BUSN 318
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1.5 The Three Threads
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Define customer value and explain why it is important to small business compe��veness.
2. Define digital technology and explain its role in small business compe��veness.
3. Define e-business and explain why e-business is important to small businesses.
4. Define e-commerce and explain why e-commerce should be integrated into small businesses.
There are three threads that flow throughout this text: customer value, cash flow, and digital
resources and e-environments. These threads can be likened to the human body. Cash flow is the
circulatory system, without which there can be no life. Digital technology and e-business are the
internal organs that carry out daily processes. E-commerce is the sensory system that enables
business to observe and interact with the external environment. Customer value is overall health.
These threads must figure prominently in all small business decision making. Although they are
necessary but not sufficient conditions for small business survival, the chances for survival will be
reduced significantly if they are not used.
Customer Value
In 1916, Nathan Hanwerker was an employee at one of the largest restaurants on Coney Island—but
he had a vision. Using his wife’s recipe, he and his wife opened a hot dog stand. He believed that the
combination of a better tasting hot dog and the nickel price, half that of his competitors, was his
recipe for success. He was wrong. Unfortunately for Nathan, Upton Sinclair’s book The Jungle a
decade before had made the public suspicious of low-cost meat products. Nathan discovered that his
initial business model was not working. Customers valued taste and cost, but they also valued the
quality of a safe product. To convince customers that his hot dogs were safe, he secured several
doctors’ smocks and had people wear them. The sight of “doctors” consuming Nathan’s hot dogs gave
customers the extra value that they needed. It was all about the perception of quality. If doctors were
eating the hot dogs, they must be OK. Today there are over 20,000 outlets serving Nathan’s hot
dogs.John A. Jakle and Keith A. Sculle, Fast Food (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999),
163–64.
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In principle, customer value is a very simple concept. It is the difference between the benefits that a
customer receives from a product or a service and the costs associated with obtaining that product or
service. Total customer benefit refers to the perceived monetary value of the bundle of economic,
functional, and psychological benefits customers expect from a product or a service because of the
products, services, personnel, and images involved. Total customer cost, the perceived bundle of
costs that customers expect to occur when they evaluate, obtain, use, and dispose of the product or
use the service, include monetary, time, energy, and psychological costs.Philip Kotler and Kevin Lane,
Marketing Management (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice-Hall, 2009), 121. In short, it is
all about what customers get and what they have to give up.
In reality, the creation of customer value will always be a challenge—particularly because it almost
always needs to be defined on the customer’s terms.H. Whitelock, “How to Create Customer Value,”
eZine Articles, March 16, 2007, accessed October 7, 2011, ezinearticles.com/?How-to-Create-
Customer-Value &id=491697. Nonetheless, “the number one goal of business should be to ‘maximize
customer value and strive to increase value continuously.’ If a firm maximizes customer value, relative
to competitors, success will follow. If a firm’s products are viewed as conveying little customer value,
the firm will eventually atrophy and fail.”Earl Nauman, Creating Customer Value: The Path to
Sustainable Competitive Advantage (New York: Free Press, 1995), 16. This will certainly be true for
the small business that is much closer to its customers than the large business.
The small business owner needs to be thinking about customer value every day: what is offered now,
how it can be made better, and what the competition is doing that is offering more value. It is not
easy, but it is essential. All business decisions will add to or detract from the value that can be offered
to the customer. If your product or service is perceived to offer more value than that of the
competition, you will get the sale. Otherwise, you will not get the sale.
Cash Flow
Revenue is vanity…margin is sanity…cash is king.
- Unknown.
Most people would define success with respect to profits or sales. This misses a critical point. The
survival of a firm hinges not so much on sales or profits, although these are vitally important, as it
does on the firm’s ability to meet its financial obligations. A firm must learn to properly manage its
cash flow, defined as the money coming into and flowing from a business because cash is more than
king. It is a firm’s lifeblood. As the North Dakota Small Business Development Center put it, “Failure
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to properly plan cash flow is one of the leading causes for small business failure.”“Why Is Cash Flow
So Important?,” North Dakota Small Business Development Center, 2005, accessed October 7, 2011,
www.ndsbdc.org/faq/default.asp?ID=323.
An understanding of cash flow requires some understanding of accounting systems. There are two
types: cash based and accrual. In a cash-based accounting system, sales are recorded when you
receive the money. This type of system is really meant for small firms with sales totaling less than $1
million. Accrual accounting systems, by contrast, are systems that focus on measuring profits.
