n Since 1996, Clarke
American's market share has increased by half to its
current 26 percent.
n Since 1997, surveys
of partner organizations have consistently shown a
96-percent satisfaction rate.
n In 2000, Clarke American
associates averaged 76 hours of training, more than
the "best in class" companies tracked by
the American Society for Training and Development.
n In 2001, more than
20,000 ideas from Clarke American associates were
implemented for a cost savings of an estimated $10
million.
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On March 7, 2002, President
George W. Bush and Commerce Secretary Don Evans presented
five organizations with Malcolm Baldrige National Quality
Awards in recognition of their performance excellence and
quality achievements. Among the winners was Clarke American
Checks Inc., which won in the manufacturing category.
Founded in 1874, Clarke American supplies personalized
checks, checking-account and bill-paying accessories, financial
forms, and a growing portfolio of services to more than
4,000 U.S. financial institutions. With its headquarters
in San Antonio, the company employs about 3,400 people at
25 sites in 15 states.
In addition to filling more than 50 million personalized
check and deposit orders every year, Clarke American provides
24-hour service and handles more than 11 million calls annually.
Clarke American's industry has undergone massive consolidation,
leaving three major competitors with a 95-percent share
of the $1.8 billion U.S. market for check-printing services
supplied to financial institutions. However, since 1996,
Clarke American's market share has increased 50 percent.
Revenues were greater than $460 million in 2001.
What follows is an interview with Karen Hollingsworth,
the company's vice president of First in Service performance
excellence. This is the second of five interviews, conducted
with a representative from each 2001 Baldrige Award winner,
appearing in consecutive issues of Quality Digest.
QD: Tell us a little about Clarke American.
Hollingsworth: Clarke American is predominantly
thought of as a check-manufacturing company. Our core business
is producing checks and check products for financial institutions.
We sell these products directly to the customer. We have
a relationship that's based upon our partners--the financial
institutions--which are banks, credit unions and securities
firms that sell our checks to their end-user customers.
In addition to checks, we provide business forms, deposit
tickets and a number of other types of forms for financial
institutions. We also provide some accessory products through
our servicing arena. We have about 17 plant sites across
the nation.
And we have seven call centers, which act on behalf of
our financial institution partners to accept calls from
their customers (our mutual customers) regarding reorder,
address changes, any of the things related to the check.
We also offer other products for sale: daytimers, portfolios,
check-filing systems and so on.
QD: How long has Clarke American been in business?
Hollingsworth: One hundred and twenty eight years.
We actually have an original partner from 128 years ago:
Frost Bank, which is also headquartered in San Antonio.
QD: When was the Baldrige criteria first introduced to
the company and what was the attraction?
Hollingsworth: The company applied for the Baldrige
Award for the first time in 1993. It was introduced because
in the 1993-1994 time frame, the industry was going through
a tremendous financial pricing crisis. At that point, there
were probably in excess of 60 check printers in the United
States. During this pricing crisis, there was a tremendous
amount of acquisition, divestiture and collapse. Today there
are essentially four players in the market.
Having spent his life in manufacturing, our CEO, Charles
Corbell, knew that in order for Clarke American to survive--as
this market collapsed and all these printers collapsed--we'd
have to distinguish ourselves as something different. And
it was he who chose the Baldrige process.
QD: What was the outcome of that initial application?
Hollingsworth: When the company first applied for
the Baldrige Award, we didn't get a site visit. In hindsight,
that's the best thing that happened because the examiners
provided a very good feedback report, which of course is
the value of participating in the Baldrige process.
I believe that not getting the site visit, yet having
the feedback report, really helped the company develop a
respect for the process and improvement. We reapplied in
1994. That was the beginning of our serious quality journey.
We've been on a quality journey since about 1986 in the
customer-focused arena, understanding that the customer
is first.
QD: What does the "First in Service" term
your company uses refer to?
