Alliance Advisory Group Blog

April 27, 2010

Preparing for the economic upturn

If your business is struggling take decisive steps to turn it around and be poised to grow this year. Below is a quick list of things to focus on that can have an immediate impact.

1. Get your finances under control. The most apparent message you get during tough times is your financial performance. Make sure you have good information on which to base decisions. Knowledge is key here in order to determine good choices, invest in high ROI items, and manage your day-to-day finances.

2. Evaluate marketing effectiveness. Don’t cut your advertising and marketing budgets, but put tight controls in place that allow you to gauge the response and adjust your expenditures on a weekly basis. If something’s not working, make changes sooner rather than later.

3. Anticipate opportunities. In whatever form it takes, there will likely be a large influx of government money this year as part of President Obama’s economic stimulus plan. Prepare a strategy for tapping into this and any other opportunities you can take advantage of.

4. Create a rapid response team. Set up a recession-busting team that can anticipate the effects of the downturn and react quickly. You may find that your best answers will come from within your organization.

5. Get creative. Brainstorm innovative solutions to your business problems and begin to execute on them. Make sure you designate a champion for each initiative to be undertaken and to report on its progress within the company.

6. Minimize layoffs. You may have no option but to cut some staff. However, do your best not to make sweeping cuts that will cause morale and productivity to drop among your remaining employees and drive other workers out the door.

7. Touch base with customers. Provide clients with reports showing the work you’ve done for them and the results you’ve achieved. Make it a point of holding face-to-face meetings periodically. Meeting in person says you are interested and gives you an opportunity to literally see things that you can help address.

8. Ask for feedback. Don’t assume your customers are satisfied. Ask how you’re doing and take their suggestions seriously.

9. Take complaints seriously. If clients ask for changes, investigate what it is they want and then accommodate them if at all possible. If not, explain why not.

April 17, 2010

Managing Your Cash Flow

A healthy cash flow is an essential part of any successful business—made even more critical in this current economic environment. Some business people claim that a healthy cash flow is even more important than your business’s ability to deliver its goods or services! That may be placing a bit too much importance on your cash flow, but consider this—if you fail to satisfy a customer and lose that customer’s business, you can always work harder to please the next customer. But, if you fail to have enough cash to pay your suppliers, creditors, or employees, you’re out of business! No doubt about it, proper management of your cash flow is vital to making your business successful.

* Understanding cash flow is the first step in effectively managing your cash flow. There’s more to it than it just being a fancy term for the movement of money into, and out of, your business checking account.

* Your profit is not the same as your cash flow. It’s possible to show a healthy profit at the end of the year and yet face a significant money squeeze at various points during the year.

* Analyzing your cash flow will help you spot some of the problem areas in the cash flow cycle of your business. As in any good analysis, you need to look individually at each of the important components that make up the cash flow cycle to determine if it’s a problem area or not.

* A cash flow budget is a good way of predicting your business’s cash flow for the next month, six months, or even the next year. If you aren’t preparing a cash flow projection, now is the time to start. It may be eye opening.

* Improving your cash flow will, without a doubt, make your business more successful. Accelerating your cash inflows and delaying your cash outflows are key factors for improving and managing your cash flow. The cash flow budget is also a handy tool to use in the improvement and management of your cash flow.

* Filling your cash flow gaps. From time to time, almost every business experiences the need for more cash than it has. If you find yourself in this position, you may have to borrow money to fill the gap.

* Handling any cash surplus is just as important as the management of money into and out of your cash flow cycle. With the proper management of your cash flow, you might find yourself with a little extra cash with which you can pay down debt or earn investment income.

April 6, 2010

Planning for Growth in the New Normal: Alliance Advisory Group Sees Opportunity in “Lessons Learned” from Recession

Filed under: Strategic Advisory — Tags: , , , — admin @ 2:27 pm

This February, Forbes Insights and CIT Group Inc. released an eye-opening report: “U.S. Small Business Outlook 2010: Lessons Learned—A Case for Greater Optimism.” The authors interviewed more than 200 business owners and key executives in $1-15 million companies, creating a snapshot of where we are now, in the “new normal.” The study’s real value is in the implications the data holds for businesses of any kind as we move cautiously into the recovery.