They assume that when you make a sale, you are paid at that point. However, almost all firms make
sales on credit, and they also make purchases on credit. Add in that sales are seldom constant, and
you begin to see how easily and often cash inflows and outflows can fall out of sync. This can reduce a
firm’s liquidity, which is its ability to pay its bills. Envision the following scenario: A firm generates
tremendous sales by using easy credit terms: 10 percent down and one year to pay the remaining 90
percent. However, the firm purchases its materials under tight credit terms. In an accrual accounting
system, this might appear to produce significant profits. However, the firm may be unable to pay its
bills and salaries. In this type of situation, the firm, particularly the small firm, can easily fail.
There are other reasons why cash flow is critically important. Firms need to have the money to buy
new materials or expand. In addition, firms should have cash available to meet unexpected
contingencies or investment opportunities.
Cash-flow management requires a future-focused orientation. You have to anticipate your future
cash inflows and outflows and what actions you may need to take to preserve your liquidity. Today,
even the nonemployee firm can begin this process with simple spreadsheet software. Slightly larger
firms could opt for the user-dedicated software. In either case, cash-flow analysis requires the owner
to focus on the future and to develop effective planning skills.
Cash-flow management also involves activities such as expense control, receivables management,
inventory control, and developing a close relationship with commercial lenders. The small business
owner needs to think about these things every day. Their requirements may tax many small business
operators, but they are essential skills.
Expense control requires owners or operators to think in terms of constantly seeking out
efficiencies and cost-reduction strategies.
Receivables management forces owners to think about how to walk the delicate balance of
offering customers the benefits of credit while trying to receive the payments as quickly as
possible. They can use technology and e-business to expedite the cash inflow.
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Effective inventory control translates into an understanding of the ABC classification
system (sorting inventory by volume and value), and determining order quantities and reorder
points. Inevitably, any serious consideration of inventory management leads one to the study of
“lean” philosophies. Lean inventory management refers to approaches that focus on
minimizing inventory by eliminating all sources of waste. Lean inventory management inevitably
leads its practitioners to adopt a new process-driven view of the firm and its operations.
Lastly, attention to cash-flow management recognizes that there may well be periods when cash
outflows will exceed cash inflows. You may have to use commercial loans, equity loans
(pledging physical assets for cash), and/or lines of credit. These may not be offered by a lender at
the drop of a hat. Small-business owners need to anticipate these cash shortfalls and should
already have an established working relationship with a commercial lender.
A small business needs to be profitable over the long term if it is going to survive. However, this
becomes problematic if the business is not generating enough cash to pay its way on a daily
basis.Barry Minnery, “Don’t Question the Importance of Cash Flow: Making a Profit Is the Goal but
Day-to-Day Costs Must Be Met in Order to Keep a Business Afloat,” The Independent.com, May 28,
2010, accessed October 7, 2011, http://www.articlesezinedaily.com/dont-question-the-importance-
of-cash-flow/. Cash flow can be a sign of the health—or pending death—of a small business. The need
to ensure that cash is properly managed must therefore be a top priority for the business.Barry
Minnery, “Don’t Question the Importance of Cash Flow: Making a Profit Is the Goal but Day-to-Day
Costs Must Be Met in Order to Keep a Business Afloat,” The Independent.com, May 28, 2010,
accessed October 7, 2011, http://www.articlesezinedaily.com/dont-question-the-importance-of-cash-
flow/. This is why cash-flow implications must be considered when making all business decisions.
Everything will be a cash flow factor one way or the other. Fred Adler, a venture capitalist, could not
have said it better when he said, “Happiness is a positive cash flow.”Fred Adler, QuotationsBook.com,
accessed October 7, 2011, quotationsbook.com/quote/18235.
Digital Technology and the E-Environment
Digital technology and the e-environment continue to change the way small and large businesses
operate. Digital technology refers to a broad spectrum of computer hardware, software, and
information retrieval and manipulation systems. The e-environment is a catchall term that includes
e-business and e-commerce. The Internet in particular has had a powerful impact on the demands of
customers, suppliers, and vendors, each of whom is ready—perhaps even expects—to do business
24/7.
Why Digital Technology?
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With the advent of the personal computer and the Internet, small firms may be able to compete on a
more equal footing with larger firms through their intelligent use of digital technologies. It would be
impossible to list all the types of software that can enhance small business operations, so the focus
will be on the major types of aids.
