Friday, November 20, 2009

Five Free, Effective Ways to Make Your Employees Better



Ouch....it's almost been 2 months since last post!!! Here it goes....

Not long ago, the hot water heater in our home went on the fritz. I knew enough to try to light the pilot light on my own, but in the end, I ended up having to call a repairman.

When the repairman arrived, he took the time to explain each part of the hot water heater to me before he even started and told me what his diagnostic plan would be. As he tried different things, he eventually came to the conclusion - in a very clear and articulate way - that there were two separate concerns with the heater that would require the replacement of enough parts that I should consider a new heater. He then walked me through some of the considerations I should think about before deciding which way to go and gave me some resources to look at.

The worker was so competent and impressive that we eventually had his company replace our water heater for us - and he did the work. Afterwards, I shook his hand and thanked him for his efforts.

He said, “Thank my boss. I’ve been doing hot water heaters for fifteen years and everything I know came from him.”

This employee was well-mannered, courteous, knowledgeable, and thoroughly impressive - so much so that I brought repeat business to that company. What kind of relationship brings about that kind of employee - and that kind of loyalty?

Later that day, I called the owner of the company and told him that his worker was quite impressive. The owner let me in on five little tactics that he attributed this successful relationship to - that, in other words, turned a good employee into a great one.

And, no, they don’t involve throwing money at the problem.

First, show the employee exactly how you want the job done. If you want the employee to just replace water heaters, just show them how to turn a wrench. If you want the employee to be courteous to the customer and explain things in detail, show them how to do that, too. You can’t expect greatness if you don’t provide an indication of what greatness is.

Second, encourage them to work on their people skills. The classic book How to Win Friends and Influence People is a real home run here. The book effectively breaks down the mechanics of interacting well with others into little bite-sized pieces. Every once in a while, drop one of these pieces on an employee and show them how to use it on a customer - or another person - to positive effect. Quite humorously, the business owner was a single guy and he said that he often illustrated Carnegie’s points by using those exact mechanisms to pick up women at a bar when going out with employees. He’d then encourage the employees to copy that success - and when they did, they’d also be practicing a “people skill” that could be utilized in the workplace.

Third, don’t be afraid to compliment good work. Many employers are afraid to compliment too often, as it may give an employee an inflated sense of worth. Instead, a better approach is simply to compliment improvement. This means that when an employee is first getting started - and has low confidence in their work - you’ll dole out lots of compliments, as their work is improving rapidly. Later, though, when they’ve built self-confidence, you don’t need to dole out compliments nearly as often. A self-confident employee is a reliable one, one that will make you money.

Fourth, don’t completely knock down bad work. Every employee - especially a new one - is going to do it wrong to begin with. Instead of starting off by informing them where they went wrong, tell them first where they went right. Then identify just a small number of the biggest flaws in what remains and tell them - don’t make a long laundry list of mistakes for them to process. End with an encouragement.

Finally, show trust. If an employee repeatedly shows that they’re capable, show them you know it by extending your trust. Allow your employees to handle some of the billing themselves. Allow your top employees to supervise new ones. Allow your trusted employees to make minor situational decisions on your behalf. Showing someone worthy of trust that you trust them results in a positive for both of you - you have less of a burden to carry and their self-worth gets a large boost.

These five tactics helped turn a down-on-his-luck kid freshly out of high school into a lifelong self-confident employee who brings new customers into the business. And it doesn’t involve raises or bonuses.

Sounds like a real bargain to me!

Trent Hamm (The Simple Dollar)

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

For Rent: Chief Financial Officer

Firms Outsource a Top Job as Cheaper Than Hiring Their Own Executive

By RAYMUND FLANDEZ

This past year, Al Lovata, chief executive of Be Our Guest Inc., cut expenses for his party-equipment rental business by laying off staff and reducing workers' salaries. He credits an "outsourced" chief financial officer with helping him prepare for the worst of the economic downturn.

The Boston-based company had sales growth in the double digits for the past few years, when revenue fell flat last fall. Now, thanks to the part-time CFO's guidance, the company is stable with revenue down 20% to 30%, but profitability higher than in the previous months, he says.

If we hadn't had this service, "we would still be struggling," Mr. Lovata says.
Mike Loria of Re.Source Partners Asset Management, in Detroit, consults his CFO, Sheri Pawlik of B2B CFO. Some small-business owners in need of accounting help to balance their books and guide them out of a financial black hole are renting CFOs rather than hiring them. The strategy comes at a time when the deep recession has forced small companies to look for money-saving alternatives that can yield good returns yet avoid substantial overhead costs.

"They're looking for ways to streamline and be efficient as they can," says Glenn Dunlap, a co-founder of Milestone Advisors LLC, a small-business consulting firm in Indianapolis that provides CFO services. The average annual salary for a full-time CFO in a small- to medium-size businesses ranges from $94,250 to $175,750, according to a 2009 Salary Guide by Robert Half International Inc., a Menlo Park, Calif., staffing services firm that serves the accounting and finance fields. Renting one can be significantly cheaper.

B2B CFO Partners LLC, a Phoenix, Ariz., firm that has over 100 CFOs-for-rent, charges at least $300 to $400 per month for the service. The company has doubled the number of small- to mid-size business clients to 650 since 2007, says Jerry L. Mills, founder and chief executive.
Business owners often want such a service when their company's finances are getting more complex and need someone with more financial expertise, says Germain Böer, professor of management and director of the Owen Entrepreneurship Center at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

Still, he cautions that some small businesses that have simple financial structures or are completely self-financed may find renting a CFO not so useful. But "if you have a loan in the bank or an outside investor, something like this is well worth considering," he says.
These CFOs have a bigger role than accountants, who mainly keep track of the company's books. They work with business owners to manage their accounting and finance departments, connect them with business sources that can help them grow and provide financial data to help make strategic long-term or day-to-day decisions. Many are certified public accountants.

The payment structure varies. Some are on project-oriented deals, such as developing financial projections, assisting with raising capital or completing a business plan. Some are on-going in nature and can be based on an hourly or flat monthly fee. Concerns regarding privacy from such consultants can easily be mitigated by nondisclosure agreements, experts say. Mr. Mills suggests that small businesses interview at least three CFO candidates, assess the quality of the firm they work for and avoid long-term contracts, if possible.

Some business owners turn to CFOs to establish proper bookkeeping systems. Ruthann P. Lacey, owner of a law practice in Tucker, Ga., brought in a part-time CFO in October. Before, an office manager handled bookkeeping while she also turned to her husband for ad-hoc financial and tax-preparation advice. "I didn't really know what the big picture was," she says. "I only knew we made payroll every month."

