
Training Industry announced Bluepoint Leadership Development as one of the top providers in leadership development. This is the seven year in row that Bluepoint listed to “Watch For in 2017”.


It is needed a total approach that differentiates your product or services based on your competitive advantage, a Premium Offer.
There are four elements that contribute equally in developing a premium offer.
Does price determine your position at the market? The answer is no. However, we shouldn’t underestimate that many buyers consider low price as the main criteria when buying, whereas others feel more confident with their suppliers when price is high. Once the price reflect a competitive advantage then a higher price is acceptable. Some brands are identified with premium price like Rolex, Mercedes, etc. So the question that rises is: Can I support a low price or Should I define and develop a competitive advantage to differentiate my product and set a higher price?
When you choose the Premium Price policy then you have to formulate your Offer. Offer is what you are capable to provide your customer as a total, is the product and the services and the benefit. It is also your position in the Market. Practically, there are three different Main Strategies:
Once you decide the strategy of your offer, you should align Services, Quality & Sales Force
From a helicopter point of view services at a certain industry looks almost the same. Nevertheless clients’ expectations are not. Clients expect different response when dealing with a “Niche/Expertise Offer” and different from a “Value Added Offer”.
In a completive market even “low price” players set a minimum standard in quality. Quality doesn’t mean perfection. Quality is relative and is the proper mix of product, person and resources that work together to meet your customer expectations. It should be in alignment to your offer and it involves all stakeholders. Quality doesn’t provide results; it is a set of criteria and KPI’s that ensure a long term development of your competitive advantage.
The latest approach of McKinsey concerning Organization Health provides a profound and practical analysis that comes very handy when setting the qualities standards. The most important points are:
Let’s also make it clear, Excellence doesn’t exist. What you need is a customer oriented organization and the right salespersons which mean that their knowledge and skills are in alignment to your Offer.
Sales force is much more that service. They design the premium image on customers’ mind (psychological side) and built with logical steps you price level (business side). The sales approach is depending on your offer.
by Bluepoint Leadership Development |
by Bluepoint Leadership Development |
The best architects have an inside track on human behavior. They understand the power of physical and spatial design—how we humans are subtly but inevitably shaped by the spaces in which we live and work. Indeed, the quality of our lives is significantly informed and influenced by our physical environment. In some cases, architecture will quietly constrain us, forming uncomfortable boundaries and edges around our activities. In the best cases, it will stimulate and uplift, energize and even inspire.
The great leader also has this inside track. They recognize that human beings are profoundly shaped not just by physical spaces but by social spaces. And just as we may not notice the persistent influence of the architecture around us, we often fail to appreciate the extraordinary power hidden in the unseen contours of our social environments. A significant part of leadership, therefore, involves a special kind of design. Today’s leader needs to understand how to create fertile organizational spaces—generative cultural environments that lift our spirits, nudge us forward, and raise our collaborative potential. This is why I believe that today’s leader needs to be a social architect—a builder, creator, and designer of dynamic, cultural spaces. And organizations that have those types of leaders will almost always find ways to thrive.
Over the past decade or so, most organizations have done a pretty good job of training their leaders in influence-focused competencies such as coaching, communications and team building. These are certainly important competencies that leaders use to get people to perform better within the system. However, they do not equip leaders to change the fundamental parameters of the system itself. Developing leaders with powerful influencing skills is only one part of what it takes for an organization to flourish. Great coaching, communication and the like only goes so far in an environment not intentionally designed for success. We are social animals, so culture matters. A pristine tool will only last so long in an old, wet, and rusty toolbox before it begins to resemble its environment. And this is not a job for a few C-suite execs and OD professionals. Every leader right down to the first-line supervisor needs to be a skilled designer, a social architect.
So what does it mean to be a social architect? Well, the first question to ask is simple: What is the current condition of your organization’s social space? How much care has been taken in the existing social architecture? Has it been consciously and deliberately designed to align the interests and efforts of employees, customers, clients, and stakeholders, a dynamic cultural blueprint that embodies the best values and ideals of the organization? Or has it been unconsciously derived, a kludge of partially considered values, more representative of the organization’s past battles than its aspirational future?
For too many organizations, the latter is true. Not because leadership tried and failed, but because leadership has not adequately put attention on this critical area. In order to address this common issue, I have come to believe that there are four essential areas that today’s leader needs to master: Organizational Structure, Job Design, Customer Experience, and Culture.
1. Organizational Structure
“All organizations are perfectly designed to get the results they get.” This old leadership maxim captures an important truth—we tend to hit what we aim for, even if we don’t know exactly where we are aiming! And that’s the fatal flaw in many organizational structures—they are not actually designed at all, at least in the creative, conscious sense of that word. But of course, there are many ways to design an effective, dynamic structure. No one size fits all. Let me offer four questions to consider as you think about the design of your own organization.
Does every person have a clear line-of-sight to his or her customer? Everyone has a customer, whether inside or outside the organization. People work best, in many cases by an order of magnitude, when they can see exactly how the product or service they provide serves their customer. A clear line-of-sight to the customer clarifies roles and prioritizes activity. It makes everyone’s job easier.
