Friday, July 15, 2011

An Introduction To The Broken Windows Theory Of Business


When is a dirty bathroom a broken window?

No, that's not a riddle. It's a question that could today be at the

core of a business's success or failure.

Answer that question correctly

and use that answer as a beacon, and your business could dominate its

competition indefinitely.

Ignore the solution to the puzzle, and you

will be condemning your business to failure in a very short period of

time.

The "broken windows" theory, first put forth by criminologist

James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling in a piece called "Broken

Windows" in the Atlantic Monthly magazine in March 1982, explains

what a broken window is in criminal justice terms.

But the brilliance

of that theory goes much further than one interpretation. It can and

should be applied to business, too, and it can make a critical

difference- if American businesses will simply take the time and have

the courage to notice.

When Wilson and Kelling first unveiled the theory, the idea of

concentrating on seemingly petty criminal acts like graffiti or purse

snatching seemed absurd: How would a crackdown on jaywalking lead

to a decrease in murders?

The broken windows theory states that something as small and

innocuous as a broken window does in fact send a signal to those who

pass by every day. If it is left broken, the owner of the building isn't

paying attention or doesn't care.

That means more serious

infractions...theft,

defacement, violent crime- might be condoned in this area as

well.

At best, it signals that no one is watching.

This is the heart of the broken windows theory: Wilson and

Kelling write that "social psychologists and police officers tend to

agree that if a window in a building is broken and is left unrepaired, all

the rest of the windows will soon be broken."

Why?

Because

the

message being sent out by a broken window- the perception it invites is

that the owner of this building and the people of the community

around it don't care if this window is broken:

They have given up, and

anarchy reigns here.

Do as you will, because nobody cares.

Wilson and Kelling suggested that a "broken window"- any

small indication that something is amiss and not being repaired- can

lead to much larger problems.

It sends signals, they said, that the bad

guys are in charge here; no one cares about maintaining some kind of

order, and anyone who wishes to take advantage of that situation

would be unopposed.

It leads to lawlessness, a kind of anarchy by

neglect.

"Just as physicians now recognize the importance of fostering

health rather than simply treating illness, so the police- and the rest of

us- ought to recognize the importance of maintaining, intact,

communities without broken windows," wrote Wilson and Kelling.

Years later, Wilson told me that the idea behind the broken

windows theory "had to do with the responsibility of the police to take

seriously small signs of disorder because people were afraid of

disorder, and there was a chance disorder could lead to more serious

crime."

Still, critics of the theory greeted it with skepticism, believing

that attention to small infractions would necessarily would necessarily

decrease the amount of attention that could be devoted to much more

serious crimes.

The same objection, in slightly less genteel verbiage, was

raised when Rudolph Giuliani, the newly elected mayor of New York

City in 1994, announced his intention to eliminate graffiti on subway

cars and move the hookers and pimps out of Times Square, to make

Manhattan more "family-friendly."

Critics practically laughed in

Giuliani's face, intimating that the "law and order" mayor- who had

been elected based largely on his experience as a U.S. attorney for the

New York area- was dealing with the small crimes because he knew he

couldn't contain the larger ones.

They were proved wrong.

Giuliani and his new police

commissioner, William Bratton, believed that if they sent out clear

signals to criminals, and to New York's citizenry generally, that a

"zero tolerance" policy would be applied to all crime in the city, the

result would be a safer, cleaner city.

And the statistics bore them out:

Over the following years, the numbers of murders, assaults, robberies,

and other violent crimes all went down dramatically.

And it had all

started with graffiti on subway cars.

I can hear you asking, "What does that have to do with my

business? It's all about crime and criminals."

That same theory is applicable to the world of business.

If the restroom at the local Burger King is out of toilet paper, it

signals that management isn't paying attention to the needs of its

clientele. That could lead the consumer to conclude that food at this

restaurant might not be prepared adequately, that there might be health

risks in coming here, or that the entire chain of fast food out outlets

simply doesn't care about its customers.

