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The Lean Post / Articles / Are You Serving “Internal Customers” or Your Real Customer?

Are You Serving “Internal Customers” or Your Real Customer?

Executive Leadership

Are You Serving “Internal Customers” or Your Real Customer?

By Brent Hostler

March 26, 2015

Are teams in your organization working in silos? Do processes feel fractured? Do upstream or downstream steps occurring in different silos adhere to internal service level agreements? If so, Brent Hostler says, it's worth asking if you're team members may be striving to reach outcomes many steps removed from what your customer actually wants.

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In my work coaching organizations large and small, I often hear the term “internal customer”. For me, this concept can be potentially damaging to the successful operation of a business. Consider the following two examples why while also reflecting on the last time you considered your real customer’s needs.

When I incorporated the game of Telephone into a class I facilitated recently, I thought the participants would recall fond childhood memories. While this was partially the case, the game also served as a keen reminder of the importance of clear and simple communication. The message, relatively simple in nature, went in one end of the line and came out the other only slightly resembling its origins. Somewhere in the cycle of receive and transmit, the line of a dozen people completely reshaped the message. More importantly, the participants significantly diluted the original message within sixty seconds. I can only imagine the results across hundreds of people, with weeks of time passing between messages.

Another example to consider (for those more mathematically inclined) is the concept of Rolled Throughput Yield. If you’re not familiar with it, it’s simply the probability a process with multiple steps will produce a defect free result. For example, step one in a process is completed 90% right the first time (RFT); step two is completed 70% RFT; and step three, 80% RFT. Rolled throughput yield equals step one (90%) x step 2 (70%) x step 3 (80%) = 50.4%. Said another way, this process has a 50/50 shot at getting the end product or service actually correct. 

So let’s think about how this connects with the idea of the internal customer. Consider now the structure of your organization. Are groups or departments consistently working in silos? Do processes feel fractured? Do upstream or downstream steps occurring in different silos adhere to internal service level agreements? Any of these scenarios can lead to people striving to reach outcomes many steps removed from what the paying customer expects. The more numerous the silos, the more likely the metrics are inconsistent, and the more likely employees feel disconnected from the organizational purpose of satisfying the end customer.

By maintaining or promoting the notion of an internal customer, an organization is potentially clouding their ability to delivery a world-class service or product – the right product their customer or client actually wants or needs. Each link in the chain, each silo standing between the input of a product or service and the deliverable to the real customer, serves as one additional point of dilution to the true value sought by the customer. As not to turn a blind eye to the ever-evolving and competitive world we live in – specialization, offshoring, and telecommuting are all factors impacting this employee-customer dynamic. This may be a matter of semantics for some, but leading an organization by fostering a culture that supports the idea of ONE team – cross-functional and diverse by nature – delivering to THE customer may make the difference between keeping the lights on and going out of business. 

In an environment where outstanding customer service is evolving to be one of the most important differentiators, depending on your industry, it may be worth revisiting your organization’s alignment across department and value streams. The risk of taking the wrong approach may result in “internal customers” not having an actual customer to please.

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Written by:

Brent Hostler

About Brent Hostler

Trained as a Master Black Belt in Lean, Brent believes foundational concepts such as trust, respect, and communication drive more organizational improvement than complicated (and pricy) alternatives. When not working, Brent promotes simplicity in process through a series of short, illustrated books called the Common Sense Collection at commonsensecollection.com.

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