Does your organizational structure reward initiative? Leaders tend to get the behaviors they reward. Do you want people to be willing to give you bad news? Then don’t penalize them for doing so. Do you want people to take risks? Then be aware how you reprimand failure and reward initiative. People are smart. They learn quickly how an organization structure actually behaves. Make sure you explicitly reward the behavior you are trying to encourage.
Is the organization designed to maximize collaboration and synergy? Almost every senior executive that I know believes that there is a significant amount of collaboration and synergy throughout their organization. And why shouldn’t they? Their direct reports are telling them that this. But is it really happening? If so, it should be a valuable source of competitive advantage because it is not likely happening in your competitors’ organizations. Here is the litmus test question: Is collaboration that produces real value richly rewarded? (If so, the highest paid people in your organization will be those who make sure others get credit for their work.) And conversely: Is destructive internal competition and territorialism firmly rebuked? (Or do you go wink-wink and support the lone wolf who believes, probably correctly, that the rest of the organization just holds him or her back?) Are you giving lip service to the values of collaboration, teamwork, and partnership or have you designed an organization structure that demands it??
Is the organization designed on the notion of “premeditated agility”? It is hard on the ego to create the very best possible plans and strategies….and then design an organization that will fix your mistakes. Leaders are not infallible. Don’t set up an organization that pretends they are. Senior leaders need to recognize that all of their strategies and decisions are imperfect, to some degree, and explicitly empower people throughout the organization to use their good judgment to implement better decisions and strategies to create more value or better serve the customer.
2. Job Design
There are the three critical principles that need to guide all job design when it comes to the social architecture of an organization.
Create Clear Accountabilities – Forget the outdated notion of job descriptions. Hold people accountable for specific outcomes. In many organizations, people are held accountable for processes. Customer service. Financial reporting. Project management. These are processes. They have fluid boundaries and overlapping responsibilities, making it easy to blur responsibility, make excuses, or dodge accountability. They also encourage territorial behavior and a “follow-the-rules” mindset. Outcomes are different. Delighted customers. Accurate, timely financials. A specific project completed on time and within budget. An effective leader designs jobs with clear outcomes, encouraging creativity, autonomy, and problem solving.
Maximize Freedom – Provide people with a scary amount of freedom to create their own priorities, make their own decisions, and do the work they love. Often the problems in an organization start with one common, overriding tenet—everyone needs a boss. Underlying this is the belief that people cannot be trusted to be responsible. Don’t design that conviction into the fabric of your organizational culture, or you may get what you expect. Maximize freedom in a context of real accountability and people will surprise you.
Craft Big Jobs – Abandon the outdated idea of delegation. No one wants to do your work; people want to do their own work. Design the absolute biggest jobs possible—just a little too big for the incumbent—and then you take on whatever bits and pieces are left over. A little spillover drudgery will be worth it if it means your team members aim high and push their limits.
3. Customer Experience
Sadly, most companies never think about intentionally designing their customers’ experiences. In order to design an incredible customer experience, we have to put ourselves in the customer’s shoes. This is not simply a high level of customer service; it’s a complete change of perspective. We have to see the product or service and the organization from the outside, so to speak—from a customer or client perspective—and then design the customer experience from that vantage point. The authentic empathy in this perspective takes real development and leadership. One has to suspend one’s own perspective and adopt that of another—value what they value, believe what they believe, fear what they fear, and see what they see. Few companies truly succeed at this, but the ones who do prosper.
4. Culture
Just as every human being has a personality, every organization has a culture. The moment there are two or more people, collective cultural values begin to emerge. And as any organization grows, that culture, with its own unique personality, will develop. Can leaders design organizational culture? I don’t think so. But they can have an impact on it—give it direction and infuse it with aspirational values. And they can build pathways towards that ideal culture. Will they ever arrive at that destination? Probably not, but it doesn’t matter. An effective culture is born in the authentic aspiration. And a leader’s actions and interactions make the difference between a pretense on a piece of paper, and a living, breathing culture where people care about embodying the better values of an organization.
“Design is a funny word.” claimed the late Steve Jobs. “Some people think design means how it looks. But of course, if you dig deeper, it’s really how it works.” Today’s most effective leaders, experts in creating organizational architecture, understand how to design social spaces that work for everyone.

The coaching wrap-up conversation over coffee quickly turned uncomfortable, at least for me. “You touched me,” said my client, “you really touched me.” With a quick “thank you” in return, I tried to quickly change the topic to something much more benign. (My mind is racing…Is he a football fan? Will a comment about last weekend’s games provide a quick detour in the conversation?) He was not to be dissuaded. “You are not hearing me, Gregg. You touched me here.” This time he pointed directly at the middle of his chest. “Right here!”
