Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Fatigue can kill your business, if you let it.

Is your company experiencing financial challenges?  Are these challenges increasing your team’s workload, worries and contributing to organizational fatigue?
Businesses with financial challenges experience a vast increase in organizational workload that will cause team member and stakeholder performance to degrade.

Due to diminished resources, routine, repeatable processes must be handled manually and micro-managed.  These increased tasks add stress and lead to mistakes which require even more counter-measures.

Team members, suppliers and other stakeholders become weary.   They lose confidence.   Little by little, the added tasks go undone or are delayed.   All stakeholders begin to perform less effectively.  Organizational performance degrades, sales drop, and costs rise due to poor execution.

To prevent and combat the fatigue induced “death spiral”, leaders must do the following with team members and stakeholders:

1)      Do not understate the severity of the problem

2)      Define the problem the company faces and explain it completely

3)      Collaborate on a realistic vision of the solution

4)      Set clear expectations

5)      Be honest and clear in your communications

6)      Maintain open, proactive communication

7)      Deal with concerns directly and promptly

8)      Get commitments and assess willingness of each team member and stakeholder to rise to the challenge

9)      Focus on the best and most committed of team members and stakeholders

10)   SHOW UP for the hard stuff

11)   Model calm and deliberate behavior

12)   Help.  Be part of the solution by taking on additional roles where your skill set delivers good outcomes, demonstrates commitment and reduces overall organizational workload

13)   Clarify and Simplify continuously by focusing only on essentials

14)   Define the metrics for determining progress and report them - good or bad

15)   Iterate as necessary, quickly

Sunday, August 28, 2011

“We’ve already thought of that.” But, did you do it?

Good ideas are often met with the response, “We’ve already thought of that.”  But, did you do it?

Many good ideas are trapped on the “To Do List” while day-to-day demands prevent progress.  In order to propel an initiative forward there must be a champion with the “will” to visualize and support a step- by-step process to achieve the desired outcome.

How do you climb a mountain?  One step at a time…if you have the “will”.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Financial Dynamics: Source of Stress or Profitability?

Fred stared at the ceiling, then at the clock on his bedside table.   It read 3:26 am.  His recent concerns over the dire financial condition of his family business haunted him day and night, even in his dreams.

Ten years ago, Fred assumed control of the family business from his father, the founder.  Fred had experienced periods of financial stress before, but nothing compared to the burdens now pressing down upon him.  This time is different.  Solutions seem elusive and Fred is losing confidence in his ability to deal with the challenges created by a rapidly eroding cash flow.  How did it get this bad?

A year ago, Fred made a decision to pursue rapid sales growth as his company had experienced slow, but profitable, sales growth for many years.   He decided to pursue larger accounts and cut prices to win the business from established competitors.  Sales grew as projected.  Profits did not.  Cash flow turned negative.

Fred missed a critical element of the scale effects of his pricing decision on gross margin dollars.  He failed to grasp the magnitude of sales growth necessary to offset the margin dollar reduction resulting from discounting and the impact of variable costs associated with increased production volume.

Given the existing gross margin, a 10% drop in pricing required a 45% growth in sales merely to achieve the same gross margin dollars.

Fred and his team predicted cost reductions associated with increased production volume that were not being achieved owing to high variable costs.

Every business has scale effects (macro, product, service, resource) that have compelling impacts on the financial performance of the business model.  The financial dynamics of scale effects can be exploited to increase profitability or may quickly create financial stress.

How does Fred lead his company back to profitability?  First, he must understand the financial dynamics of his business model.