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School of Hard Knocks
Sam Cece Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
March 4, 2008
Now What?
On a recent flight to Atlanta, I came across an excellent and relevant article in the February 18, 2008 edition of Fortune Magazine called “Ram’s Rules: Managing your business in a downturn," written by Ram Charan, a well-known and widely respected author and management guru. The entire issue of the magazine is focused on understanding the state of today’s economy and what it means for businesses.
I was recently asked by our investors about the state of the economy and the impact on our current business. Are we recession-proof? Recession-resistant? Tough questions for a CEO, indeed, especially since my trusty crystal ball has been in the shop for the past 20 years!
I've spent a lot of time thinking about the state of the economy and its possible impact on our business, and it really bugs me that it's impossible to answer that question with any certainty. Fortunately, I do know that we’re being prudent about our spending and hiring and matching those directly to our operating plan. And I believe that we have a good process in place to monitor key data points from our end.
As I consider these questions, Mr. Charan’s article has helped me put a few things into perspective and, more importantly, validated several lines of thinking that I feel are important in running a business.
Keep building
Mr. Charan outlines several very reasonable points to keep in mind. In uncertain times, you’ll feel tempted to cut discretionary spending – just be sure not to include Product Development, Innovation or Brand Building in the “discretionary” spending category. He goes on to say that if you keep building, you will come back strong. During tough times, it’s important to reinforce your core values, and being a high-technology company, StrongMail's core values center around product development, innovation and engineering excellence and loyalty.
Communicate intensively
During uncertain times, getting accurate data to the operating folks is imperative to make fast, correct decisions. Where’s the best place to get this information? From your customers of course! Speaking to your customers’ customers may give you an even better picture of what’s really happening out there. This is a great point, and I'm going to ensure that StrongMail does more of this.
Evaluate your customers
Mr. Charan states that in good times, companies manage the P&L; in bad times, cash and receivables matter more. As a company that is gaining momentum (e.g. maturing), that is something we’ve always tried to do, but haven’t yet perfected. Acquiring customers is paramount to our success, so balancing customer acquisition with identifying high-risk, cash poor customers can be tricky.
Just say no to across-the-board cuts
Finally, this is a good time to look at and clean out your company’s “attic.” Mr. Charan endorses having a purpose and a plan for cutting specific expenses, but not across-the-board cuts. This makes sense since it augments the “keep building and investing” section above.
Overall, these are relevant pieces of advice that reinforce the fundamentals of growing and managing a business. There is no magic wand advice here, but good old-fashioned blocking and tackling. This was a great refresher course for me. I would love to hear from others on how your companies are looking at (and what you’re doing) during these uncertain economic times.
Posted by: Sam Cece at 11:47 AM
Categories: Business , Experience , Silicon Valley
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