Thursday 19 February 2009

Step Up..., Step Down...! again

The Step Up debate in brief (taken from the new book). This discussion won't go away...


In a recession situation the board's role should be limited to discussing the key issue:

“How would the shareholders/owners want to balance the two competing objectives of
1) minimizing the hit to profits versus
2) capturing maximum growth?”

You should be talking about how the company could, in fact, step-up its activities and use the recession as a chance to gain position and advantage.

A company has almost twice as much chance to dramatically improve its position in an industry during a recession compared to normal times — most (but not all) of the companies that did step-up in the last recession held their gains in subsequent economic recoveries.

The question
“How can your board and management determine whether a step-up strategy is right for your company?”

You should consider three major questions:
1. Are there truly tangible consequences of missing the next year's earnings forecast by going for growth?
Yes/No/Maybe
2. In your industry, do ‘temporary’ gains tend to become permanent?
Yes/No/Maybe
3. What is the potential downside if you simply take a defensive posture?

The point
It would take a lot of effort and courage to tailor a step-up strategy to the company's specific situation.

It's important for the board to hold the right discussion, even if the decision ends up in favour of retrenchment. And if the decision is to step-up, so much the better.

RELEVANT LINKS
Step Up or Step Down - continued - the original debate


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I guess it’s easy in times such as these to put your head down and deal with the daily grind of survival, the nitty gritty stuff and just deal with what’s in front of our nose. Whilst that stuff is inevitably important, it’s a conversation I have had with small businesses that have “forgotten” the value of looking forward with confidence at the positive future and therefore their staff, suppliers and customers have also “forgotten”.



It’s in these times it becomes essential to look forward, keep your eyes open for those that haven’t and gain what they might loose. It will be those that look forward with confidence that become the strengths of the future.

Anonymous said...

Robert

Very interesting BUT our experience is around getting the board to understand that NOW is the time to make those decisions.

Large company boards are too complacent and too distant to see, hear or feel the bad news except through reported earnings. Small business boards don't have the skillset to do it (make the difficult decisions) themselves.

Jim