November 17, 2008

What to do when the Excrement Hits the Air Velocity Accelorator

Attitudes, CEO Skills

0  comments

1. Talk to people – Don’t assume
Talk to your customers

  • Ask how the current situation will impact them.
  • Ask how you can make it easier to keep their business

Talk to your vendors and suppliers (Look at point #2 before you do this so you can combine discussions as you see fit).

  • Will they need to change terms?
  • Tell them what you’re going through so they aren’t suprised

Talk to investors
Talk to your bankers
Talk to Employees
Talk to your spouse and family

2. Cut back – conserve cash. Think of cash flow before profit.
Do a line item inventory. Go through your P&L statement and stop spending on anything you don’t absolutely need. For everything else, call up your vendor’s and renegotiate.
Cut back on employees last (unless there are some you should have let go anyway – and this is true for many companies)

  • Be sure to explain to employees what they can expect. They’ll expect the worst if you don’t and you may end up losing people you want to keep
  • Maybe we call all cut back on hours so as not to lay anyone off
  • Maybe we can cut back on some pay or benefits – start with yourself (and since you’re talking to them – see #1 they’ll understand.
  • Maybe become like Toyota – Invest in your employees.
  • UPDATE: If you can’t be like Toyota and find you do have to lay people off read this by Guy Kawasaki about how to do it well.

Cut back on Marketing second to last. The stronger you market in the down times the better position you are in

  • A) you’ll be more likely to get a bigger share of the business that is still out there
  • B) you’ll do better faster when things turn around as your weaker competition is gone
  • C) perhaps you’ll find ways to get into markets you haven’t had before

Cut back on prices as necessary. Understand where your break even is and what your marginal costs are. It may be smart to take some jobs or sell some product just to keep your staff employed. Be flexible.

3. Look for more ways to get more bang for your time (you thought I was going to say buck didn’t you? – you did that in #2 if you were paying attention).

Takeaway:

  • Plan for the world not to end. If it doesn’t you’ll be in better shape for planning and if it does, your planning won’t matter anyway.

[tags] CEO, entrepreneur, recession, small business, economic melt down [/tags]

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About the author 

John Seiffer

I've been an entrepreneur since we were called Business Owners. I opened my first company in 1979 - the only one that ever lost money. In 1994 I started coaching other business owners dealing with the struggles of growth. In 1998 I became the third President of the International Coach Federation. (That's a story for another day.) Coaching just the owners wasn't enough for some. So I began to do organizational coaching as well. Now I don't have time to work with as many companies as I'd like, so I've packaged my techniques into this Virtual CEO Boot Camp.

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