Book recommendations via Twitter
blogs

4
posts
The Little Big Things: 163 Ways to Pursue EXCELLENCE
Thomas J. Peters
#131 The Case of the Two-Cent Candy
Years ago, I wrote about a retail store in the Palo Alto environsa good one, which had a box of two-cent candies at the checkout. I subsequently remember that "little" parting gesture of the two-cent candy as a symbol of all that is Excellent at that store. Dozens of people who have attended seminars of minefrom retailers to bankers to plumbing-supply-house ownershave come up to remind me, sometimes 15 or 20 years later, of "the two-cent candy story," and to tell me how it had a sizable impact on how they did business, metaphorically and in fact.
Well, the Two-Cent Candy Phenomenon has struck againwith oomph and in the most unlikely of places.
For years Singapore's "brand" has more or less been Southeast Asia's "place that works." Its legendary operational efficiency in all it does has attracted businesses of all sorts to set up shop there. But as "the rest" in the geographic neighborhood closed the efficiency gap, and China continued to rise-race-soar, Singapore decided a couple of years ago to "rebrand" itself as not only a place that works but also as an exciting, "with it" city. (I was a participant in an early rebranding conference that also featured the likes of the late Anita Roddick, Deepak Chopra, and Infosys founder and superman N. R. Narayana Murthy.)
Singapore's fabled operating efficiency starts, as indeed it should, at ports of entrythe airport being a prime example. From immigration to baggage claim to transportation downtown, the services are unmatched anywhere in the world for speed and efficiency.
Saga . . .
Immigration services in Thailand, three days before a trip to Singapore, were a pain. ("Memorable.") And entering Russia some months ago was hardly a walk in the park, either. To be sure, and especially after 9/11, entry to the United States has not been a process you'd mistake for arriving at Disneyland, nor marked by an attitude that shouted "Welcome, honored guest."
Singapore immigration services, on the other hand:
The entry form was a marvel of simplicity.
The lines were short, very short, with more than adequate staffing.
The process was simple and unobtrusive.
And:
The immigration officer could have easily gotten work at Starbucks; she was all smiles and courtesy.
And:
Yes!
Yes!
And . . . yes!
There was a little candy jar at each Immigration portal!
The "candy jar message" in a dozen ways:
"Welcome to Singapore, Tom!! We are absolutely beside ourselves with delight that you have decided to come here!"
Wow!
Wow!
Wow!
Ask yourself . . . now:
What is my (personal, department, project, restaurant, law firm) "Two-Cent Candy"?
Does every part of the process of working with us/me include two-cent candies?
Do we, as a group, "think two-cent candies"?
Operationalizing: Make "two-centing it" part and parcel of "the way we do business around here." Don't go light on the so-called substancebut do remember that . . . perception is reality . . . and perception is shaped by two-cent candies as much as by that so-called hard substance.
Start: Have your staff collect "two-cent candy stories" for the next two weeks in their routine "life" transactions. Share those stories. Translate into "our world." And implement.
Repeat regularly.
Forever.
(Recession or no recessionyou can afford two cents.)
(In fact, it is a particularly Brilliant Idea for a recessionyou doubtless don't maximize Two-Cent Opportunities. And what opportunities they are.)

Amazon Rating: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | |
| US$16.49 | |
(As of Sep 07 15:33 , info) | |
1 review from Business blogs:
- The Tom Peters Weblog 11 Mar 10:
... The Little BIG Things is now available as an audio download through Amazon. com (although the link points you to Audible. com since Amazon now owns Audible). And as Erik mentioned, you can find it at iTunes. One fan alerted us that if you try to search by Tom Peters at iTunes (and some booksellers), you may have trouble finding The Little BIG Things as the author listed is Thomas J. Peters or Thomas Peters (who knew that search wasn't smart enough to do that yet?). We recommend searching by the book title. ...
3 reviews from Marketing blogs:
- Duct Tape Marketing 30 Jun 10:
... Talking Little Things with Tom PetersThis content from: Duct Tape Marketing Marketing podcast with Tom Peters (Click to play or right click and “Save As” to download – Subscribe now via iTunes My guest for this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast is management consultant and author of a dozens of books, including the mega best seller In Search of Excellence, Tom Peters. Some would suggest, and I would have trouble arguing, that Peters is the most influential business voice since Peter Drucker. His new book The Little BIG Things is a fabulous collection of very solid information presented in snack size format. These kinds of books are so easy to read and can be picked up at any point in the book and still deliver great value. Peter’s message of old fashion decency rings very true in today’s business environment. ... - Web Ink Now 15 Mar 10:
... Great stuff here. If you don't have 12 minutes for the entire thing, check out the timeouts below and do listen to Tom answer at least one question. We discuss business, excellence, writing, toilet reading, marketing using free content, and life on a Vermont farm. And we also talk a bit about his new book The Little Big Things: 163 Ways to Pursue EXCELLENCE (just released). Tom Peters has been writing bestselling books and has been a top-level speaker to international business audiences for more than 25 years. Both Fortune Magazine and The Economist call Tom, "uber-guru of business. " His advice is just as important today as in 1982 when his groundbreaking book In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-Run Companies (called "the greatest business book of all time" by Bloomsbury UK), was published. ... - Chris Brogan 09 Mar 10:
... gotten me in trouble for years. Well, his books have. I finally got to have lunch with him, and then see him keynote. The affair just grows and grows. And now, Tom’s done the whole “compile some good blog posts into a better book” thing. It’s awesome. His new book, The Little Big Things: 163 Ways to Pursue EXCELLENCE (amazon affiliate link), is just outright wonderfully STUFFED full of Tom Peters-ish things about pursuing excellence. Some of it is so simple you’ll kick yourself for not doing it already. The rest of it is thought-provoking and ...












Follow
Share