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William Duck |
William Duk (pronounced Duke) is the co-owner of the Plantation
Shutter Co., a business that designs, manufactures and installs
adjustable window and door shutters. The company, which was bankrupt
before Duk came along and bought out the original owners, has since
become a thriving, national business in South Africa. He is also one of
the finalists for the 2012 Sanlam/Business Partners Entrepreneur of the
Year award.
Duk was asked about running a successful business.
What would you say are the top three skills needed to be a successful entrepreneur?
- Understanding how to take a product to market and positioning this product in the market place
- Skill of dealing with people and building relationships – both in terms of an exceptional team internally as well as strategic relationships with suppliers, partners and clients
- Financial acumen and underpinning this with sound systems and processes
What sacrifices have you had to make to be a successful entrepreneur?
I am in the fortunate position where it feels like I have not had to
make any sacrifices as I absolutely love what I do and can’t imagine
having chosen any other path. I have the full support of my wife who is a
fellow shareholder and integral in what we do and have achieved today.
Being an entrepreneur is first and foremost a state of mind so in that
sense one could say it is a 24/7/365 activity and all consuming. This
would definitely appear to be a big sacrifice to those that cannot
relate or have chosen a different path but for someone living it, it’s
merely life itself, so hence not a sacrifice of anything.
Besides money, what are your favourite ways to compensate people?
We try as much as possible to recognise all individuals who have
performed exceptionally and have integrated this into our culture and
organisation as much as possible. Recognition and acknowledgment from
your peers, team or seniors in the business is tremendously powerful and
I don’t think anyone can ever get enough of it. It is also amazing how
far just a simple “thank you” for a job well done can go.
As we evolve and grow, these reward and recognition programmes can
and will evolve into a more elaborate structure besides the ad hoc
celebratory team dinners or massages and spa days for the back office
team.
What have been some of your failures, and what have you learned from them?
There have been numerous lessons along the way from which we have
learnt. We have in turn ploughed these lessons back into the processes
and business as we have evolved.
If I had to pinpoint the single biggest lesson, though, it would
definitely be around partnering with someone who I did not see eye to
eye in terms of life and business philosophies. It wasn’t entirely
through choice in the sense that he was the original founding partner
who I partnered with 50/50. Dealing with this dynamic was by far the
single most challenging aspect of the journey to date and a very
expensive lesson in buying him out 18 months ago.
In your opinion, is it more challenging to buy an existing business than to start one from scratch?
It really depends on the circumstances. If capital allows, buying an
existing successful business and then adding value to the business, is
probably the easiest. Next easiest, is starting a business from scratch
as one can grow organically as the market allows and build the
necessary team to achieve what one needs to achieve as one evolves.
Taking over an existing business that has failed is definitely the
path with the biggest potential pitfalls so it depends. In my case it
was:
- Inheriting such a large cost base from a standing start
- The cost of making good on all the existing clients and other relationships
- The level of wasted emotional energy and money (to rectify the situation) of inheriting a business partner with whom one is not aligned
What was the tipping point for The Plantation Shutter Co.?
There was definitely no single clearly identifiable tipping point but
more a sustained effort and mindset of continual improvement and doing
the right activities over and over again. Running a business is
definitely in line with running a marathon (not doing a short sprint) so
having a long term view and adopting this mindset of continual
improvement best sums up the key ingredients. If something is not
working properly, change it.
One of these mini changes along the way, which had a dramatic impact
on who we were and the overall mindset, was utilising the large
production capacity that we had, to promise a 21 working day turn around
in our timber shutters. Historically the shutter industry had always
been a long lead time industry, typically anywhere from 6 to 12 weeks or
more and the lead time would vary depending on what time of year it was
or how busy the supplier was. We turned this concept on its head by
committing to a 21 working days (4 weeks and 1 day) lead time,
regardless of time of year. Others have tried to follow with similar
lead times but no one has or is able to do this consistently throughout
the year. Our commitment to this through tailoring all our processes,
systems and production environment is core to business and our mindset
of being 100% client focused and being regarded as the best in the
industry is reflected in this walk that we walk, every single day of the
year.
Another perhaps more notable step, or mini-tipping point, goes back
to buying the original founding partner out of the business 18 months
ago.
Source: How We Made It in Africa
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