Today, even the smallest of firms can acquire a complete accounting system at a reasonable price.
These packages can be tailored for specific industries and are designed to grow with the company.
They not only generate standard accounting and financial reports but also assist with management
decision making. Information about accounting software for small businesses is easily available on
the Internet.
Small-business operations have also benefited greatly from affordable software that can handle
forecasting, inventory control and purchasing, customer relations, and shipping and receiving. In fact,
the software has advanced to the point where a small firm can cost-effectively possess its own
enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. Only a few years ago, ERP systems were out of
reach for all but the largest firms. ERP systems integrate multiple business functions, from
purchasing to sales, billings, accounting records, and payroll (see Figure 1.2 "Broad Schematic of an
ERP System"). These advances now give small firms the capability and opportunity to participate in
global supply chains, thus broadening their customer base.
Figure 1.2 Broad Schematic of an ERP System
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Touch screen computers, smartphones, or iPads can bring a new level of sophistication to data entry
and manipulation and communications. Smartphones can boost productivity, especially when out of
the office.Christopher Elliott, “5 Ways Smartphones & Servers Boost Productivity,” Microsoft Small
Business Center, 2010, accessed October 7, 2011, www.microsoft.com/business/en-
us/resources/technology/communications/smartphones-and-business -productivity.aspx?
fbid=WTbndqFrlli. It is predicted that the iPad will change how we build business relationships,
particularly with respect to connecting with prospects in a more meaningful way.Brent Leary, “The
iPad: Changing How We Build Business Relationships,” Inc., accessed October 7, 2011,
www.inc.com/hardware/articles/201005/leary.html. Inventory control may soon be revolutionized
by a technology known as radio-frequency identity devices (RFIDs). These small devices enable
the tracking of inventory items. These same devices may change retailing by curtailing time at
checkout and eliminating pilferage.Kevin Bonsor, Candace Keener, and Wesley Fenlon, “How RFID
Works,” HowStuffWorks.com, accessed October 23, 2011,
electronics.howstuffworks.com/gadgets/high-tech-gadgets/rfid.htm.
Using Smartphones in Your Business
Lloyd’s Construction is a 100-person demolition and carting firm in Eagan, Minnesota. This
small, family-owned business is not your typical candidate for a firm that exploits cutting-edge
technology. At the suggestion of the president’s 17-year-old daughter, the firm switched to a
smartphone system that allows for integrated data entry and communication. This system
allowed the firm to reduce its routing and fuel costs by as much as 30 percent. The firm was also
able to further reduce accounting and dispatch costs. On an investment of $50,000, the firm
estimated that it saved $1 million in 2007.Jonathan Blum, “Running an Entire Business from
Smartphones: Mobile Software Helps Track Equipment, Accounts—and Employee Lunch
Breaks,” CNNMoney.com, March 12, 2008, accessed October 7, 2011,
money.cnn.com/2008/03/11/smbusiness/mobile_phone_software.fsb/index.htm.
Video Clip 1.3
RFID Technology
(click to see video)
How RFIDs work.
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Video Clip 1.4
The Future Market
(click to see video)
How grocery shopping may change with RFID.
All these technologies, and others, are within the reach of the small business, but careful analysis
must determine which technologies are best suited for a company. Given the speed of digital
technology development, this analysis is something that should be conducted on a frequent basis. It is
in the best interest of every small business to introduce digital technologies into the business as
quickly as is practical and affordable. There should always be an interest in doing things better and
faster. Through technology, a small business owner will be able to do so much more: grow the
business (if desired), work smarter, attract more customers, enhance customer service, and stay
ahead of the competition.“Technology: Your Roadmap to Small Business Success,” Intel, 2009,
accessed October 7, 2011, www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/world-ahead/world-ahead -small-
business-success-article.html.
The smaller the business, the more efficient it needs to be. Digital technology can help. Digital
technologies, with their relatively low cost, ease of implementation, and power, can offer small
businesses the rare opportunity to compete with larger rivals. If smaller firms are able to fully use the
capabilities of these technologies along with exploiting their faster decision-making cycle, they can be
the ones that secure competitive advantage.
Why E-business?
