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Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Essential strategies for weathering the economic storm

By | October 15, 2008, 5:50am PDT

Summary: Economic downturns require extraordinary leadership, brutal honesty — and action. If your market and company are truly in trouble, here are some turnaround strategies so you can live to fight another day.

Guest post: Christopher Lochhead, the retired chief marketing officer at Scient and Mercury, offers some turnaround strategies (learned the hard way) for weathering the economic storm.Essential strategies for weathering the economic storm

Economic downturns require extraordinary leadership. They require brutal honesty. They require action. If your market and company are truly in trouble, here are some turnaround strategies (learned the hard way) to weather the storm so you can live to fight another day.

1. There Is No Such Thing As One Bad Quarter

When your markets get weak and/or you really screw up, fixing it will take a lot longer than you think it will. Pray for spring, but get ready for a long, cold winter.

2. Get The Facts Yourself

People don’t like to deliver bad news. As an executive, your job is to get to the heart of the problem fast. You (not someone who works for you) need to figure out how bad your problem is.

How bad is the sales forecast? How late is the next release of the product? What is the cash burn rate? How many critical projects are broken? You must drill into the “whys” to make sure you understand the facts and the causes of the problems. The key is to ask “why?” five times.

Why is the project late (you will get an answer)? Then ask why that is the case (you will get another answer), then ask why that is the case (you will get yet a deeper answer), and so on.

Once you’ve asked why five times, end every conversation with the most powerful question you can ask, “Is there anything else?” Before my grandmother was heading into surgery to fix a broken hip, I asked her doctor that question. He told me something he had not wanted to tell us–that there was a 25 percent chance she would die during the operation. People don’t like to deliver bad news. Real leaders get the real facts so they can take real action.

3. Get 2 Top 10 Lists Fast

Get the smartest, most courageous people in the company together this weekend (no more than 10 as big groups do stupid things) to brainstorm about the top 10 ways to drive revenue and the top 10 ways to cut costs. Here are a few ideas to get you started.

Drive revenue:

  • Assign every big deal in the pipeline to an executive and make the execs and the salespeople accountable for closing the deals
  • Give customers a new incentive to buy this quarter
  • Focus on your core markets and ignore the rest
  • Announce a competitive replacement program (provide an incentive for customers of your competition to switch)

Cut cost:

  • Do a lay-off
  • Pull out of under-performing markets or geographies
  • Sell under-performing assets or business units
  • Stop all stupid travel, off-sites and trade shows (anyone at AIG from there?)

4. Horde Cash

In March of 2000 as the tech bubble was getting ready to burst, my accountant, the legendary Greg Finely called me and yelled, “Horde cash!” It’s good advice in bad times. Meet with your CFO and finance team to figure out how to optimize the cash, and never forget the sage words of the Coen brothers, “Where’s the money Lebowski?

5. Tear Off The Band-Aid Once

Take all the pain in one big shot. Cut deeper and make bigger changes than you think you need to. The more quarterly forecasts you miss and lay-offs you do, the harder it is to recover. Once you know that your company is in trouble, assume it’s in worse shape than you realize. Because it is.

If you are going to miss quarterly numbers and forecasts, miss them once. If you have to do a reorg, do it once. And if you are forced to do a lay-off, do it once.

6. Fire Executives

It is stunning how many companies do a lay-off without firing any executives. You can’t lay-off 20 percent of the company without letting go of some of the executives (who are at least partially responsible, if not completely responsible for the problem). And don’t just demote them, or move them to some other job. Fire them.

7. Chop The Dead Wood

Every company has people on the team who are “C” players. Rather than doing an across the board 10 percent cut, make sure that the people you are cutting are the worst performers in your company. Your “A” and “B” players will appreciate the fact that you did the right cutting. This may sound harsh, but no one wants the “C” players around anyway.

8. Tell The Truth

Some executives think that lying, misleading, and otherwise obfuscating will “soften” the blow in bad times. Wrong. Lying never works. It sounds obvious, but companies and executives do it all the time. It can land you in jail or ruin your career (trust me I’ve seen this happen to well meaning, but misguided execs). People hate delivering bad news, so they tell a “white lie,” which they often rationalize as somehow doing good for others.

Be honest and direct about the facts. Brutally honest. Be honest with your stakeholders. If you are laying off 25 percent of your people, then say that’s what you are doing. Don’t say, “We are laying off 15 percent and expect some additional headcount reductions through normal attrition.”

9. Communicate Clearly and Powerfully

The truth will never be as bad as the rumors will become. “No comment” will increase the untruths and gossip. It will also unleash the venom of the people you used to be forthright with. The press will attack harder, and your employees’ distrust will grow deeper. Both will undermine your efforts with customers and drive your stock price even further down. It doesn’t matter how much it hurts. You must over-communicate.

When you’re in trouble, get clear about what you are going to say before you open your mouth. Rambling or trying to make 16 points will make you look confused, defensive, or stupid. Then get clear on three–and only three– key messages to deliver: the facts as you know them, the actions you’re taking now, and how your actions today position you for future success. Write these messages down, and practice saying them.

10. Sign A Pact In Blood

In November of 2005 Mercury’s board of directors fired our CEO, CFO and general counsel because of a stock-option accounting problem. Our stock tanked, our competitors attacked, and our employees were scared. The key executives in the company agreed to stick together come hell or high water (and boy, did we go through hell and high water…but that’s another story).

We didn’t wavier. And neither should you. Nine months later, we had settled the accounting problem, turned the company around, produced some of our best quarters ever, did an acquisition and ultimately HP bought us for a significant premium. That turned out to be a big win for shareholders, customers, our people and HP.