Hollingsworth: We adopted that concept in 1986 to
help us focus on the customer through the use of listening
posts and surveys, and performing quality function deployment
studies. The very first examiner feedback report was the
catalyst. It suggested that we were too internally focused.
We weren't looking outside our own company and outside our
own industry. We responded by benchmarking outside the industry
in a big way. I think that's what has led to the success
today.
QD: For Clarke American, what was the most difficult
element of getting to that highest of Baldrige levels?
Hollingsworth: Particularly when we began to focus
on the customer early on, it really required a shift in
the way we thought about who our customers are.
Initially, the industry as a whole focused on banks and
financial institutions as the customers. The Baldrige process
was the reason we renamed that group as partners, because
it was actually the end users of the product that could
tell you whether they were satisfied with the products that
they received. They could tell you about the total experience
of ordering and receiving and so on. So, when you're wrongly
focused on the wrong customer set, you make wrong decisions.
I think making that change to our mode of thinking was the
greatest challenge.
QD: Has your company tracked the expenses associated
with not just the application but the implementation and
the refining of the criteria?
Hollingsworth: We track everything here. We're an
incredibly measurement-focused organization. Yes, we do
track expenses related to both applying, celebrating, site
visiting--all of that sort of thing. But the aspect of managing
the business using Baldrige, the implementation, is actually
built into the budget of every line manager. And we don't
pull that out separately simply because the way we view
it here is that "First in Service" is the responsibility
of every associate of Clarke American. And every leader
of every organization certainly needs to be making the right
choices and decisions of using our First in Service quality
tools to embed this in the way they do daily operations.
QD: Has the company experimented with any other
performance improvement methodologies, such as ISO 9000,
Six Sigma or quality circles?
Hollingsworth: We don't utilize ISO 9000; it's not
something that's of value to our particular customer base
and partner base. Having come out of a manufacturing background,
I'm very familiar with ISO 9000. If we see that our market
ever develops a penchant for that, I feel like we could
receive registration very readily because we're incredibly
well-documented from a process standpoint, and we adhere
to all the tenets of ISO 9000. We just haven't sought certification.
Secondarily, I would say that our First in Service culture
is uniquely designed by Clarke American, but it encompasses
the concepts and philosophies of all of the quality gurus
that have come before. We really value the leadership focus
and all of the team methodology that Joseph M. Juran and
W. Edwards Deming would have had in place. And we understand
the value of defect reduction that Philip Crosby would have
focused on. We even have something in our First in Service
methodology that very much equates to the Six Sigma Black
Belt. It's a key company-management position. And I've actually
been through deployment of Six Sigma with two other companies;
I understand Six Sigma very well and can look at our culture
and say that all of the pieces of it are here, but we just
don't feel a compelling need to relabel our processes with
some other methodology.
QD: Compare the levels of difficulty in the two
different tasks of getting the company to the Baldrige recipient
level and then maintaining that level of excellence once
the award has been achieved.
Hollingsworth: We've not reached a plateau. This
is not something that was an end goal. This is certainly
a significant milestone on our journey, but our vision is
to be a world-class company. We've defined "world class"
as sort of the Good Housekeeping seal of the Baldrige process.
That's been part of our vision. But I think maintaining
it is even more challenging--you can't let up; you have
to continue the process, and we're certainly prepared to
do that and have said that all along; this is a milestone
and not a finish line.
The reason that I think it's more challenging is that
you certainly come under greater scrutiny from outside,
and you have to be very careful not to dilute your interests
and to continue to manage your business using the tools.
I think there's a lot more activity that has to be managed
effectively. Keep your focus on the business and continue
to apply your First in Service tools and methodologies to
it.
For more information about Clarke American, visit www.clarkeamerican.com.
For information about current or past Baldrige Award winners,
visit www.nist.gov/public_affairs/releases/g01-110.htm.
Robert Green is Quality Digest's managing editor. Letters
to the editor regarding this column can be e-mailed to letters@qualitydigest.com.
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