Given that scenario, it is not a stretch of the imagination but in

fact a point of logic to conclude that the broken windows theory

should be applied to business, as it was to the problems of crime in

urban areas.

Certainly, the perception of the average consumer is a

vital part of every business, and if a retailer, service provider, or

corporation is sending out signals that its approach is lackadaisical, its

methods halfhearted, and its execution indifferent, the business in

question could suffer severe- and in some cases, irreparable- losses.

This book is about broken windows in business: how they

happen, why they happen, why they are ignored, and the fatal

consequences that can result from their being allowed to go

unchecked.

It is meant as a cautionary tale, a primer, a road map, a

manifesto, and a salute to those companies that fix their broken

windows promptly.

It will explore not only specific examples of

broken windows, how they occurred, and what their long-term results

were but also the culture that creates an environment in which

windows are broken and left unfixed.

I believe that small things make a huge difference in business.

The messy condiment area at a fast food restaurant may lead

consumers to believe the company as a whole doesn't care about

cleanliness, and therefore the food itself might be in question.

Indifferent help at the counter in an upscale clothing store-even if just

one clerk- can signal to the consumer that perhaps standards here

aren't as high as they might be (or used to be).

An employee at the gas

station who wears a T-shirt with an offensive slogan can certainly

cause some customers to switch brands of gasoline and lose an

enormous company those customers for life.

But that's only the tip of the iceberg. I think we as a society

have fostered and encouraged broken windows in our business by

standing by and letting them happen. If the waiter at a local chain

restaurant is impolite, or even merely complacent, about our order, we

chalk it up to a bad day, one employee in one outlet of a large chain,

and we don't send a letter to management or the corporate level.

Even

if we do change brands of gasoline after seeing an attendant in an

offensive T-shirt, we do not write or e-mail the president of the oil

company to alert him to the problem.

We are enablers to window

breakers in every aspect of every business. We don't even necessarily

patronize those companies that fix their broken windows, if the less

attentive one is in a more convenient location or has a slightly lower

price.

That's not to say we are all to blame when a company has

broken windows and doesn't fix them, but it does mean we all bear

some responsibility to stand up for what we actually want and have

every right to expect out of a company to which we're giving our hard-earned

money.

In a capitalist society, we can assume that a company

that wants to succeed will do its best to fulfill the desired of its

consuming public.

If the company sees sales slipping but doesn't have

data from consumers as to what made them decrease their spending on

a retail level, the company will not necessarily know what to fix.

Still, corporations and even small businesses that don't notice

and repair their broken windows should not simply be forgiven

because their consumers didn't make enough of a fuss.

It is the

responsibility of the business to tend to its own house.

The owner of a

Starbucks franchise who decides that revenues are at a healthy level,

such that he or she can put off painting the store for another year, is

asking for trouble:

Yes, things are fine now, but when the paint is

faded and peeling and consumers are no longer getting the experience

they've come to expect, it will be too late to fix things with, literally, a

fresh coat of paint.

The time to repair broken windows is the minute

they occur.

It's better, however, to prevent such smashed panes of glass to

begin with.

This book will examine the origins of broken windows into

two purposes in mind. First, we will see how the small things that can snowball into

large problems develop so we can best illustrate how to

repair the damage once it's been done.

But it is equally important to

see how these things happen so that a smart business owner can make

sure to prevent them at- or before- the very first sign of trouble.

If you

have a policy to paint the store every year, you'll never have to worry

about whether this was the year you waited too long.

In order to best understand how the broken windows theory

relates to business, it's important to examine the original theory- as it

related to criminal activity- in some detail. Because of the brilliant

thinking of Wilson and Kelling, "Broken Windows" illustrated a

serious societal problem that was going unnoticed, and helped turn

around some of the country's largest cities (including the largest of all)

by paying attention to detail.

