The garden has been struggling this year. I'm not sure if it's from:
- the weather
- my skills
- the soil
Regardless of the cause, there's not much I can do in the short-term.
- Weather is uncontrollable.
- I can learn and practice new skills, but that's a long-term improvement.
- Improving the soil will take at least a few months for a short-term improvement. Real, notable improvement will take years.
This means I need to adjust down my expectations. Yields will be lower than I hoped, some plants won't produce at all, and some days might feel like a waste of time.
But if I continue to improve where I can, in the long-term things will start to work out. That's the underlying principle of continuous improvement (aka Kaizen).
When you're tracking your store's performance you'll quickly find a few metrics that are doing poorly. No matter what you do in the short-term, they don't seem to budge.
These require a similar approach:
Continue investing in improvements but don't expect big changes in the short-term.
Use whatever advice you can, like the insights in Repeat Customer Insights.
Stack of win after win, no matter how tiny. Be happy with a 1% or even a 0.1% improvement. Build up improvements year after year and eventually in the future, you'll be paid back.
Eric Davis
Analyze your customer's behaviors before they defect
Your customers aren't yours forever. Some might have defected today, never to be seen again.
You need to analyze your customer behavior so you can reach them before they defect.