Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Navigating the arithmetic of economic recovery: A guide for mid-size businesses

[caption id="attachment_783" align="alignleft" width="150" caption="Synergy and momentum matter."]Art and science of recovery after recession[/caption]

Just as there is arithmetic to recovering in the investment market, there is a logic and arithmetic involved in business recovery. Specifically, it's often easier to lose ground than it is to win it back.

In the investment market, if you lose 40% of your $10,000 investment, you have $6,000 left. When that remaining investment adds 40%, you have... $8,400. What a bother.

Similarly, a recession can create business losses that are challenging to recoup... and they aren't all strictly in the numbers.

For example, a large business customer may pull its business "temporarily" during a recession. Getting that customer buying again can be an uphill battle. Getting the customer back to or above its previous level of purchasing can be even tougher. During the customer's hiatus, it has probably been courted by your competition, with great deals, low prices and - gulp - perhaps a fresher approach.

Many businesses reduced their marketing and hence shrunk their visibility during the last difficult quarters. Now they need to regain what they've lost in terms of being "top of mind" - ramping up marketing will require serious, insightful and ongoing effort now if it's been shelved or minimal in the last year or two.

Were your engineers busily designing the next great thing during the slowdown? Great - you can come out shining. However, if the malaise meant that R&D was stalled and that even the best minds in your company were dulled by lack of sales and incentive, it's time to refresh your approach and your offerings, because your competition will or has done so already.

Has the sales team been keeping in touch with all its customers and prospects, or has it, as in the infamous sales saga of Glengarry Glen Ross been waiting for the "good leads" and better times? There is no time NOT to be selling.

Today... while the past certainly affects your firm, days gone by matter now primarily as a lesson. Starting today, you have the need and you've absorbed the arithmetic. You know that a concentrated, energetic and smart effort distinguishes the companies that will soon regain their momentum and reach new heights from those that will not. This is true even if your revenues are down, your staff is reduced and you've borrowed money. It will take more work and more applied intelligence to gain ground than it took to lose it, just as it does in the investment market.

How is your company addressing the recovery? Please comment or email us privately with your thoughts.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The courageous consultant

Maybe it's because the business climate is hardening, or perhaps it's because vSA as a company has reached the ripe old age (25) when we're much hungrier to do what's right for a client than simply what's expected. But in either case, we're encountering an increasing number of situations in which we feel called upon to give our clients answers to questions they may not have asked.

Typical issues include the continuation of business models as well as sales and marketing programs that have become limp remainders of what they used to be. Very basic examples in the sales and marketing arena have symptoms that include dependence on non-working outreach: large commitments to print industrial directories or yellow pages, networking through local chambers and other organizations that haven't updated their thinking or memberships in years, cold calling for rareified services, and keeping salespeople who cost more than they bring in. More problematic instances involve selling products that have become overly expensive compared to foreign knock-offs, perpetuating processes or technologies that are being washed over by tidal waves of newer ideas, and trying to get more and more work from fewer and less prosperous customers. The most intractable problems are faced by companies struggling to sustain a business service or product line that is – well, today's typewriter. Products are becoming obsolete faster than ever. A glance into the computer graveyard in vSA's storage room (or perhaps your own) is ample testimony to this reality.

The need for tough solutions and big shifts in business practices has altered vSA's work as well, making it harder and yet more rewarding. Marketing is certainly enjoyable when we bring exciting new sales and opportunities. Today, rewarding and fun strategic marketing has married the stern face of business consulting. This partnership has become crucial because when clients call upon us to develop programs to build their sales and market share, we occasionally see that structural changes to their business processes, model or offerings are required before outreach is appropriate. Our work begins further upstream, supporting change to meet the spoken and unspoken needs of the client's prospects, customers and other influentials.

So, that's where the courageous consultant comes in. Just like a physician telling a patient that change must start with quitting drinking, losing weight or controlling his mood swings, vSA professionals do the right thing by helping clients build or rebuild for the wild and crazy future. In those cases, we don't simply put a bandage on the client's offerings and start marketing whatever we've got. Not when the stakes are so high for our client.