Upon the advice of her rented CFO, she installed QuickBooks software, hired an accountant and sorted out the company's accounts-receivable system, billing those customers who owed the company. Ms. Lacey also began reviewing monthly reports about cash flow and profitability that's making it easier for her to make hiring decisions or put more into the marketing budget. She says she's quite happy paying the rented CFO's $185 per-hour rate about 15 to 20 hours per month, because she can't afford a full-time executive. "This is something I should have done a long time ago," she says.

Entrepreneur Bob Compton, founder and chief executive of Vontoo Inc., an Indianapolis-based voice-messaging company, says he has rented CFOs for six companies he has started or been a lead investor in. "To hire a CFO in the early-going is a waste of money," Mr. Compton says. "It's much better to invest that money in engineers and sales people."
For Vontoo, he pays $5,000 a month for the CFO's strategic advice, bookkeeping services and accounting expertise. "It's a tremendous cost-saving," he says.

A company outsider can also help deliver a reality check. Re.Source Partners Asset Management Inc., a reseller of technology products in Detroit, has used cash to fuel growth since 2001 but is now using a line of credit for the first time, and needed help managing the new financing. In 2007, Mike Loria, the company vice president, brought in a part-time CFO who advised the company to rein in aggressive plans for growth and prepare for flat sales this year of about $9 million.

The CFO is more objective and "someone who can prevent us from making any bad decisions,"
Mr. Loria says. "It has really given us a level of confidence that we did not have in decision making."

Write to Raymund Flandez at raymund.flandez@wsj.com
Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page B7
Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit
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Monday, September 14, 2009

It's Not the Economy, Stupid.

This article contains some harsh talk to business owners. Although I don't agree with his perspective, he does bring out some interesting points to consider. I did find it interesting that he doesn't mention customers or vendors anywhere in the article. All business troubles won't be eliminated by focusing entirely on your employees (especially in the manner he prescribes.) -JH



Your sales are down. Your operating costs are out of control. Your cash flow has slowed to a trickle. Your bank won’t give you a loan. Of course you blame the economy. Everyone’s suffering, so it’s no wonder your business is in trouble. Right?

Wrong.

Don’t blame the economy. Recession or no recession, if your small business is failing, it’s your fault. Sure, we all take hits in downturns. But if you’re struggling, it’s because you’ve been doing something wrong all along. Take a good hard look under the hood and you’ll see that most of the problems in your small business are internal. But guess what? That’s good news. That means the situation is not beyond your control and can be fixed. It won’t be easy. My advice is controversial and uncompromising, but there is nothing I preach that I don’t practice myself as a business owner.

Here are five things:
1. Forget teamwork. Teamwork is overrated. It simply doesn’t work in most small businesses. Insisting on teamwork is a fast route to lousy financial performance. Why? Because your team is only as strong as its weakest link. A single poor performer brings everybody down. Employees crave strong leadership and structure, so focus on individual performance. Place set goals and demands on each head, one by one. Your employees have to know that at the end of the day, they answer to you, not to each other. And replace that tired cliché “There is no ‘I’ in team” with this thought: There is no $ in team--just mediocrity and excuses.

2. Micromanage like crazy. Don’t delegate to the point of abdication. Delegating is just another word for shirking responsibility. Expect someone else to do it and 90 percent of the time it won’t get done. In a small business, you don’t have the time or money to correct someone else’s mistakes. Instead, you should wear the badge of “control freak” with pride. Sure, delegate tasks, but watch your employees like a hawk until you are satisfied they are doing what they are supposed to do; then keep watching. Insist on “flash reports”--one-sheeters that give you daily updates on the status of each flashpoint in your business. And never hand over the reins of your business to anyone, no matter how senior the employee. Micromanage, micromanage some more, then circle back to make sure the task is getting done, and done right. You may have to put in a lot more time at the office, but you’ll ensure your business is making maximum profits.

3. Pay raises are over. Freeze your salaries now. Paying for performance is an absolute necessity for small and midsized businesses to achieve real profitability. Anywhere from 30 percent to 100 percent of an employee’s compensation should be based on performance, and that amount should be against the goals set for employees by the owner.This applies especially to businesses with sales staff: sales people should have 100 percent of their compensation based on performance. Keep in mind that pay-for-performance doesn’t just mean an employee gets paid more for doing well--this is not an entitlement. You have to be willing to set up a system and then also penalizes failure to perform. Pay-for-performance is so important to the success of your business that if you don’t establish it today, you should fire yourself.

4. Fear is the best motivator. Owning a small business isn’t a popularity contest. You cannot be effective unless you are feared and respected by your employees. Your employees won’t thank you for being tough on them, but they’ll respect the dictator who keeps the business afloat and continues to cut them a paycheck. And fear of not getting a paycheck was, is and always will be the best motivator.Fear shouldn’t just motivate your employees. It should motivate you. Never get too comfy. A business owner’s internal fear of failure is what keeps the company alive.

5. If your business fails during a recession, it’s your fault. This bears repeating. It’s not the economy, stupid, it’s you. Don’t use the recession as an excuse. If you’re not surviving it’s because you weren’t doing all that you should have during better times. Resist the bunker mentality--if you wait until the tide turns, you will drown. Instead, take action: cut costs, get aggressive about sales and fire mediocre workers. Continue to invest in areas of your business that will generate growth. Don’t play the victim. Do everything you can to take care of your business--work harder, faster and smarter than the competition by a factor of 10. As long as your business has a pulse, it’s in your power to turn things around.

George Cloutier is the author of Profits Aren’t Everything, They’re the Only Thing: No-Nonsense Advice from the Ultimate Contrarian and Small Business Guru (HarperCollins, Sept. 2009).

Friday, September 4, 2009

Dreading the High Cost of Software for Your Business? Try These Free Solutions.

I picked this article up off of the Internet. These suggestions aren't viable for every situation (i.e. heavy Excel users). But, the email, contact management, calendar and scheduling ideas make a lot of sense for most. -JH



Several years ago, one of the biggest costs for small businesses was software. Accounting software? Expensive. Word processing and spreadsheets? Expensive. Contact management software? Expensive. Calendar and scheduling software? Expensive. Quite often, the total bill would be enough to make you wince in pain.

Since then, fortunately, we’ve moved on to a better era. With the advent of free open source software along with the growing maturity of the software industry as a whole, most of the key software needed for small businesses are now available for free - if you know where to look.
I speak from experience. As a small businessman myself, I use a mix of free and open source software for almost all of my business needs. Accounting, contact management, task management, word processing, spreadsheets, presentation software - I use free solutions for all of these and not only is my budget happy, I’m happy, too. In most cases, the software is as full-featured (for my needs) as the expensive software at the office supply store, plus I usually don’t have to wait around for bug fixes - it’s all updated regularly and upgrading the software is free, too.

