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SMALL BUSINESS
Six Tips for Business Leaders to Consider as We Emerge from Recession
Business Wire
Now that we are finally seeing some signs that we may be beginning to
come out of the long recession, what should we be doing to fully take
advantage of a recovery? That’s the question most middle market
executives are asking today.
Rich D’Amaro, Chairman and CEO of Atlanta-based Tatum LLC, the nation’s
largest executive service firm focused primarily on the Office of the
CFO, has developed a list of six tips which should serve as a basic
guide for financial executives in the coming months.
1. Identify and Maintain Your Strengths, and Your Best Customers
Identify the strengths that have enabled your success to date, and those
that will be important in the future. Which capabilities and skills are
most critical? What distinguishes your ability to serve customers
effectively? Identify your highest-margin customers, and understand what
you are “doing right” for them. Develop a game plan to protect and build
on the strengths that have allowed you to be indispensable to these
customers. Rather than cutting costs across the board, think about how
you can shift resources to retain these high-margin customers, and
attract more customers like them.
2. Capture Market Share: Consider Opportunistic Acquisitions
Recessions reshape industries faster than good times do, creating
opportunities for those with the vision and ability to seize them
quickly. Studies have shown that companies have twice the opportunity to
change their relative position in an industry during a recession
compared to growth times. Keep an eye on competitors, and stand ready to
capture market share as other players allow cost cutting to damage their
service and quality, or fail outright. Market valuations are still down
for strong and weak companies alike, and companies with resources to
acquire complementary rivals will earn higher returns than they can with
internal, organic growth. Of course, acquire only companies that support
your ability to be the best in the world at what you do, and work
aggressively to capture synergies. New opportunities may also exist to
gain new alliance partners, to move into adjacent markets, to adopt new
pricing models, or to enter new channels. Some of these opportunities
may be created by the failure of competitors, and some may be created by
a new customer appetite for solutions that show measurable ROI or reduce
risk.
3. Manage Liquidity As Closely As Profitability
Your company has been dealing not only with negative growth but also
with liquidity constraints. During good times you may not have obtained
sufficient lines of credit to sustain your company through economic
adversity. Trying to maintain liquidity on a smaller revenue base can be
crippling. Every balance sheet dollar has to be turned over faster to
contribute to working capital. Maximize cash flow by matching
inventories to sales and collecting from customers faster. Take
advantage of increased supplier willingness to share risk and to provide
favorable terms.
4. Keep Core Activities In-House, and Outsource Everything Else
Build and protect those “core” capabilities that differentiate you,
while aggressively outsourcing anything non-core. Depending on your
business, non-core activities may include IT maintenance, human
resources administration, benefits and payroll, accounts receivable and
payable, manufacturing, distribution or sales. You’ll get the benefit of
service provider expertise and economies of scale, and will pay only for
services you need. The biggest benefit of outsourcing, however, is that
it shifts your focus, resources and capital toward serving your clients’
higher value needs and building your competitive advantage.
5. Create New Metrics and Manage by Them
Tight economics put a premium on your ability to understand and model
the relationships between revenues, costs and margins. Think about
metrics that focus on the building blocks of revenue and sustaining
market share, including sales pipeline, customer satisfaction, pricing
and market penetration. Metrics should look beyond core financials to
provide management with insight into market dynamics such as market
share trends. The good news is that the enhanced metrics you need during
challenging times will help you manage more profitably and efficiently
in good times as well.
6. Communicate and Reenergize!
A downturn is a scary time for all your constituencies. You now need to
begin the process of re-energizing your employees and creating new trust
among all your constituencies. Frequent and honest communication will go
a long way toward maintaining a calm and motivated workforce. Create
regularly scheduled forums to listen to concerns, and to update
employees on the state of the company and on their roles in achieving
new company objectives. Studies show that employees are motivated far
more by a sense of shared purpose than by compensation. Create that
shared purpose and reinforce it daily. Lead your company out of the
recession with realistic confidence, candor and a renewed sense of
direction.
About Tatum, LLC
Companies turn to Tatum when critical business challenges arise because
we immediately deliver financial and technology operational expertise
via solutions tailored to the Office of the CFO. We understand the
urgency of NOW and we leverage nearly 1,000 executives and consulting
professionals nationwide to accelerate results to create more value™.
For more information, visit
www.tatumllc.com.
Copyright Business Wire 2009
2009-10-14 10:00:00
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