By Tom Brown
Battard was a small $1/2 billion chain of stores and a
wholesaler to smaller stores in southern Belgium.
After completing several projects for Delhaize, based in
Brussels, I was contacted by its president, Pierre Battard.
I agreed to a visit and they had a car and driver pick me up
at my Brussels Hotel and make the 100k trip to the south. The meeting went fine and I wrote a proposal
for a buying system. I emphasized that I
needed to get permission from Delhaize to accept the assignment, and they
(Battard) would need to accept my proposal before I would seek the permission.
Pierre and I had a dinner meeting
in Brussels to review the proposal and he accepted my terms.
It was not so easy to get
permission from Delhaize as they had strong feeling that their consultants
should not help their competitors. I
replied that I do not violate confidences, and that they might gain from
sharing non confidential practices. They
subsequently agreed.
When my colleague, Ron Dupont,
and I arrived in Pommeroeul we stayed in a small, very old inn near the
village. It was 100% French speaking,
and so was Battard, except for Pierre. Ron spoke French with a Swiss accent. His French surname helped as well.
The people at Battard were very
smart and very proud of the business practices that they had worked out. They raised procurement issues that Delhaize
had never considered. My favorite issue
was on how our system would build an optimum order for bulk wine pickup in a
multi-compartment tank truck with different wines and even different wineries
far away in France. It did.
We installed the system over a
year, got good output of the system and good initial results and left them to
proceed.
They did not call for a year, and
when they did I visited. Interestingly,
the IT Director had reprogrammed our system to more effectively use it on their
specific computer. It was
successful. I fine-tuned a few things
and left, noticing that their actual buying and attentiveness to the process
was not as good as when we first installed the system.
Then they approached us about
redesigning the warehouse, probably with
automated handling of goods. I did this
building on a successful design that I had installed in a US company in
Ohio. They were interested but wanted to
see the US site, which I showed them.
The next development was that
they told me that some Dutch consultants had looked at the design and thought
that I was crazy! So nothing was done.
I saw Pierre at an industry
meeting a year or so later. There were
two developments.
--They had done something very
simple to improve the warehouse a little bit.
--He had sold the company to a Dutch company and had been temporarily
working for them in the transition.
The Dutch people apparently were poor operators as Pierre
told me that Battard was nearly out of business!
I think that Battard started off as a great assignment, with
good buy-in to our work and good initial results.
Somewhere along the way Pierre decided to sell the company
and lost interest in running the company.
Then they did a minimal fix-up of the warehouse to enable
selling the company while the company slowly died.
It was in some ways like Laurel Grocery Company is the
US. Both were too small to have great
people who could be leaders below the president.
So when he lost interest it was over.