Here are the key pieces of small business software I use. I’ve included both offline and online options for each category, since many small businesses do not have or necessarily need online access in the office.

Accounting: Intuit QuickBooks Simple Start Free Edition 2009 (offline) or Quickbooks Online Edition (online). I’ve been a fan of Intuit’s QuickBooks accounting software for years. Recently, Intuit has been offering very solid basic accounting packages for free to small businesses, under the idea that if a person’s business continues to grow, they’ll grow naturally into a larger, full-featured package. The basic packages themselves are loaded with features and easily take care of every accounting feature that a small business will need in the early years, plus it offers a very clean upgrade path to QuickBooks if you decide your business is outgrowing the software.

Calendar/Scheduling/Task Management: Mozilla Sunbird (offline) or Google Calendar and Remember the Milk (online). I used Mozilla Sunbird as my scheduling and calendar software for many years with no problems and have only recently moved to Google Calendar, which is almost as full-featured and runs entirely within the web browser. Sunbird does a solid job of managing tasks offline, but for online management of the countless little things I need to do, I use the brilliant Remember the Milk.

Email: Mozilla Thunderbird (offline) or Gmail (online). Don’t let your internet service provider try to sell you an email package – there are tons of great packages available for free. Mozilla Thunderbird is a great free desktop client for email, but I use Gmail to simultaneously manage several email accounts all under one interface.

Word Processing: AbiWord or OpenOffice (offline) or Google Docs (online). AbiWord may be the best word processing program out there, period, and it’s a free open source package. OpenOffice is a large collection of offce software (also a free open source download) that includes a very solid word processor. For online use, I often find myself using Google Docs when on the road – in fact, I’m composing this post in Google Docs.

Spreadsheets and Presentations: OpenOffice (offline) or Google Docs (online). OpenOffice (mentioned above) includes wonderful packages for spreadsheets (very comparable to Excel) and presentations (comparable to PowerPoint) and it’s free. When you’re on the go, Google Docs provides basic versions of these tools in any web browser – I particularly find the Google Docs presentation software to be quite useful.

Databases: OpenOffice (offline) or Zoho Creator (online). Need to create a simple inventory database? OpenOffice also includes a database tool that’s quite comparable to Access and can easily meet your needs. If you’re looking for an online solution, Zoho Creator makes it very easy to create a simple database and entry form online – for free!\

Contact Management: Salesforce Personal Edition (offline) or Keepm (online). As a small businessperson, you have suppliers to contact and customers to keep track of. Thankfully, there are many options for managing all of these contacts. Salesforce Personal Edition is a great free desktop contact manager, but I’ve come to use Keepm, which provides most of the same functionality online, accessible from anywhere, for free.

Why spend your hard-earned money on software packages that are loaded with many more features than you need when there are so many great free software solutions out there?

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Little Things


Aug 27, 2009 -

A few weeks ago, I stopped in a local office supply and copy store in my area. I had an unusual special request, so I explained what I wanted to the guy behind the counter. As I began to speak, he picked up a rough-looking little notepad and began to jot down what I was saying. When I was finished, he took a tiny piece of Scotch tape, tore off the note, and taped it to the front of the CD I gave to him.I took a careful look at that rough notepad. It was about a quarter the size of a normal sheet of paper. In fact, that's exactly what it was - pieces of paper cut in half vertically and horizontally. The pad was about fifty "little sheets" thick with a staple through it near the top, making it easy to tear off sheets for various uses. Here's the kicker, though. On the other side of these sheets was printing of various kinds. I asked about them and was told that these were cut-up error documents, things that would have to be tossed if not utilized in some other fashion."Good idea," I thought to myself. I asked them how much money it saved them. The guy behind the counter didn't know, but a manager overheard my question and said "We used to spend about $100 a year on notepads around here, but we haven't bought one in years." I looked around the shop a bit and noticed something else interesting. They were actually selling these pads for a dime. Talk about turning your trash into treasure. Even if they just sold two of those pads a day, they'd have $60 more - just from their refuse.Sure, it's a little thing - but little things can be the lifeblood of any business.What are you throwing away that can be used in other ways? Perhaps your waste paper can be reused for taking notes or for other such purposes. Maybe you can reuse some packaging for storage containers. Why not set up a recycling bin for cans and bottles, then cash them in on occasion to put a little more change in the till?Is there employee downtime that can be directed to some other purpose? You might be able to put a receptionist in charge of a Twitter account for your business, allowing that downtime to be directly converted into communications with customers. If a technician is burning time, why not get them started on a maintenance program on your own equipment?It takes some creativity to come up with these ideas, so why not utilize more eyes and minds? Suggest to your employees that if they come up with a simple money-saver like this, they can pocket the money saved (or earned) for the first year of any such initiative. With lots of eyes and minds looking for such opportunities, you'll almost certainly find lots of little things to improve your business.There are countless little opportunities floating through your business to save a little money here or earn a little bit more there without much effort at all. It's these details that can give you the room you need to breathe or to grow your business. Always keep your eyes open - and listen to your employees.A few weeks ago, I stopped in a local office supply and copy store in my area. I had an unusual special request, so I explained what I wanted to the guy behind the counter. As I began to speak, he picked up a rough-looking little notepad and began to jot down what I was saying. When I was finished, he took a tiny piece of Scotch tape, tore off the note, and taped it to the front of the CD I gave to him.I took a careful look at that rough notepad. It was about a quarter the size of a normal sheet of paper. In fact, that's exactly what it was - pieces of paper cut in half vertically and horizontally. The pad was about fifty "little sheets" thick with a staple through it near the top, making it easy to tear off sheets for various uses. Here's the kicker, though. On the other side of these sheets was printing of various kinds. I asked about them and was told that these were cut-up error documents, things that would have to be tossed if not utilized in some other fashion."Good idea," I thought to myself. I asked them how much money it saved them. The guy behind the counter didn't know, but a manager overheard my question and said "We used to spend about $100 a year on notepads around here, but we haven't bought one in years." I looked around the shop a bit and noticed something else interesting. They were actually selling these pads for a dime. Talk about turning your trash into treasure. Even if they just sold two of those pads a day, they'd have $60 more - just from their refuse.Sure, it's a little thing - but little things can be the lifeblood of any business.What are you throwing away that can be used in other ways? Perhaps your waste paper can be reused for taking notes or for other such purposes. Maybe you can reuse some packaging for storage containers. Why not set up a recycling bin for cans and bottles, then cash them in on occasion to put a little more change in the till?Is there employee downtime that can be directed to some other purpose? You might be able to put a receptionist in charge of a Twitter account for your business, allowing that downtime to be directly converted into communications with customers. If a technician is burning time, why not get them started on a maintenance program on your own equipment?It takes some creativity to come up with these ideas, so why not utilize more eyes and minds? Suggest to your employees that if they come up with a simple money-saver like this, they can pocket the money saved (or earned) for the first year of any such initiative. With lots of eyes and minds looking for such opportunities, you'll almost certainly find lots of little things to improve your business.There are countless little opportunities floating through your business to save a little money here or earn a little bit more there without much effort at all. It's these details that can give you the room you need to breathe or to grow your business. Always keep your eyes open - and listen to your employees.

