In an earlier article, I suggested some business strategies for effectively handling the changes wrought by the pandemic. My recommendation was to instill a set of practices that would keep you, personally, at the top of your game. In the second article of this
series, I suggested some specific steps that Chief Sales Officers could take in response to the changes brought by the pandemic.
With that in place, the next question has to do with your broader responsibilities. What about your business or organization? Are there some things you should be doing to prepare your business for life on the other side of social distancing?
A Digression
We have been here before. As a nation, as individuals, and every level of society in between, this level of confusion and anxiety is not new. The cause may be new, and the breath of the malaise may be unusual, but we’ve had similar times of national angst and confusion.
It may be new for you. Depending on your age, this may be your first encounter with life that hasn’t gone according to your plan.
But it certainly isn’t unique for many of us.
For example, I have lived through many similar circumstances. In addition to three major financial reverses in my life, I have lived through the oil embargo in the 70s; Jimmy Carter’s malaise and inflation in the teens; the 911 attacks and the resulting tailspin in the economy; the dot com crises, and the 2008 real estate crisis. I’ve seen my business so devastated that I had to tell my staff
that I could no longer make payroll.
In all of this, I have learned some lessons and gained some wisdom that showed me business strategies that may be helpful to you. I have some advice and strategies to give regarding directing a business through these difficult times.
I am going to assume that you are taking the necessary steps to assure the survival of your business. With that said, what else?
Slow Times Are a Gift
One of the things that I have learned over my 35 + years in business is this: Slow times are a gift. Let me explain. As I struggled through the ebbs and flows of my business, it seemed that ebbs occurred pretty regularly, regardless of what I did. And, in that period of forced inactivity, I discovered the space to clean up the messes, to tighten up the systems, to address issues that hadn’t been
addressed for a while. I found the space and the inclination to plan for the next thing and to lay the groundwork for the next climb up the sales curve.
After a while, I became thankful for the slow times, as they provided me space and time to get ready for the next onslaught of activity. The slow times, brought on by national calamities or just turns in my own specific markets, were a gift.
I believe the same is true for most of us. For most of our time, we find ourselves striving to build the business, to acquire the right people, to build effective systems, to increase our margins, and to expand our bottom lines. It has been a frenzy of activity focused on a single issue: Build the business.
Now, however, for a lot of people, building the business, at least in the short term, is no longer a realistic goal. We just want to survive.
That sudden lull in frenetic activity presents us with an opportunity. Now, we have the emotional space, the time and the energy to think about things we haven’t thought about for a while, to imagine a future we haven’t dreamt about for a while, and to envision the specifics of more fulfilling tomorrow.
With that perspective, I have two suggestions for business strategies right now. Use the gift of slow time to:
- Do it Better
- Prepare to do it differently