Costco, Customer Experience Success & Little Things.

CostcoLast night, in a strange moment, I found myself watching a CNBC show about Costco. Yes, Costco – the mega discount warehouse chain. Here’s a clip from The Costco Craze.

Some fascinating tidbits from the show:

  • The company never advertises. Ever.
  • The maximum markup for any product ever is 15%.
  • Costco posts $93 billion in annual sales. (Yes, that’s a B in billions)

But here’s what struck me about it. The founder and former CEO of Costco, Jim Sinegal, said (and I’m paraphrasing) that success is really about doing a million little things well over and over again. Think about that. It’s not the big idea or the store design or the way you price your products. It’s the little things.

Isn’t this true for all businesses? Years ago, sitting the lobby of a client bank, I asked the customers some basic questions on their way out the door. One of them was the uber-simplistic “What do you like about it here?”

So many of those customers answered what they liked was the relationship with the teller or banker. One woman, clearly rushed, stated, “They always smile and get it right. That’s all I ask.”

She liked how the employees at the bank “got it right.” It could be a variety of things, but essentially customers want companies to deliver “right” with a smile.

Costco is not glamorous, and yet shoppers describe it as “fun.” They pay their employees a lot more on average than most retailers, keeping turnover much lower than others. They keep a determined focus on their original strategy – low margins, low overhead, big profits.

There is nothing revolutionary about this, and yet companies forget it and instead launch splashy web sites that don’t work or hire surly employees who don’t care. It is absolutely the little things done well over and over.

How would you grade your own company on doing the little things well over and over? How about those where you are the customer?

Photo Credits: coolmikeol and aquababe via Creative Commons

 

7 comments
Al Smith
Al Smith

Fantastic Jeannie.  "They always smile and get it right"  Wow.  Wouldn't that be a wonderful thing to say every time you left a place of business ?  Love it.  Thanks.

jeanniecw
jeanniecw

@Al Smith Sometimes the simple things are difficult to achieve.

AmyMccTobin
AmyMccTobin

None of this happens by accident. Somewhere someone at Costco made these rules and made sure that management knew they were to be implemented and to be made part of the culture.     Costco is SO much better than its competitors in so many ways.... it's amazing it's not talked about more.

jeanniecw
jeanniecw

@AmyMccTobin I totally agree. They master what they're great at. A key point is how they pay their employees a lot more on average. This keeps the right people.

ambrking
ambrking

 @AmyMccTobin Whoever made the rules is or are geniuses.

jeanniecw
jeanniecw

@ambrking @AmyMccTobin Right!? I get the impression the founder and former CEO impressed those rules from the beginning.

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