(from Trent Hamm - The Simple Dollar)

Sunday, August 23, 2009

You Aren't Crazy, You're Just an Entrepreneur



You aren’t crazy—there are good reasons why starting a business feels hard. Like any big change in life like getting married or having a baby, entrpreneurship has its ups and downs.

Once you get over the initial rush of your launch, certain that everything is going to go according to plan, you run into some snags. Your website developer disappears with your site half done. A sure-thing client cancels his project. Your Mom wants her dining room back and you have to start to pay for office space.

Martha Beck, O Magazine columnist and author of Finding Your Own North Star, has a very useful framework for describing the cycle of change experienced by new entrepreneurs. I explain it at least once a week to reassure my clients that “nothing is going right and it feels like the universe is conspiring against you, but you are not insane for thinking of starting a business, and once you get through this rough patch, things really will get better.” See if you can identify which square of change you are currently in according to Beck’s framework:

Square One: Death and Rebirth

Characteristics: This first stage of change happens when you consciously choose to move from employee to entrepreneur. Nothing is familiar anymore, and you grasp to both feel normal and explain your new work identity to others.

Mantra: I don’t know what the hell is going on, and that’s okay.

Recommendation: Stay focused inward, on your own insights and creativity. Exercise, eat right and stay grounded. Don’t worry about figuring everything out at this stage, just pay attention to how you feel, and stay open to possibility.

Square Two: Dreaming and Scheming

Description: Once you get more comfortable with your shift in identity, you begin to brainstorm a bunch of different business ideas and scenarios. The sky is the limit as you imagine yourself as a software genius, media tycoon, or rich inventor.

Mantra: There are no rules, and that’s okay.

Recommendation: Don’t edit your imagination. Run wild and think up new ideas for products and services. Don’t worry if they don’t make sense, or that no one you have ever known has ever been successful at it. The important thing is to brainstorm as many possible ideas as you can and gather lots of data from different sources.

Square Three: The Hero’s Saga

Description: You whittle down your big list of business ideas to one that appears to be viable. You launch the business. Everything goes wrong. People criticize you. You question your sanity.

Mantra: This is much worse than I expected, and that’s okay

Recommendation: Don’t get flustered. Expect that things will go wrong. Do not beat yourself up when they do. Focus on tweaking, learning from mistakes, and moving forward. Surround yourself with smart people and good support.

Square Four: The Promised Land

Description: When you get through the awful growing pains of Square Three, business will stabilize. You will have paying clients, make a profit, and get the right team in place.

Mantra: Everything is changing, and that’s okay.

Recommendation: Enjoy it while you can! Save your money, clean up your systems, and be smart about growth. Sooner or later, you will either be forced through the cycle again—or will go through it willingly.


Pamela Slim is a business coach and author of Escape from Cubicle Nation: From Corporate Prisoner to Thriving Entrepreneur (Portfolio, May, 2009).

Saturday, August 15, 2009

The new (recovery) playbook

By Ram Charan, contributor
Last Updated: August 13, 2009: 12:02 PM ET
(Fortune Magazine) -- Last October, GE CEO Jeff Immelt decided he had had enough. For months, GE managers had been dutifully preparing reports for him explaining declines in their businesses in excruciating detail. He laid down the law.
"I don't need that to be part of your presentation," he told them. "I already know the market's slow." As Immelt puts it, "The presentations had to go from 'The market's slow' to 'There's an 80-locomotive order in Egypt -- let's go get it.'"
In that one stroke, he put an end to the agonizing game so many leaders in corporate America have been playing since the recession began: the waiting game. If we can just hold on, they are still telling themselves, one of these days things will finally get back to "normal."
But Immelt and the other top CEOs I work with have come to a radically different conclusion. Forget about waiting for normal to return: This is the new normal. "The going-in assumption is that this is a new world order," says Avon CEO Andrea Jung. "We need to run the business as if that's the case."
What does that mean, exactly? It means grappling with unemployment in the U.S. that is at a 26-year high of 9.4%. It means adjusting to the reality that financing corporate debt is roughly three times more expensive than it was in 2005 and that financial institutions are less willing to extend credit, given the toxic waste and insufficient equity capital on their balance sheets. And it means growing your business when global GDP is expected to shrink this year for the first time since World War II.
"Normal," in other words, isn't quite like anything we've seen in our lifetime. But too often companies become so caught up in trying to survive that they neglect long-term strategy altogether. They forget that stabilizing your balance sheet is necessary not in order to stand still, but in order to gain ground.
Nalco, a $4.2 billion water-processing company, entered 2009 significantly overleveraged, with $1 billion in debt coming due over the following two years. But a major restructuring strengthened the company's cash flow and Moody's upgraded its debt in May, enabling it to refinance at lower rates. Suddenly it had more flexibility than it had had before the crisis began!
When I hear CEOs say that they don't have the money to be aggressive, I know that they aren't looking deeply enough for ways to free up cash. They aren't thinking creatively enough about their options in this changing world.
You have to sharpen your focus on the core business, making the company leaner and more fit for the attack. Refinance ahead of others. Build maneuverability to pick up acquisitions at bargain prices. Identify new opportunities for growth that are adjacent to your newly defined core business. It may mean extracting resources and people from some areas and redeploying them; it may mean forming partnerships you hadn't previously considered.
Nalco (NLC), GE (GE, Fortune 500), Avon (AVP, Fortune 500), and Waste Management (WM) -- each of which I explore in detail below -- are vastly different corporations with vastly different approaches to the current environment, but they have one thing in common: They aren't using a difficult environment as an excuse.
Examining their strategies can help you think about where your business is now, and where you want it to be when the economy recovers. Like Immelt, you already know the market's slow. The question is, What are you going to do about it?

