Progressive Distributor

Do the right thing

When business is bad, pressure can increase on salespeople to bend the rules to bring in needed revenue. To avoid ruined reputations, distributors must decide how to deal with ethical business situations.

by Richard Vurva

Sales managers don’t often applaud salespeople for walking away from business. But Joan Hoppock of General Industrial Tool & Supply in Sun Valley, Calif., knew her salesman did the right thing when he told her he wouldn’t be calling on a particular account any longer. The reason? The customer told the salesman that if he wanted his business, he had to supply him with Los Angeles Lakers tickets.

That’s not to say it’s never appropriate to give gifts to a client. But a customer who demands kickbacks isn’t the kind of person you want in a long-term business relationship.

Rather than continue to do business with someone who values personal gifts over quality products and services, the salesman quit calling on the customer. Since it wasn’t a major customer, the decision was easy. But Hoppock believes her salesman would have done the same thing regardless of the size of the account.

“It’s easy to have values when they’re easy to follow,” she says. “But they’re not values until you can follow them even when it’s hard to do so.”

Dealing with a
dishonest employee

What should you do if you discover that an employee is dishonest? Most distributors agree that the best approach is to deal with the situation immediately, before one bad apple sours an entire sales team.

“If someone is stealing from you, you must get rid of that person,” says Jay Smith of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “But you also need to ask yourself what you might do to prevent the situation from occurring. Don’t excuse it and don’t sweep it under the rug, but investigate more than the symptom.”

Smith says having a written statement defining your company’s core values won’t prevent employees with bad intentions from behaving dishonestly, but it will make it clear where you stand.

Pete Cowgill of H&C Tool Supply in Rochester, N.Y., developed a brief corporate value statement that he gives to employees. One of the most important values he tries to instill is the need to treat people with honesty and fairness.

“There has to be implied trust throughout the organization,” he says. “If you get a crack in the dike, it’s only a matter of time before other employees find out and start doing the same thing. Before you know it, you’ve got a bunch of people bending rules. If they’re doing it in the organization they’ll start doing it with customers and suppliers. Before you know it, your reputation is ruined. Any time you know about it, you’ve got to step up and deal with it, even if it’s painful to do so.”

Hoppock often talks to salespeople about making ethical business decisions. She knows that her company’s success requires relationships built on trust. A breach of ethics can seriously damage a company’s reputation.

“If I don’t have the kind of trust in my salespeople that they’re going to do the right thing, then I don’t have the right salesperson,” Hoppock says.

Management sets the tone
A National Business Ethics Survey conducted by the Ethics Resource Center and KPMG Peat Marwick in 2000 showed that one-third of the 1,500 workers surveyed said they observed their bosses lying to employees, customers, vendors and the public. They also witnessed their bosses abusing employees, stealing from the company or breaking the law.

Dr. Jay Smith of the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s industrial distribution program says it’s important for management to define the company’s values and ethics. A written code of ethics or statement of company values can avoid problems and misunderstandings among employees.

He cautions, however, that there are no easy answers to many ethical questions.

“Write down as much as you can to prevent misunderstandings, but realize that you can never anticipate every situation that might arise. It eventually comes down to trust,” Smith says.

If employees see managers making questionable choices, they’ll stretch the rules themselves. He adds that company owners and top management must set the tone.

For example, suppose a major customer asks you to supply them with a product that your company is not authorized to sell. You go to the product manufacturer and work out an agreement to sell the product to that one customer. Would you then offer the same product to other customers?

Chuck Gray, chief executive officer of Machinery & Factory Industrial Supply in Racine, Wis., says he would honor his commitment to the manufacturer, even if it meant turning down business.

“I set the moral tone for the company,” he says. “If I allowed things to go on such as selling a product to anybody who wanted to buy it even if I agreed with the manufacturer not to do so, it’s eroding the moral value I tried to instill. That’s going to create problems for yourself down the road.”

Manufacturers don’t always appreciate the position that Gray and distributors like him take. Grateful for the business, they look the other way and accept additional orders that rightly should have gone to another authorized distributor.

“Business is so competitive; a lot of companies are scrapping for whatever crumbs they can grab. If they have to bend the rules, they’ll bend them,” says Pete Cowgill, president of H&C Tool Supply in Rochester, N.Y. “Often, their attitude is, don’t tell me what I don’t want to know.”