It began with a program in New Jersey in the mid 1970s. The

Safe and Clean Neighborhoods Program was meant to improve the

quality of life in twenty-eight Garden State cities, and it was to do so,

in part, by increasing the number of police officers on foot patrol,

rather than in patrol cars. Police chiefs, Wilson says today, felt that

such a move was not likely to lower crime levels, "and the police

chiefs were right: They didn't have an effect on crime rates. But they

did have an effect- and in my view, a powerful effect- on how people

felt about their communities and their willingness to use it, suggesting

that fear of disorder was as important as fear of crime."

Indeed, as Wilson and Kelling wrote in the Atlantic, "residents

of the foot-patrolled neighborhoods seemed to feel more secure than

persons in other areas, tended to believe that crime had been reduced,

and seemed to take fewer steps to protect themselves from crime

(staying at home with the doors locked, for example).

Moreover,

citizens in the foot-patrol areas had a more favorable opinion than did

those living elsewhere."

What does this all mean to business?

It's not likely that having

police officers walk the aisles of a Wal-Mart store will increase sales.

But it was the perception that something was being done to increase

order that made the difference for the people living in these New

Jersey cities.

In a business (as we'll discuss in detail through out this book), the broken windows

can be literal or metaphorical.

Sometimes a

broken window really is a broken window, and a new pane of glass

needs to be installed as quickly as possible. Most of the time, however,

broken windows are the little details, the tiny flaws, the overlooked

minutiae, that signal much larger problems either already in place or

about to become reality.

We'll examine companies- huge ones, household names- that

have failed to notice and repair their broken windows and have

suffered greatly for it.

We'll also look at those that have made it a

priority to attend to every potentially broken window and ordered

plenty of replacement panes to make quick, seamless repairs.

The

lessons learned will be many, and varied, and they will have happy,

and not-so-happy endings.

Sometimes companies that deserve to be

rebuked for their laziness will go unpunished, but other times there

will be retribution at the hands of the public, which shows exactly

what happens when you give people what they don't want.

What the public wants more than anything else is to feel that

the business- retail or service-oriented, consumer or business-to-business-

that work for them care about what they want.

Consumers

are looking for businesses that anticipate and fulfill their needs and do

so in a way that makes it clear the business understand the consumer's

needs or wants and is doing its best to see them satisfied.

Broken windows indicate to the consumer that the business

doesn't care- either that it is so poorly run it can't possibly keep up

with its obligations or that it has become so oversize and arrogant that

it no longer cares about its core consumer. Either of these impressions

can be deadly to a business, and we'll see examples of both as we

proceed.

If you run a business, and you truly believe that little things

don't make a difference, you really should read this book- it may save

your business.

If you don't run a business but would like to, this can be

the road map to your success. IF you're merely interested in business

and wonder why one succeeds where a very similar one fails, perhaps

the examples contained here might help answer that question for you.

But it can't be overemphasized that tiny details- the smaller,

the more important- can indeed make a tremendous difference in a

business's success or failure.

Sometimes, yes, a company can make a

huge mistake (the whole New Coke thing was less a broken window

than a neutron bomb placed dead center on corporate headquarters),

but often, even those are foreshadowed by the little things that go, alas,

unnoticed.

A broken window can be a sloppy counter, a poorly located

sale item, a randomly organized menu, or an employee with a bad

attitude.

It can be physical, like a faded, flaking paint job, or symbolic,

like a policy that requires consumers to pay for customer service.

When the waiter at a Chinese restaurant is named Billy Bob, that's a

broken window.

When a call for help assembling a bicycle results in a

twenty-minute hold on the phone (playing the same music over and

over), that's a broken window. When a consumer asks why she can't

return her blouse at the counter and it told, "Because that's the rule,"

that is a broken window.

They're everywhere.

Except at the really sharp businesses.

Read on.




From Michael Levine's Ground-breaking New Book, Broken Windows, Broken Business- How The Smallest Remedies Reap The Biggest Rewards

http://BrokenWindows.com



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