Narrow your focus
It was called the Big Bang meeting.
Earlier this year CEO Erik Fyrwald called 50 of his top executives to a Hilton conference room near Nalco's Naperville, Ill., headquarters. Fyrwald, who'd been at the helm of the water-treatment and environmental-services provider for a little more than a year, saw that conditions were continuing to deteriorate and knew he had to act fast.
"Everybody was concerned about the economy, and we were very upfront that our company is not immune," says Fyrwald. The choice was either to "stick our head in the sand or go on offense."
The top executives traveled from as far away as Shanghai and Calcutta and represented sales, manufacturing, and R&D. The CEO greeted the troops and installed them in a large conference room. His instructions: "I told them not to come out until they had decided on 25% of our products to cut," he says.
When the group emerged three days later, they had blown up hundreds of products. Older water-purification systems? Gone. Antiquated anticorrosion products? Sacked. At first blush this may sound like your standard corporate response -- cutting, after all, is generally a manager's tool of first resort. But there's a fine distinction between jettisoning just enough to stay afloat and throwing enough overboard that the ship is able to maneuver.
Fyrwald was, in the meantime, making other, smaller changes as well, including calling on employees to submit money-saving ideas. To his surprise, 1,500 suggestions came flooding in during the first quarter.
An employee in the Philippines, for example, suggested that the company change the way it generated receipts so that Nalco could apply for that country's 12% VAT rebate on every major purchase. A British plant employee proposed a sample-container recycling procedure that reduced the number of containers purchased. It was implemented around the globe and will save Nalco more than $1 million a year.
With costs under control, and its debt upgraded, Nalco's stock, which peaked above $30 in October 2007, then sank to $8, has rebounded to $18.
In shrinking the company, Nalco took out about 4% of its 11,000 workers around the globe but avoided one all-too-common mistake: mandating equal cuts across the board. "Some people have to give, and some get," explains Fyrwald.
A contingent of employees who were working at a deteriorating paper segment in Europe, for example, was picked up and moved to Eastern Europe to work on pollution control. In China, Nalco installed a new government-affairs office to help get through red tape and strategize about winning state-owned-enterprise business there. Says Fyrwald: "We've continued to add people in China, India, Brazil -- the places we thought would rebound sooner."
Strategic cutting, in other words, wasn't the end. It was the means for positioning the company to grow.

Accelerate innovation
"If you don't do the crisis play, you don't get a chance to do the reset play," says GE's Immelt. "But if you only do the crisis play, your investors are not going to like you when the crisis ends."
For GE the crisis play involved selling a $3 billion stake to Warren Buffett in October, cutting the dividend 68% in February to save $9 billion a year, and in early August agreeing to pay a $50 million penalty to settle SEC allegations of fraudulent accounting (the company did not admit or deny wrongdoing). Following the settlement announcement, the stock was trading near $15 -- a far cry from its peak of $60 in 2000 but more than double the worst levels.
The reset play means placing bets -- carefully. "Our own hypothesis is that we're going to get through the recovery into a slower-growth world," says Immelt, who expects that once the worst is past, GDP growth in the developed world will have slowed by about a point.
So for GE the questions are, "How do we launch more technologies faster and accelerate our R&D efforts so that by 2011, or whenever the economy recovers, we're going to be better positioned than our competition?"
One answer: "The government's moved in next door, and they're not leaving," explains Immelt. "In a unique way you've got a window where, not just in the U.S. but globally, stimulus money allows you to do more things faster."
To that end Immelt ticks off a list of GE projects that are benefiting from stimulus money: sodium battery technology in New York State; electric locomotive and high-speed-rail technology in the U.S.; electronic medical records in states like Kentucky and Pennsylvania -- the list goes on.
In Miami, for example, this spring GE, along with Cisco (CSCO, Fortune 500), Silver Spring Networks, and Florida Power & Light, announced a two-year rollout of the country's largest "smart grid" to power 2.6 million homes and businesses. By equipping homes with GE monitoring devices, FPL will be able to more efficiently transmit power where it's needed, and customers will be able to track their own power usage and make easy fixes (for example, running the dishwasher at night) to save energy. Roughly a third of the project's $600 million cost could be covered with stimulus money. "The more you do, the more you can do," says Immelt. "Because we stuck our neck out, we've got 15 or 20 other cities around the world who say, 'Let us in.' "
The key, says Immelt, is not to be so cowed by the crisis that you neglect to make long-term bets. "We've got a view of the world map that says, Okay, in 2012, 2013, what regions count? China and India are obvious, but you know we're big believers in the Middle East, Africa -- all the resource-rich regions. So we're going long in all those regions," he says.
There's a psychological switch that's turned too, when a leader talks about the big picture. "This is quite strange," says Immelt, but "the innovation comes easier. People don't want to feel frozen. People don't want to be afraid. One antidote to fear is if they see you're taking a swing."

Aggressively leverage what you can control
"Here's a nice surprise in this economy," a satin-voiced narrator purrs. "Possibilities." The camera pans to a chipper fortysomething woman named Daryn, her reddish hair perfectly coiffed. "I can't get fired. I can't get laid off," she says. "It's my business."
The TV spot is a recruiting ad for Avon. It delivers a pitch that is increasingly elusive in today's work world: that you have more power than you think you do.
The ad neatly mirrors CEO Andrea Jung's corporate strategy. She says simply, "We believe in controlling what we can control."
Last year when panicked consumers began to curtail spending, Jung decided to take advantage of the economy rather than put herself at the mercy of it. Avon set off on what Jung calls "the biggest recruiting drive in our history." During the second half of 2008, Jung doubled the company's online ads for new recruits, and at the end of April the company ran its first 30-minute paid advertisement, hosted by Deborah Norville, which featured Avon reps talking about the wonders of self-sufficiency through sales.
When compared with the number of net jobs lost during this recession, Avon's hiring stats are particularly striking.
In the U.S. during the first quarter, some two million net jobs were lost. Avon added about 200,000 new representatives, or 10% of total jobs lost. In Britain, 126,000 jobs were lost in the first quarter; Avon added 50,000 new representatives. In Mexico, 200,000 jobs were lost; Avon added 248,000 new representatives. (Because Avon doesn't pay for traditional benefits and salespeople work on commission, it is very inexpensive for the company to staff up.)
"Our research is confirming that a lot of these new reps are people who have lost their jobs in the current recession," says Jung.
Jung reports that the newest crop of recruits -- many of whom work part-time -- have a slightly better than average financial profile and higher order sizes. And because they are largely what Avon calls "E-Reps," meaning they sell to their own contacts online using Avon-supplied e-mail blasts, they aren't necessarily cannibalizing existing sales.
Avon's stock, which bottomed at $15 in March, is up nearly 70% over the past five months. Jung would no doubt like to see a return to an environment where women have unlimited cosmetics budgets, but she's not counting on that happening anytime soon. "Whether the Dow goes back to 14,000," she says, "we have to make sure our customer stays loyal."