It seems that I have spent many years positioning leadership coaching as a practical and potent performance improvement process (and it clearly is that) while minimizing the more personal aspects of this work. After all, we are coaches, not counselors. And not just regular coaches for that matter. We are leadership coaches whose clients are primarily senior business managers. We use words like “partnership” and “challenges”, not “intimacy” and “compassion.” We ask our clients to step up to a bigger game, not get in touch with their feelings. And now, sitting right in front of me is the seasoned COO of a major manufacturing enterprise telling me that our coaching work has not only rekindled his passion for leadership, but for life itself. * He continues, “I have made three commitments, and I am living these every day. First, I have committed to have a positive impact on the jobs, careers and lives of every single person in our organization, regardless of their position. Second, I have recommitted myself to be a genuine servant leader in my family. Third, I have committed to leave this planet a better place in some way when my time is done.” And then he said the words to which I had no response: “My heart has opened up to a whole new world.”
In this column I often provide a few insights or aphorisms for those readers who are interested in the leadership development field. This time I simply have some reminders for myself:
When I am coaching I need to remember that:
Coaches give little advice. We mostly remind our clients of their talents, their passions, their aspirations and their potential. That day over coffee, my client reminded me so clearly of one of the most important tenets of this work – it is impossible to fully explore leadership potential without touching the heart along the way.
*I rarely write about my coaching conversations much less quote my clients, however in this case, my client not only gave me his permission, he encouraged me to write the article. I thank him for his thoughtfulness and generosity.

by Gregg Thompson |
When great leaders speak, things happen! People become engaged. Teams gel. Customers are served. Problems are solved and products are invented. Such is the power of a leader’s communication. So important is communication that it is difficult to find a leadership text that does not devote a significant portion of its pages to the topic. Unfortunately, most such works present communication as simply another important leadership competency up there with project management and strategic thinking. Communication is not a leadership competency; it is your leadership. Leadership and communication are synonymous; virtually all of one’s leadership is manifested through communication. As James C. Humes wrote: “Every time you speak, you are auditioning for leadership.”
We should hold leaders to a much higher standard of communication than others. Most others are measured primarily on their ability to efficiently and accurately convey information. Leaders need to do more than simply inform; they need to communicate in ways that get people (as John M. Kane once said) thinking and acting together. They need to create not just understanding, but action. In fact leaders should be judged not by their performances as communicators, but rather by the performance of those they seek to lead. Think about your own leadership. Are the people on your team or in your organization more inspired, more productive and more innovative because of what you communicate? Are you simply an efficient transmitter of information, or are others changing the way they think and act as a result of the words you choose to use?
Fortunately, great communication is an observable and learnable set of practices that are within the reach of all leaders. Leaders at all organization levels can significantly increase their communication effectiveness by adopting the three universal, powerful practices that have been employed by great leaders in organizations of all kinds. These men and women connect with their constituents on a Personal level, construct an enticing image of the Future, and create a compelling Story in which everyone has a starring role.
• Personal. All communication is personal. For the leader, there is no such thing as communication that is strictly business. Unless the listeners decide to allow the leader’s words to touch them personally, their words simply become a part of the organizational noise that is omnipresent today. Picture your listeners with a remote control in their hands. They can shut you off at any point when you no longer are able to keep the personal connection open. Great leaders communicate to us personally. Whether they are speaking to one person or a thousand, they are able to connect with each as individuals. They recognize that others are listening through lenses shaped by their own interests and values, and they make it their job to illuminate these elements in their communication. They share their own driving passions and most exciting They share their own driving passions and most exciting aspirations. They make others feel valued and uniquely important.
• Future. Great leaders invite others to join them in pursuit of a tomorrow that is better than today. Confidence and optimism are apparent in all of their communication. Their positive, enthusiastic view of the future is obvious in everything they say, whether it is ordering office supplies or presenting corporate strategy. They are, however, not simply arm-waving cheerleaders. They view their role as one of advancing the organization along the continuum of time. They see the organization’s future as an extension of its history and current state of affairs. In their communication they honor the heroes and victories of the past, give voice to the realities of the present (both harsh and positive), and reveal and invite others to join them on the path forward.
• Story. Leaders craft big stories for their teams and organizations not just to be entertaining or engaging. They do so because this is the only way humans can think and relate to each other. As Isak Dinesen wrote: “To be a person is to have a story to tell.” We see the world (and our jobs) through stories. It is through stories that we can connect to an organization’s mission and plans. Great leaders make these plans come alive through rich, engaging stories that capture our attention. Most importantly, they help others connect their personal stories with the organization’s story and enhance both in the process. And when they help us see our own starring role in the stories, they elicit our very best efforts.
Great leadership communication is less about the efficient transmission of information and much more about the impact it has on others. The challenging question for all who seek to lead is this: “Are the members of my team or organization more aligned, more committed and more engaged because of what I say and write?”
Fortunately, great leadership communication is not the exclusive domain of a gifted, charismatic few. It is within the reach of all who care enough about others to connect with them personally, to share their most hopeful view of the future and to craft a grand story that provides a special sense of meaning and purpose.
by Gregg Thompson, President of Bluepoint Leadership Development and author of several books, including “Unleashed: Leader As Coach”