Taking a head-in-the-sand approach erodes the trust between manufacturers and distributors, Cowgill says. What can hurt a business relationship even more is when someone makes a choice to deliberately deceive a business partner.

One of the most disturbing practices Cowgill has seen recently involves reverse auctions, where companies invite suppliers to make online bids. At some accounts where H&C Tool Supply entered bids, Cowgill suspected that the customer entered false bids in order to drive down the price. Suppliers who participated in the auction in good faith were unaware that the customer manipulated the process.

“There’s no policing mechanism in this situation. We think there needs to be someone to step in and write a code of ethics,” he says.

Hoppock recently discovered a vendor selling products direct to one of General Industrial Tool & Supply’s customers. When she confronted the vendor, he said it wasn’t the company’s normal policy to go direct, but admitted doing so with this customer.

“If there’s a circumstance where the customer needs to go direct to the manufacturer for some reason, the manufacturer should stand their ground and say, ‘We sell through distribution.’  If the customer insists on buying direct, it’s the manufacturer’s responsibility to involve the distributor by compensating them somehow,” Hoppock says.

Suggesting that it’s not your policy to act in a certain way but going against that policy anyway is like saying you’re not in the habit of cheating on your spouse, but you’ll make an exception just this once.

"Our core suppliers are more important to me than any single customer because they can earn me more money than any single customer. I would hope that suppliers would look at us the same way,” Hoppock says.

You decide
Distributors and manufacturers in the industrial and construction distribution channel face tough business decisions every day. Some are easy to solve; others require thoughtful consideration.

Progressive Distributor posed the following three scenarios to readers of our bi-weekly e-mail newsletter, Progressive Distributor Dispatch. Each scenario describes common problems faced by distributors and manufacturers. We asked readers to tell us how they would handle the situation. Here are the scenarios and some of the best responses:

Scenario No. 1:
You discover that your top-performing salesperson is excessively padding his expense accounts. The accounting department has proof, and other salespeople are aware of the problem, so you can’t ignore the situation. You’re concerned about losing your best salesman if you confront him, but if you don’t, it may hurt morale among the rest of the team. What should you do?

Response:
Establishing and maintaining an environment of integrity and high ethical standards is absolutely critical to long-term success (just ask the former employees of Arthur Andersen, Enron or WorldCom). Padding one’s expense account is stealing from the company, regardless of who does it. The offending person needs to be approached with the intent of giving him/her the opportunity to self-report and make restitution. Should they do so, you have succeeded in enforcing company policy while retaining the salesperson. Restitution is key. In addition, it is important to communicate that any future incident will result in termination.

If, on the other hand, the salesperson continues to deny what the company can prove, management must consider suspension or termination. Suspension is a viable approach if there is a sense that the employee will come to his/her senses given some time off without pay. If the salesperson is unwilling to acknowledge culpability, termination is warranted. Talent should always be trumped by ethical concerns because of the impact a breach in ethics and integrity has on the entire company.

John Sircy, COO
Henry A. Petter Supply Company

Scenario No. 2:
Your distributorship has a long-time relationship representing the manufacturer of Brand A. One of your customers decides he wants to buy Brand B, which you can obtain through a master distributor, but at a lower profit margin. Performance characteristics of the two products are essentially the same. Do you get the customer the product he requests even though you’ll make less money on the deal or do you try to sell him the product with the higher profit margin?

Response:
Call the manufacturer of Brand A to explain that you have presented their case. However, this is a price-sensitive issue and you want to participate in this customer’s business. Ask them the following questions: Do they have a promotion in the works? Do they have a non-branded offering that might be a sub-contract offering? Do they offer an imported product that they are looking to test market? Do they see the need to send one of their own field representatives to the end-user to evaluate their own marketing and sales strategy? An opportunity in today’s market has to be appreciated by all parties and respect is what we all have to earn everyday.

Frank Sespico, national account manager
Toolmex Corporation

Scenario No. 3:
Your company just landed a major account with a manufacturing plant. The plant uses products from a supplier whose brands you don’t carry, so you set up a special pricing agreement with the supplier to handle that customer’s business. Will you make that same pricing available to other customers?

Response:
I would not sell to other customers without first discussing it with the supplier. If other customers want that company’s products, the supplier must be told that there are demands from other customers. I would expect the supplier to allow sales to other customers regardless of pricing agreement.

Carl Norris, president
Rogers Industrial Supply

This article originally appeared in the July/August 2003 issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright 2003.

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