E-business is a term that is often used interchangeably with e-commerce, but this is not accurate. E-
business uses the Internet and online technologies to create operational efficiencies, thereby
increasing value to the customer.Kelly Wright, “E-Commerce vs. E-Business,” Supply Chain Resource
Cooperative, November 27, 2002, accessed October 7, 2011,
scm.ncsu.edu/public/lessons/less021127.html. Its focus is internal—for example, online inventory
control systems; accounting systems; procurement processes; supplier performance evaluation
processes; tools to increase supply chain efficiency; processing requests for machine repairs; and the
integration of planning, sourcing, and manufacturing. Critical business systems are connected to
critical constituencies—customers, vendors, and suppliers—via the Internet, extranets, and
intranets.Elias M. Awad, Electronic Commerce: From Vision to Fulfillment (Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Pearson Education, 2004), 4. No revenue is generated, but “e-business applications turn into e-
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commerce precisely when an exchange of value occurs.”Kenneth C. Laudon and Carol Guercio Traver,
E-commerce: Business, Technology, Society (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007),
11.
E-business processes should be introduced wherever there is a process that is currently working OK
but is costing unnecessary time and money to implement via paper. This would certainly apply to the
small business that finds itself drowning in paperwork. Small businesses should always consider that
e-business processes could improve their operational and cost efficiencies overall, so thinking about
e-business implications should be part of many decisions. E-business can work for any small business
“because it involves the whole business cycle for production, procurement, distribution, sales,
payment, fulfillment, restocking and marketing. It’s about relationships with customers, employees,
suppliers and distributors. It involves support services like banks, lawyers, accountants and
government agencies.”“Making Money on the Internet,” BizBeginners.biz, accessed October 23, 2011,
bizbeginners.biz/e_business.html. The way you do business and your future profitability will be
affected by e-business. Converting your current business into e-business may require some redesign
and reshaping, depending on the size of your company. However, e-business integration should be
seen as an essential element in the efforts of a small business to increase its agility in responding to
customer, market, and other strategic requirements.William M. Ulrich, “E-Business Integration: A
Framework for Success,” Software Magazine, August 2001, accessed October 7, 2011,
findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0SMG/is_4_21/ai_78436110.
Why E-commerce?
E-commerce, the marketing, selling, and buying of goods and services online, is a subset of e-
business. It generates revenue, whereas other areas of e-business do not. E-commerce has
experienced extraordinary and rapid growth and will continue to grab more market share.Heather
Green, “US Ecommerce Growth to Pick up in 2010, But Hit Mature Stride,” Bloomberg
BusinessWeek, February 2, 2009, accessed June 1, 2012,
http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/the_thread_05272011/blogspotting/archives/2009/02/
us_ecommerce_gr.html.
In a survey of 400 small businesses, each with fewer than 100 employees, it was reported that the
Internet had significantly improved growth and profitability while helping to reduce costs. Some
businesses even indicated that they rely on the Internet to survive. Interestingly, the survey
participants themselves took advantage of e-commerce to purchase computers and office technology
online (54 percent), capital equipment and supplies (48 percent), and office furnishings (21 percent);
one third bought inventory for online resale, and 59 percent purchased other business-related goods
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online.Robyn Greenspan, “Net Drives Profits to Small Biz,” ClickZ, March 25, 2004, accessed October
7, 2011, www.clickz.com/clickz/stats/1719145/net-drives-profits-small-biz. E-commerce offers many
benefits to small businesses, including the following:“E-commerce: Small Businesses Become Virtual
Giants on the Internet,” SCORE, accessed October 7, 2011,
www.score.org/system/files/become_a_virtual_giant.pdf.
Lower business costs. It may not be necessary to maintain as much physical space and staff.
Greater accessibility. Customers can shop when they want to.
The ability to provide customized service. Like Amazon.com, companies can address their
customers on a personal level by recognizing and greeting repeat shoppers.
Increased customer loyalty. Companies can give information to customers while offering
something of value (e.g., a coupon for use on the next purchase or helpful hints about using a
product).
These benefits make it possible for a small business to compete with, perhaps even overtake, larger
companies that do not have the agility and innovation of a smaller company.
The realities of Internet usage make a strong case for small businesses to integrate e-commerce into
their operations, including the following:
Seventy-four percent of American adults use the Internet.
Eighty-one percent use the Internet for information online about a service or product they are
thinking of buying.
Seventy-one percent buy products online.“Trend Data: What Internet Users Do Online,” Pew
Internet & American Life Project, May 1, 2011, accessed June 1, 2012,
http://www.pewinternet.org/Trend-Data-%28Adults%29/Online-Activites-Total.aspx.
