet on the desk, reading another copy of Issues! |

Housing stock is housing stock. Modern communications mean that geography isn't a problem any more, so amalgamations in Warrington and Widnes are no more difficult than in Wakefield and Watford. A three-bed terrace is a three-bed terrace.
“Whoa there a minute, Mary! What companies might these be?”