Obsessively search for the right growth
Last summer David Steiner, CEO of Waste Management, was in the midst of a huge hostile bid for the third-largest player in the industry, a company called Republic Services (RSG). A big acquisition of the right assets was the perfect way to expand the company's reach and market position. But when the economy started to crack, Steiner's plans changed.
"We called the deal off," he says. "We knew that taking on an $8 billion company and the associated debt was not the right thing to do in that environment."
With a mega-acquisition off the table, a strategic repositioning was the only other option. "How," he asked his troops, "can we take advantage to come out of this as a stronger company?"
He and his team began with a seemingly simple analysis of Waste Management's business. He explains that the collection portion of Waste Management's business, which makes up more than half its total revenue, could be divided into three categories:
(1) the residential business (your local trash pickup), which is recession-proof;
(2) the commercial business (your office or place of business's trash pickup), which is recession-resistant because companies that stay in business still need to have their waste taken away; and
(3) the roll-off business, or the temporary boxes at construction sites, which is completely dependent on the economy.
Going forward, Steiner had three criteria for where he would place new bets: The business had to be recession-proof or recession-resistant and have high growth and good returns.
Prior to this exercise, Waste Management had always considered recycling one of its most promising growth areas. But that business is extremely cyclical and sensitive to volatile commodity prices, so it was nixed from the list. One area in particular did fit the bill: an area called waste to energy, where, as the name implies, trash is combusted to generate electricity.
After it fell out of favor in the late '80s, there hadn't been a new waste-to-energy power plant built in the U.S. in a decade. But Steiner saw early signs of growth. There are currently six plants that are in various stages of requests for proposal in the U.S. -- and of those, Waste Management has been selected as the preferred vendor to build a plant in Frederick County, Md., and is short-listed for at least one other project.
Outside the U.S., however, is where the real action is. In Europe and China, regulation is mandating growth. Says Steiner: "The EU has basically put taxes on landfills such that 70% to 90% of waste will be diverted out of landfills." In Britain, Waste Management has bid on six plants and has so far made it to the final four bidders on four of them.
In China, meanwhile, Steiner says, the central government has mandated that 70% of waste will go into waste to energy. Waste Management is angling to enter that market via a joint venture, and just bought a 40% stake in the environmental subsidiary of a company called Shanghai Chengtou. With an estimated 300 plants to build in China over the next 10 years or so, "we think we will have plenty of opportunity," says Steiner.
These aren't instant-gratification investments, and Waste Management's stock, while up 28% since its March lows, has been volatile. But by placing these bets now, Steiner is thinking beyond a crisis mindset, which is exactly the point.
No matter what business you are in, no matter what you've done till now, there is still time to change your attitude from that of fighting for survival to seeking opportunities for growth. Face the tough decisions, but don't let cutbacks stop you from seeing the windows of opportunity that are suddenly open. Think creatively. Act aggressively. We can't predict with certainty when the broader economy will recover. But your company's recovery can begin whenever you're ready.
Ram Charan's latest books are "Leadership in the Era of Economic Uncertainty" and "Owning Up: The 14 Questions Every Board Member Needs to Ask." He advises dozens of Fortune 500 companies, including Nalco, GE, and Avon.

Monday, August 3, 2009

6 Questions to Ask Before Starting a Business


Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Quote: Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Whatever course you decide upon, there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong. There are always difficulties arising which tempt you to believe that your critics are right. To map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires courage."

It's amazing that the words of a writer who died almost 127 years ago have such application to today's business world. To me this quote sums up the challenge that haunts entrepreneurs or employees who stick their neck out with a new idea, product or concept. Surely we must listen to trusted colleagues, friends and advisors and give their feedback sober consideration. However, at some point we are all going to be criticized for an idea or decision. It takes courage to persevere!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Opportunities Within Problems

The following is taken from business coach Marc Corsini..


Last week, I talked about the pressing need for a “new” formula for success. The business environment has changed drastically; we simply cannot continue to sell using the same old techniques that worked before. The stark reality is this: It is two to three times harder to be successful in this tsunami economy. So I challenged everyone to throw out last year’s playbook and embrace this new reality. Then meet it head-on with new and improved techniques and more of them.

Now I want to perhaps shock you into a newer, more positive attitude about all this. I’m encouraging you to stop focusing on the problems we face in this economy. All too often these days, conversation centers on the negative. People are asking things like “How’s your business doing in the worst economy since the depression?” or “Did you see that Any-Co is laying off 140 employees?” or “Have you noticed that two more stores on Main Street have closed their doors?”

Sure, it’s disturbing. Frightening, even. And we can’t ignore it. But we have to look at all this in a healthier, more productive way.

Stop focusing on the problems and the things you can’t control! That is not time well spent. These days, your time is even more valuable than ever since you’re going to have to work harder to achieve your goals. Yes, we’re in challenging times, but your most pressing concerns should not be what’s wrong at your company, the stagnation of the industry you serve, the anemic economy, the problems with health care, etc.

I have a better idea.

Look for (and then act on) opportunities within the problems. I guarantee you that some of these problems are opportunities in disguise. Some might be dressed in absolute shambles, but look beneath the guise, and, chances are, you’ll find something you can work with.

For instance, times are tough, but housing prices are low. Is now the time for you to buy? (The same holds true for cars.) People are being laid off; I’ll bet there are people out there looking for jobs, and they have just the talent your company needs. Business is slow; take the time to train your people and improve your processes. Then take time for yourself so you can get in better physical shape or enrich your spiritual life.

Reverse-engineer the problems, and you’ll find opportunities everywhere. Of course, you need to be able to recognize the opportunity of an opportunity. Let’s lighten things up with some witty indications of how opportunities might appear:
I say this: “Opportunity knocks; it doesn’t lean on the doorbell. You have to be listening for it; better yet, you need to be expecting it.”
Doug Larson said, “Sometimes opportunity knocks, but most of the time it sneaks up and then quietly steals away.”
And Boyd Chissum takes it a step further with this: “Even when opportunity knocks, a man still has to get up off his seat and open the door.”
Albert Einstein said this: “In the middle of every difficulty lies opportunity.”
Ken Lintz put the same idea this way, saying: “An obstacle is often an unrecognized opportunity.”
Charles Swindoll cautions, “We are all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.”
Ann Landers advises something similar: “Opportunities are usually disguised as hard work, so most people don’t recognize them.”
Finally, know this: Opportunities are never lost; someone will take the one you miss.

SUMMARY
Turn problems into opportunities. Rethink how you view trouble. Look for the opportunities within the predicaments. It takes leadership, creativity and innovation to train your brain to focus on the opportunities instead of the setbacks…especially these days. But you can do it. It’s the healthy, productive way to move forward in these challenging times.

Monday, July 13, 2009

How To Talk Cash Flow With Vendors

Communication is essential, but so is good judgment...

When the going gets tough, even the tough stick their heads in the sand sometimes. For example, when a small business grapples with its cash flow and can’t pay vendors on time, the boss might be inclined to ignore the problem in the hope that it will go away on its own.