Sixty-six percent of adults have home broadband.“Home Broadband Adoption Since 2000,” Pew
Internet & American Life Project, 2010, accessed June 1, 2012,
http://www.pewinternet.org/Static-Pages/Trend-Data-(Adults)/Home -Broadband-
Adoption.aspx.
American small businesses have embraced broadband.Robyn Greenspan, “Small Biz Gets Up to
Speed,” ClickZ.com, January 26, 2004, accessed October 7, 2011,
www.clickz.com/clickz/stats/1704631/small-biz -gets-up-to-speed.
Fifty-five percent of American adults connect to the Internet wirelessly.Lee Rainie, “Internet,
Broadband, and Cell Phone Statistics,” Pew Internet & American Life Project, January 5, 2010,
accessed October 7, 2011,
pewinternet.org/~/media/Files/Reports/2010/PIP_December09_update.pdf.
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All income groups have high Internet usage, from 65 percent (less than $30,000 per year) to 98
percent ($75,000 per year or more).“Demographics of Internet Users,” Pew Internet & American
Life Project, 2012, accessed June 21, 2012, http://www.pewinternet.org/Static-Pages/Trend-
Data-%28Adults%29/Whos-Online.aspx.
Forty-six percent of small business owners plan to grow their businesses by creating or improving
their company’s online presence.“Small Biz Plans to Grow with Social,” eMarketer.com, 2010,
accessed October 7, 2011, www.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?R=1007706.
Almost half (49 percent) of online adults have used online classified ads.Sydney Jones, “Online
Classifieds,” Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2010, accessed June 1, 2012,
http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2009/7--Online-Classifieds/1-Overview.aspx.
We live in a society of 24/7 immediacy, where the equivalent of foot traffic is increasingly becoming
eyeballs on a website.Sramana Mitra, “The Promise of E-Commerce,” Forbes.com, April 9, 2010,
accessed October 7, 2011, www.forbes.com/2010/04/08/retailing-entreprenuers-online -intelligent-
technology-ecommerce.html. People and businesses turn to the Internet to solve problems and
address the needs that they have. Embracing this change and moving existing small business
practices to include e-commerce would not seem to be an option. Rather, it is increasingly becoming a
requirement for survival. Even so, small business must think carefully about how to enter the e-
commerce world or, if already there, how to best take advantage of the opportunities. Both situations
will require careful and deliberate decision making that takes e-commerce implications into
consideration regularly.
K E Y TA K E A W AY S
The crea�on of customer value must be a top priority for small business. The small business owner
should be thinking about it every day.
Cash flow is a firm’s lifeblood. Without a posi�ve cash flow, a small business cannot survive. All
business decisions will have an impact on cash flow—which is why small business owners must
think about it every day.
A cash-based accoun�ng system is for small firms with sales totaling less than $1 million. Accrual
accoun�ng systems measure profits instead of cash.
Digital technologies are very important to small businesses. They can improve efficiencies, help
create greater customer value, and make the business more compe��ve. Digital technology
integra�on should be something that small business owners think about regularly.
It is not correct to use the terms e-business and e-commerce interchangeably. E-commerce is a
subset of e-business.
E-business can work for any small business.
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E-commerce generates revenue. E-business does not.
Moving exis�ng small business prac�ces to e-commerce is increasingly becoming a requirement
for survival.
E X E R C I S E S
1. “A customer calls L.L. Bean about a favorite jacket he purchased more than 10 years ago and has
recently lost. In a ma�er of minutes, the sales agent iden�fies the old jacket, locates a
replacement model in the current catalog, suggests a matching size and color, and orders the
jacket. The replacement jacket arrives three days later.”Peter Kolesar, Garre� van Rysin, and
Wayne Cutler, “Crea�ng Customer Value through Industrialized In�macy,” Strategy + Business, July
1, 1998, accessed October 7, 2011, www.strategy-business.com/ar�cle/19127?gko=81aa7. How
has L.L. Bean added to the customer’s percep�on of value?
2. When thinking about customer value, you should plan to address three ques�ons: (a) What do my
customers truly value? (b) What do I provide? and (c) How does what I provide differ from my
compe�tors? Select a small business and interview the owner to see how he or she answered
these ques�ons. Pay par�cular a�en�on to the first ques�on.
3. Intuit QuickBooks, Peachtree, and AccountEdge are three popular accoun�ng packages. Gather
informa�on from their websites and conduct a compara�ve analysis as though you were a new
small business looking to buy one of them.
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