Starting the Real Business • 33
also wait until the end of a car’s model year to buy because the auto deal-
ers and manufacturers must similarly offer incentives to clear away the
unsold inventory.
Ford reinforces this concept with this chapter’s statement: “All the large
and successful retail stores in this country are on the one-price basis.” The
principle, therefore, is to sell for as low a cost as possible, but never raise
or lower the price in response to demand. The
seller must also reduce the
cost through continuous improvement, and, specifically, through removal
of waste (muda) from the entire supply chain.
* * *
This is not standardizing. The use of the word “standardizing” is very apt to
lead one into trouble, for it implies a certain freezing of design and method
and usually works out so that the manufacturer selects whatever article he
can the most easily make and sell at the highest profit. The public is not con-
sidered either in the design or in the price. The thought behind most stan-
dardization is to be able to make a larger profit. The result is that with the
economies which are inevitable if you make only one thing, a larger and
larger profit is continually being had by the manufacturer. His output also
becomes larger—his facilities produce more—and before he knows it his
markets are overflowing with goods which will not sell. These goods would
sell if the manufacturer would take a lower price for them. There is always
buying power present—but that buying power will not always respond to
reductions in price. If an article has been sold at too high a price and then,
because of stagnant business, the price is suddenly cut, the response is some-
times most disappointing. And for a very good reason. The public is wary. It
thinks that the price-cut is a fake and it sits around waiting for a real cut. We
saw much of that last year. If, on the contrary, the economies of making are
transferred at once to the price and if it is well known that such is the policy
of the manufacturer, the public will have confidence in him and will respond.
They will trust him to give honest value. So standardization may seem bad
business unless it carries with it the plan of constantly reducing the price at
which the article is sold. And the price has to be reduced (this is very impor-
tant) because of the manufacturing economies that have come about and not
because the falling demand by the public indicates that it is not satisfied with
the price. The public should always be wondering how it is possible to give so
much for the money.
Standardization (to use the word as I understand it) is not just taking
one’s best selling article and concentrating on it. It is planning day and night
and probably for years, first on something which will best suit the public and
then on how it should be made. The exact processes of manufacturing will
develop of themselves. Then, if we shift the manufacturing from the profit to