11. Drive It Like You Stole It

Legendary teams execute their turnaround plans like it is the last thing they will ever do. Take action. Bust your butt. Get on planes and meet with all of you key customers. Rally your teams in town hall meetings in all of your key offices. Refine your strategy. Focus your efforts. Get your people focused on results. Meet with your top investors to tell them how and why your turn around will work. Get help from some wicked advisors. Recruit new talent to the company. Sell, sell, sell, and lead, lead, lead.

Leading a company through a turnaround is arguably the hardest thing to do in business. If you actually do it and pull through, it will become the most rewarding thing you have ever done in business. Good luck and knock ‘em alive.

After twenty years in business and being the marketing chief at three public companies, Christopher Lochhead retired at 38. Now, he serves on a few boards and is a part-time strategy advisor. Every year he gives a handful of speeches, and from time to time writes something. Check out www.lochhead.com.

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Topics

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: Essential strategies for weathering the economic storm
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
It is a amazing wholesale jerseys submit. Can I use this on my blog page?
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This kind of hard-driving Type A person is what ruins companies in the first place. His strategies to fix things are what they did to destroy things in the first place. This list can basically be summed up as put people second to results.
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Not quite true
maldain 17th Oct 2008
The whole point is to save the company and thus save as many jobs as possible. The fact is when times get tough you need to reduce costs and maintain an income stream to pay the costs you do have. In business these days labor is the primary cost. Unfortunately, when trying to cut costs you can't significantly cut them with out reducing your labor costs. It is harsh but it is a reality of the world. In good times companies support a lot of people they don't really need and in bad times those people who aren't really needed should be either laid off or retired. Either way you need them off the payroll as a cost savings meansure. The reason you do this is to save the remaining jobs. Yeah, 25% got laid off but 75% kept their jobs in using the author's example. And it does require a level of ruthlessness.
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If companies need to cut costs by laying off during bad times, then why are they spending that cash during good times? Surely a good company would not spend cash on unnecessary staff during good times OR bad.

As for "saving the remaining jobs", I have been at too many companies that told everyone they needed to cut to "save the remaining jobs", and then went under anyway. Why? Because the same fools who kept paying the incompetents during good times had no clue how to tell good from bad during the bad times: they killed the goose that laid the golden egg by laying off the good along with the bad.

Anyone remember Lear Siegler? Sierra Electronics?
Good story but soft on a couple of very key points. One - corporate social responsibility to an organisation's employees. One bad quarter - start slashing jobs is a guaranteed recipie to destroy corporate moral and remove the courage that he is relying on from his senior executives to tell him what is wrong, including his leadership.

Two C class empoyees - a big hole for pushing the very people that he is relying on to be honest into. Those that are unpopulare because they dont play the political games and those that are simply badly managed are always great pawns for the axe in poorly managed and run companies.

Three - The most important question is avoided. How has your organisation got to this location in the first place - because of the CEO's crappy previous management and failure to ask the why questions now advocated as an emergency measure instead of as on going process.

Four - Moral of the story - self examination first - you might be the biggest problem.
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RE: Essential strategies for weathering the economic storm
The Management consultant 20th Oct 2008
I am really disappointed but not surprise at this bad advice.This a typical American model which has been shown to fail in the medium and long terms is ingrained in American corporation graveyards.In Europe we call it shortermism based on earning headcount ratios and accountants risk adverse advice.There is no evidence that this works in fact many argue it decreases time to realign to markets and reduces competitive competancies.Many companies in Europe have been used to the economic ups and down of the economic cycle and have different strategies.

Please dont put such bad advice on this website some desperate executive might actually read it!!!
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What is even worse...
mejohnsn 24th Oct 2008
your "desperate executive" will not only read it, but believe it immediately, because it panders to his credulity, relying as it does on the American pop cultural myths that the executive already so eagerly believes.

Please tell us more about those "different strategies": I really want to see our myths challenged!
People love spicing up their language with terms like "brutal honesty" and "extraordinary leadership". But when the pedal hits the metal, they usually give up on either the honesty or the leadership.

Even this article illustrates this. What, for example, is he really hiding behind the exhortation, "Get help from some wicked advisors"?

Even so, I was delighted to notice that he advises some things I have been waiting for years to see, e.g., firing the executives in a layoff. That has been one example of "brutally honest extraordinary leadership" that has been SORELY LACKING at most companies in the high tech industries for years.

But even then, even if the companies fire the incompetent and/or dishonest leaders who got them into the mess, it won't help if the company goes right back to the same bad habits that got them into the mess in the first place. Neither will it help if they put the blame for the weak economy on their own scapegoats.

Finally, I see in this article a severe failure to be "brutally honest" about Pareto optimality. The "C team" people he is talking about are not always really "C team", if they are part of the 80% that are used only 20% of the time. This is a common ignorance, anyone who styles himself such a management consultant has NO EXCUSE for perpetuating the ignorance, especially when the HR teams making the decision really ARE "C team" or worse.

Now THAT is "brutally honest"!
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The C people
A contractor 27th Oct 2008
The C people really exist! We had one in our organization that no one trusted to anything more than just write the origianl prgrams. The persons testing skills were horable. (like my spelling:) The manager refused to document the problem and get rid of them. The project managers would assign the work to the A & B staff.

When they left for a gig on the east coast, no one noticed any difereence in the work load. We did notice alot less noise from the manager screaming to give the C person something to do so the VP didn't see them loafing.

C people exist because managers don't like to manage, lead, or own up to their hiring mistake.
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RE: Essential strategies for weathering the economic storm
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
It is a amazing wholesale jerseys submit. Can I use this on my blog page?

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