Usually it won’t – and the ostrich-like behavior will only make the situation worse.

Eric Siegel is an adjunct lecturer in management at Wharton School and president of Siegel Management, advisors to middle market growth companies. He offered some advice on how to talk about money with vendors during recessionary times.

“I think communication is normally a good thing,” says Siegel, noting that some of us have a tendency to duck unpleasant calls and discussions, which, he says, only antagonizes people.

“So, with some exceptions, it’s a good policy to take calls from vendors about their invoices and sometimes even preempt their calls.” On the one hand, Siegel recommends telling the vendor that – for example – you’re in a tight cash flow period and will need to switch from paying every 30 days to a 45-day schedule. That sort of proactive communication, he says, “will win friends and help with the bonding of vendors.”

On the other hand, he says, “You shouldn’t use that as a blanket policy. There could be adverse implications.” A crucial vendor could decide they don’t want to take the risk that you’ll go out of business and leave your bills unpaid. They may insist on shipping COD instead.

What to say to vendors – and when to say it – is a question of culture and climate, says Siegel. Before picking up the phone to talk turkey with a vendor, ask yourself what kind of relationship you have with them. Are there feelings of trust? “If so, “ he says, “sharing financial information can be useful.”

When cash is tight and you don’t know what to tell your vendors, Siegel recommends a three-step process:

1. Understand the issue that needs to be addressed. You owe money, but your customers might not be making their payments; or you lost a big customer; or business has fallen off across-the-board. Whatever the need is, be sure you can articulate it.
2. Know what you want to achieve in order to address the need. Better payment terms from the vendor? A discount? Free delivery? Keep a specific goal in mind.
3. Have a communication strategy. Now that you know what you want to achieve, think about how to express it. There’s no single surefire method. Again, it will depend on your relationship with the vendor. How do you normally communicate with them? Casually? Formally? By phone? Email? Face-to-face? Stick with what makes you – and your vendor – comfortable.

“There’s a head-in-the-sand reflex with vendors,” says Siegel. “And it’s rarely a good idea. Communicating is always good, but how much you communicate is based on who you are, who the vendor is and your relationship.”

Monday, July 6, 2009

Ten Commandments from Entrepreneurial 'Evangelist' Guy Kawasaki


Here are some innovative, yet practical ideas for any business. - JH


Published : June 10, 2009 in Knowledge@Wharton

When Guy Kawasaki talks about business innovation, as he did recently at a University of Pennsylvania technology conference, he brings more than 25 years of major-league experience to the conversation -- a background that the good-humored investor and entrepreneur calls "my checkered past." After getting a psychology degree at Stanford and an MBA at UCLA, the Hawaii-born Kawasaki became the second software "evangelist" at Apple Computer, where his job from 1983 to 1987 was to convince people to create software for the Macintosh. Kawasaki fondly recalls his colleagues at Apple as visionary, driven and "arguably the greatest collection of egomaniacs in the history of California -- though the record has subsequently been broken by Google."

After leaving Apple, Kawasaki started his own companies in addition to becoming an author, consultant and venture capitalist. His books include The Macintosh Way, Rules for Revolutionaries, Selling the Dream and, most recently, Reality Check. Now 54, Kawasaki listens to pitches from start-ups regularly at his venture capital firm, Garage Technology Ventures. Its portfolio includes technologies ranging from logistics outsourcing to renewable energy, though he admits the firm hasn't yet had its breakout hit -- its own Apple or Google. In 2008, Kawasaki launched Alltop, a free Web site that uses RSS feeds to aggregate, by topic, the latest stories from thousands of web sites and blogs. His blog, "How to Change the World," is among the most visited business strategy sites.
At Penn, he spoke at a conference marking the 20th anniversary of the Executive Master's in Technology Management (EMTM) program, offered by Penn Engineering and co-sponsored by Wharton. His talk, titled "The Art of Innovation," amounted to a 10-point manifesto on how to make something of value for customers. Along the way, he invoked funny and revealing examples that included everything from obsolete ice-delivery men to beach sandals that open beer bottles.

The following is a summary of Kawasaki's "Ten Commandments":
1. Make meaning, not money. "As venture capitalists," Kawasaki said, "we deal with many companies, and often they come in [saying what] they think we want to hear: that they want to make money. It's been my observation that most companies founded on this concept of making money pretty much fail. They attract the wrong kind of co-founders and early employees." Rather, he says, entrepreneurs should focus on making their product or service mean something beyond the sum of its components -- and the money may very well follow. He noted how Nike made its aerobic sneakers for women into more than just "two pieces of cotton, leather and rubber, manufactured under somewhat suspect conditions in the Far East." With smart advertising about how women traditionally have been measured and judged, Nike "turned $2.50 of raw materials into something that stands for efficacy and power and liberation. They are making meaning with shoes. Great companies make meaning." Certainly, Apple has done that with the Mac, iPhone and other devices.

2. Make a mantra, not a mission statement. Bland, generic company mission statements -- about "delivering superior-quality products and services for our customers and communities through leadership innovation and partnerships" -- serve no one but the consultant brought in to develop them, Kawasaki said. Instead, keep it short and define yourself by what you want to mean to consumers. Nike stands for "authentic athletic performance." FedEx is about "peace of mind." To get everyone internally and externally on the same page, explain why your organization exists and how it meets customers' needs and desires.

3. Jump curves. Innovating is harder than just staying a little bit ahead of competitors on the same curve. "If you're a daisy-wheel printer company, the goal is not to introduce Helvetica in another point size. The goal is to jump to laser printer," he said. That's easier in some businesses than others. Kawasaki noted how in the days before refrigeration, the ice industry consisted of ice harvesters in cold climates using horses, sleighs and saws to collect ice outdoors during winter months. Ten million pounds of ice were shipped in 1900 that way, he said. Then came "Ice 2.0" -- factories that could freeze ice anywhere and an ice man who would deliver it to establishments and homes. Finally came "Ice 3.0": home refrigerators.
Of course, none of the ice harvesters got into the ice factory business, and none of the factories got into the refrigerator business. That's because "most organizations define themselves in terms of what they do," he said, "instead of thinking 'what benefit do we provide the customer?' True innovation comes when you jump curves, not when you duke it out for 10% or 15% better."

4. In product design, "roll the DICEE." That's an acronym. "D" is for deep, which to Kawasaki means thinking about features that go beyond the norm. One of his favorite "deep" ideas: Fanning Reef sandals, which have a bottle opener built into the sole. "I" is for intelligence, as seen in the design of Panasonic's BF-104 flashlight, which uses batteries of three different sizes to accommodate the random mix of extra batteries many people have around the house. "C" is for complete -- or being not just a product, but including support and service. The first "E" is for elegance: Beauty matters, according to Kawasaki. "Companies should have CTOs -- chief taste officers," he said. The second "E" is for emotive. "Great products generate strong emotions: Think Harley Davidson, Macintosh."