Nearly all of us faced challenges during the downturn—some more dramatic than others. The question is: how will business owners apply the lessons we’ve learned to make the most of their opportunities, internal and external?

Here are the four key lessons from Alliance Advisory’s perspective:

Lesson 1: Have a plan

In the last 18 months, many companies hit a wall, or worse yet, broke through that wall only to fall off the top-line revenue cliff.

The recession has shown us that small and mid-market businesses did not have the control necessary to maintain or stop the decline, and took drastic action to limit losses. In large part, these actions were reactive rather than planned.

The downturn—and its eventual impact on operations—was not something many smaller companies had prepared for. From mid-2008 and back, we were fat, dumb and happy. Times were good. Money was flowing freely and being spent. A certain degree of complacency worked its way into the system. The majority of companies, as indicated by the survey, did not have a plan of action to put in place if tough times hit, so they made changes on the fly, scrambling to redefine themselves without a model.

Only 64 percent of the companies surveyed intend to aggressively seek growth in 2010. What about the other 36 percent? They are not done reacting to the downturn. The unspoken fact is, they are worried about survival, not growth.

Lesson 2: Plan for profitability within the “new normal”

Having survived the recession is an accomplishment in itself. Just being in existence puts you in a position to benefit where others have failed. The exact definition of the “new normal” is in flux, but we can say unequivocally that the mentality of “if it isn’t broken, why fix it?” proved suicidal. Assume that your business model is broken somewhere and you have just not noticed yet.

Smart companies thrive by constantly reinventing themselves. Does that mean radical change? No. It means evolutionary awareness: constantly analyzing what they do, and how, where, and for whom they do it—adapting to the changing competitive landscape.

If your company has survived, you might be tempted to let down your guard. Don’t! You may have dodged a bullet, but the next shot is unpredictable. Protect yourself by truly understanding your operating expenses. Start by taking the top ten expenses by percentage of total, and drill down into them, identifying opportunities and risk. For service businesses, the biggest expense will be human resources. Do you have the right people, doing the right things, and are the roles and expectations clearly spelled out and articulated?

Revenue growth is an excellent goal, but in the new normal, focus on profitability first. Our clients have seen up to triple-digit increases in profitability from single-digit increases in revenue, just by making their operational mechanisms more efficient.

Warren Buffett remarked that when the tide goes out, you learn who’s been swimming naked. Plan now for low tide.

Lesson 3: Plan for complementary revenue streams

For companies targeting growth in 2010, much of the past two years was spent looking inward, rationalizing the business model based on the new revenue reality. Once you’ve planned for profitability in the face of 20, 30, even 50 percent revenue declines, it’s time to expand market planning and evaluate new revenue opportunities.

Your company has a skill set and capabilities in a particular area. Going forward, you must find ways to exploit these to get a bigger slice of the pie. I advise clients to identify what they do well, boiling it down to their core competencies, and leverage these to take advantage of other opportunities in the marketplace.

When you’ve defined new offerings to take to the marketplace, start with your existing clients. With good will already established, your chances of selling something new or additional will be much greater than recruiting a new customer.

The greatest threat to finding new revenue opportunities is tradition (we do business this way because we’ve always done business this way). A resistance to change equates to a failure to take risks.

Lesson 4: Build accountability into your plan

Planning is not a once-and-done exercise. It is a process. When you’ve set a plan for a period of time—say, your fiscal year—you need to revisit it regularly. I recommend evaluating results against your plan at least monthly. Develop a standard process for measuring performance against the plan, and evaluate progress on your key objectives at least monthly. Once a quarter, evaluate the bigger picture. How has the landscape changed? What new needs or threats have appeared and how will you maneuver around them?

Entrepreneurs create businesses around a passion or a particular proficiency, but the disciplined management and execution of strategic, operational and financial plans tend to be elusive.

If that is the case in your organization, building accountability into your planning process can mean the difference between growth and mere survival.

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