| PRESS RELEASE - April 2, 2002 Contact: info@dawsonconsultinggroup.com
Dawson Consulting Group
2000 Bering Dr, Ste 460
Houston, TX 77057
800-422-7540 In Houston: 713-784-3197
Strategies for Winning in a Downturn
When the economy contracts and "business as usual" is disrupted, we become
very tentative, and the temptation is to withdraw. Hunkering down is no way to win a
battle. Now is the time to gain ground on the competition and reposition your organization
for the upturn. Sheryl Dawson, president of Dawson & Dawson Consultants states,
"During 25 years of consulting with companies in many industries to improve business
performance, we have observed that when management retreats under duress, they often
intensify their problems. Boldness and well planned action are a winning combination when
the going gets tough." Following are essential strategies to win in tough economic
times:
1) Start with Peter Drucker's Three Principles for Leadership:
a) Focus on the Mission -- re-verify that all activities, funding, and processes
are focused on the mission and within the boundaries of the mission.
b) Redefine Significant Results - make process simplification and waste
reduction part of the significant results.
c) Continue Rigorous Assessment -- objectively measure all areas for alignment
with the mission and contribution to business goals.
2) Evaluate Business Development/Sales Strategies: New business development and
sales strategies may not be adequate to counter the receding economic tide. Now is the
time to re-evaluate your company's competitive position and truly envision the future.
Step back and consider new growth markets, examine competitive vulnerabilities and
re-energize your sales team. Are there market segments that can be explored and exploited,
successful but more poorly positioned competitors to be acquired, new products or services
to explore? Are there short term revenues to be gained or longer term opportunities that
need nurturing in preparation for the upturn? Shaping business development strategies and
building new capabilities can help neutralize the impact of a declining market and better
position the company for a variety of new scenarios.
3) Increase Revenue with Internal Savings: Track down persistent, high dollar
waste producing redundancy, returns, quality defects, late deliveries, etc. Take time to
identify and eliminate root causes of poor delegation, wasted action, rework, redundancy,
quality defects, and poorly timed deliveries. According to Juran Institute research, most
companies lose an average of 20% of total revenues from waste or poor performance.
Eliminating internal waste drives dollars straight to the bottom line, unlike increased
sales which only delivers a portion to the bottom line. In other words, while $7M in
increased sales potentially adds $1M in net profits, $7M in internal savings equals $7M in
profit! Home Depot is a recent example of the dramatic impact of internal savings. Through
their internal savings program named "Home Depot Lite," they reported a 22%
increase in 2001 3rd quarter net profit even though sales dropped 7%! The dramatic bottom
line impact was achieved through internal cost saving techniques aimed at improving
processes, individual performance and technology.
4) Optimize Human Capital: "Sharpen the Saw!"
a) Innovate, Innovate, Innovate - Collectively and persistently use the
innovation process to produce cost savings ideas. Solicit ideas particularly from
contributors who do the job on which you are focusing. Invite your suppliers and customers
to innovation sessions. Remember, best idea wins!
b) Develop, Develop, Develop -- Catch up on technical and soft-skills training.
Don't miss opportunities to build employee competencies. Pay particular attention to your
cross training and coaching efforts.
c) Maintain, Maintain, Maintain -- Review all of your equipment preventive
maintenance needs; for example, in manufacturing settings leverage "deep
maintenance" such as motor rebuilds as training sessions. Build your employee skills
while you take care of the equipment.
d) Retain, retain, retain -- This 90's mantra remains in vogue for ongoing
success in the new century, even through economic slowdowns. Use creative redeployment,
job sharing, contract and gain sharing techniques coupled with developmental strategies to
retain talent for the upturn. A key ingredient is a detailed and well communicated plan
for keeping and developing your talent.
5) Focus on Your Teams: Each of the above strategies proactively engages your
team to increase morale. Pursue team-oriented sessions resulting in reduced conflict and
more focused efforts. Employ Deming's "Drive Out Fear" and "Break Down
Barriers" Techniques to keep the lines of communication open. Employees are empowered
through teams and vision to implement business development and internal savings
strategies; resistance to change is minimized through high levels of commitment. Finally,
remember that stronger team accountability yields maximum results.
If you feel besieged, now is the time to take the offensive. There are dollars to be
saved and made by strategically repositioning your organization for short-term survival
and long-term growth. Don't mistake a downturn as a time for defeat or retreat -- it's a
time for battles to be won!
Dawson & Dawson Consultants, Inc. is a Houston-based, global human resource
consulting and training and development firm specializing in business development,
performance and retention strategies, team and career development, executive assessment
and coaching, and career transition and outplacement. They are certified as woman owned by the Houston Women's Business
Council. For more information, call 713-784-3197. |