The Great Game of Business Blog

Think Outside the Top Line: How Open-Book Management Helps Employees Understand the Bottom Line

Written by Mary Lewis | Mar 24, 2015 1:00:00 PM

 

 

“We need to sell more stuff!”

“If only the sales team was on a plan, we would be hitting our profit numbers and making bonuses!”

Do you ever hear this chatter in your company? When our bottom line profits are not up to par, we all have a tendency to first focus on the top line. When in reality, there are all kinds of opportunities internally to boost profits. In most companies, additional profits are slipping through the cracks every day.

Open-book companies have many opportunities to teach their employees the income statement, especially if they actively nurture financial literacy. The Great Game of Business® is a very active system of open-book managing that creates proven superior results. According to Forbes, Open-book Management companies can double or even triple employee engagement, and register as much as a 30% increase in productivity and profitability in the first year alone.

As a business leader, imagine how exciting it is when employees want to learn about the income statement and balance sheet. These employees are curious about the financials and how their actions impact the results. Not only does this feeling of engagement benefit the entire company, but it creates a consistency of behaviors across the board.

To develop that “buy-in” feeling, I find it helpful to think of my own experience at my local gym, which actually is very successful internationally, selling programs to 55,000 gyms worldwide. In 12 years of my membership, I always feel like it is my choice to get more fit, competent and stronger, and I know I will achieve this faster because of their offerings. The programs are varied, the timetables are frequent and recurring, every exercise is demonstrated, individual skill level is not highlighted in-group lessons, and instructors are very competent, professional and encouraging. My fitness, strength and sense of well-being has improved enormously, and I still attend 3–4 times a week because of its clear benefits.

The benefits of open-book management to a company are a similar sort of commitment to the financial fitness of their employees. If employees see that gaining financial knowledge will help them be more competent, they will find it enjoyable. As they begin to enjoy financial literacy, they will just keep getting better and will eventually “buy-in.”

Using the gym example and examples from open-book companies, here is a 5-point plan to create those “bottom-line gurus”:

1. Display and demonstrate.

Take time and thought in displaying the complete income statement, so it is easy to read as one whole linear statement. One of my clients used a shower lining type material adhered to a wall of the staff break room. Include percentages and ratios (e. g. percentage of net profit, variable and fixed costs of sales).

2. Instructors are competent.

Encourage management and employees to learn the company’s financials from “rookie” to “instructor” level. They can lead training bites or the huddles with knowledge and confidence.

3. Encourage improved financial literacy at regular meetings.

Take time to listen, repeat and explain financials at the main huddle reiterating important financial ratios and their trends.

4. Supplement regular training with developmental bites.

Request “trainers” to run training bites including: what ifs - what if we charged more or sold more? Would this make much of a difference if we reduce expense?

5. Share the impact and feel the results.

Introduce a bonus plan driven by a transparent relationship to results. Consider establishing a bucket bonus plan where the bonus is measured each quarter.

 

If you can implement these five steps into your financial literacy training process, you’re sure to see a quick increase in employee engagement and understanding of company financials.

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