As mentioned in our Decision Factors Report, Vistage Research developed the “Corona Curve” in April 2020 in an attempt to understand what businesses were — and are — experiencing as a result of Covid-19.
After the trigger event in March came the tipping point (or market crash) before the curve continued to accelerate downwards, reaching the bottom in mid-April. This is when the economy came to an effective standstill and most businesses entered the pause or survival phase. Soon after this, organisations began to examine what it would take to recover, and then to rebuild.
Rebuilding is different to immediate recovery. Recovery is the attempt to return a business to the way it was. But when the world looks so different, businesses cannot survive by going back to their pre-Covid days.
Rebuilding is about taking a fresh perspective, imagining what could be possible, innovating to create something future-proof, and seizing the opportunities this new landscape might present.
There are three areas leaders might have to reimagine – operations, customer engagement, and financial planning.
Find everything below and more advice for leaders looking beyond Covid-19 in our Decision Factors Report.
Perhaps one of the most seismic shifts in the post-Covid era has been in the way we work. As we climb the Corona Curve, some SMEs have welcomed staff back into the physical workplace but many more continue to work remotely. Both of these scenarios are new realities.
For employees going into work, it’s not the carefree workplace of 2019. This is a workplace set against the backdrop of a still prevalent virus, with many necessary measures and systems in place. For those working from home, how do you keep productivity high and keep everyone seamlessly connected?
Joel Greenwald, Managing Partner at Greenwald Doherty LLP, has a solution to make the process easier:
‘As processing information and making decisions can be time-intensive, designating a Chief Safety Officer (CSO) can best support efforts to ensure the workplace is safe on all fronts. The CSO – whether a temporary assignment or permanent position – serves as a leader empowered to guide decisions about return-to-work plans based on changing safety protocols and to ensure that plans are implemented across all departments.’
Find out more in our Decision Factors Report.
The way customers buy - and what they buy - has changed dramatically. When the pandemic hit, the effects on customer behaviours were immediate. Overnight, face-to-face selling vanished and buyers switched off. In true survival mode, we bought only what was essential. After the initial shock subsided and the new reality dawned, certain sectors began to flourish: exercise equipment, home construction, interiors, technology. Our needs had shifted, and so had the markets.
Now, as economic uncertainty continues, customers have become more risk averse. Most markets have more sellers than buyers, finance has become increasingly stringent, and sales cycles are longer and more labour intensive. To survive in this landscape, businesses need to adapt quickly and decisively.
Dave Mattson, CEO of Sandler Training, believes sales is the lifeblood of a business and ‘attitude, behaviour and technique are key to unlocking sales’. Attitude is about getting out of your comfort zone - pushing yourself to more than 60-70% of your capacity. Successful sales doesn’t come from indicators or targets, it comes from behaviours which are set and repeated. Finally: technique. As Dave says, ‘technique boils down to what your salespeople say and how they say it’. What you say depends on who exactly you’re speaking to. He recommends using the KARE framework to help categorise customers at different parts of the sales funnel.
Get advice from your peers on how to rebuild your business by joining Vistage today.
In terms of revenue, profits, and cashflow, the past 10 months have been a time of uncertainty and turbulence - and the foreseeable future looks the same. Sales are unpredictable, patterns of buying are disrupted, and, for many companies, cashflow is a problem. In this climate, decision-making is extremely challenging. How can you make decisions when circumstances can change at the drop of a hat?
One tool you can use as a business leader is scenario planning. Scenario planning helps you make short-term decisions, as well as pre-empting problems or changes before they happen; it’s an effective way to mitigate risk. For example, if sales drop dramatically one month, your scenario planning could suggest that you furlough a proportion of your staff. This type of planning should be driven by your business’ strategic priorities.
One person who believes scenario planning can make all the difference to your cash flow is Matt Garrett, Founder and CEO of TGG Accounting:
‘Managing cash is important, especially in today’s uncertain times. You can improve your cash flow forecasting it over the next quarter, which will help you identify cost savings.
To get a complete picture of your cash flow, outline all of your ins and outs over the next 13 weeks. In this process, you will find areas where you are spending too much money, expenses that are not necessary, or payments for something you no longer need. You will find the cost savings in your own books. This is the first step in scenario planning. After you’ve made this forecast, review how your business is tracking each day.’
Rebuilding isn’t about knocking the entire infrastructure down to rubble and starting afresh. Rather, it’s about pivoting, repositioning,# and future-proofing. While it may seem a daunting prospect, there is another way of looking at it: as a once in a lifetime opportunity. The pandemic has forced us to look at our organisational processes, the way we work, how we can be better. It’s shown us the chinks in our armour, taught us the value of innovation, and proven how agile we can be in the face of adversity.
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