Comments about these process-improvement offerings from non-Ford experience.
Both my dealerships have participated in Standards For Excellence (Cadillac) since the beginning. Here's some of the things that made SFE work for me.
The best part of SFE (besides the cash bonus, of course) is the customer research. We continue to research everything customers want (both Cad and non-Cad owners and the employees!) and the insight is powerful. Besides, the research topics are flexible and not dependant on what JD Power thinks important.
Anyways, the first couple of years, SFE was 'voluntary'. There's the annual fee charged at the end of the year and a little pressure to sign up. The 'facilitators' or consultants from Maritz worked pretty hard in the beginning but they were not spread too thin (# of dealerships or geography). The 'reward' came in the form of a calculation based on increased sales (measured against your district) and CSI scores higher than the district. When succesful in both, there was $250 per car sold given back and the bar was raised.
In the first two years this was quite a bit of $$. In the subsequent years, the payout has been a total amount (say $2,500,000 total) divided by 'points'. In every year we have received enough to cover the subscription. And there were the trips to Hawaii, Germany, Canada, ...
Then Cadillac made a mistake. They made SFE mandatory to sell the Catera. This added a bunch of dealers to the system who were 'forced', and you know how motivated you are with a gun to your head. There are now two SFE's, one (the original described above) and SFE II which had a lower suscription fee ($8000 vs. $15,000) and no cash bonus.
SFE still works for us except under the new field re-arrangement I find the MAM teams uninterested. They will become more so now because of the learning curve we've conquered. There isn't any 'qualification' or 'certification' process (which sounds expensive) because our measurement is based on improvement.
As M. Bower suspected, these things change the competitive landscape by effecting price. The bigger competitive advantage is in business improvement, but the real challenge is to master the system with little or no additional cost (which will be tough).
scott
[This message has been edited by sallen1 (edited 05-23-2000).]
[This message has been edited by sallen1 (edited 05-23-2000).]