5. Don't worry, be "crappy." This doesn't mean ship a bad product, but "your innovation can have elements of crappiness to it," Kawasaki said. Twitter has a litany of flaws, but it is changing people's habits. The first Mac had plenty of room for improvement, but it made a statement about the future of personal computing, and it did not need to wait.

6. Polarize people. Try to be all things to all people and you often ship mediocrity, Kawasaki said. The boxy Toyota Scion xB looks ugly to some people but very cool to its devotees. TiVo became popular while maddening the advertising industry.

7. Let 100 flowers blossom. Borrowing from Chairman Mao, Kawasaki said you never know where the flowers will emerge, so let them grow. Innovations may attract unexpected and unintended customers. Think of Avon Products' Skin-so-Soft cream, which became popular as a mosquito repellent. Rule one, he said, is "take the money. Rule two: Learn who's buying your product, ask them why and give them more reasons. That's a lot easier than asking people who aren't interested 'why not,' and trying to change their minds."

8. Churn, baby, churn. Always improve. Listen to customers for ideas. That's difficult, Kawasaki said, because an innovator or entrepreneur must often ignore the advice of naysayers and "bozos" who say it can't be done. Once it is done, and the product reaches the hands of customers, it's time to start listening to their feedback. "Once you ship, then you flip," Kawasaki said.

9. Niche yourself. Find your place, Kawasaki urged. He showed a simple X-Y graph, with the usual four quadrants mapping the variables "Uniqueness" and "Value." A product or service does not need to be unique if it delivers value. That, he said, is how Dell won market share selling computers. In the lower left quadrant of his X-Y graph he placed many of the me-too dot.com companies of the late 1990s that were low value and uninspired. But in the upper-right quadrant were high value, unique products and services. They included the online movie-ticketing service Fandango and the Clear card that can speed passage through airport security. "The upper-right-hand corner is the holy grail of marketing," he said. "It's where meaning is made, it's where money is made, it's where history is made."

10. Follow the 10-20-30 rule when pitching to venture capitalists. That means no more than 10 PowerPoint slides, a limit of 20 minutes for the pitch, and using a 30-point font size in the presentation (to keep it simple). The goal of such pitches isn't to walk home with a check, he said, it's to "not be eliminated" from consideration.
Kawasaki added one bonus point for innovators -- and a mea culpa. "Don't let the bozos get you down," he said, trotting out some well-worn statements from technology naysayers, such as IBM chairman Thomas Watson's assertion in 1943 that the total worldwide market for computers was "maybe five" (computer historians question the authenticity of the unsubstantiated quote), and Western Union's inability to see a use for the telephone. These companies were trapped by thinking about what they already did, rather than what could be done next. Ignore them, Kawasaki said. Nevertheless, he admitted he was a "bozo" himself once. In the mid-1990s, he was offered a chance to interview for the CEO position at Yahoo. He declined. He saw the web as just another thing to do with a computer modem, and a web index as having limited value. "By my calculation, this decision cost me $2 billion."

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

"When you've finished changing, you're finished."

This quote from Benjamin Franklin rings as true today as it did in his era. We have ideas to help businesses adapt to today's environment. Let us help you make it happen!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

CFO for Hire

This article from The Buffalo Business Journal captures the essence of our business model. However, I have interjected a couple of my opinions in italics as shown below:

Small to mid-sized companies - the ones that need to turn a corner but are short on the right personnel - usually can't afford a CFO. Facing the prospect of growth, or problems such as poor sales or difficulties with banks, some companies need one. For those companies, the financial services industry has developed CFOs-for-hire. They are professionals who act like financial superheroes by descending into a situation, getting the ear of the CEO and offering their best advice before moving along to the next assignment. Their engagements can be short and specific or a bit longer and advisory, but they are always temporary. "Most companies don't need a full-time CFO. They bring us in when they do," said Jack Livingston, owner of CFO Solutions Plus of Buffalo.

What they do
The first thing short-term CFOs unpack at the client's place is the understanding of the fundamental principles of business. Sometimes this basic approach is just what an entrepreneur with little business experience needs. "The typical entrepreneurs know their products, but they're not salesmen (I disagree. Although they might not be stereotypical salesmen, effective entrepreneurs should be passionate/evangelistic about their company, which ultimately "sells" whatever they have to offer....JH) . What they don't know is how to make money," said David Pontrello, vice president of Phoenix Consulting Group of Grand Island.

He recalled a client who complained: "I'm spinning my wheels. Five years into the business, and I only made $35,000 last year. That's not enough for the owner of a company." Pontrello and his partner Darren Graff, Phoenix president, might suspect the problem is linked to pricing, which would require their financial and operations expertise. But before they jump to conclusions, the partners first perform an assessment to determine a logical next step. And when they do, "we want to sit next to the owner and say, 'Here's how you do it'," Pontrello says.

A CFO-for-hire's role is purely advisory. They have no signing authorization, they can't make decisions for the company, and they're not employees of the company. These CFOs don't serve as emergency bail-out consultants, nor are they "temps" in the classic sense of the word. "We're not a placement agency for CFOs or controllers," Livingston said. CFOs-for-hire may work at a company for as little as one day a week, or even one day a month, and help in various ways:
Restructuring the business' practices
Preparing owner to seek capital investment
Reviewing candidates for financial positions

Who they do it for
"We provide advice to the owners. Lots of business owners don't have anyone to talk to. It can be a very lonely spot to be in," said Gregory Meyer, who heads Business & Technology Consulting Inc. in Lancaster. Teddie Granville was one such business owner. Her 6-year-old Web design company was going gangbusters, with new and bigger clients knocking and sales doubling for each of the past three years. Busy on the creative end and juggling administrative duties, Granville's own time was limited. She needed an objective point of view and fresh ideas to position Conbrio Design for the future. The time was right, she thought, to call Phoenix Consulting.


"I wanted to make sure the infrastructure was here so we could continue to grow in a healthy way. I wanted someone to relook at the roles in the company see if should be shifting people and responsibilities," Granville said. "I have a CPA who does the books and balance sheets and makes sure the paperwork is in order. I brought in Dave to work our numbers with me. He acted very much as a CFO sitting down with me, working through the numbers and giving advice."
Clients do self-diagnose, like Granville did, but others are referred by bankers, attorneys or accountants to recognize a change is necessary, Pontrello said. Other times, a "shock event" - a sudden resignation, the defection of a major client or a called bank loan - will trigger a call, he said. "The common denominator," Livingston said, " is they don't have a high-level financial head in the organization. Maybe they have just a bookkeeper." Clients span a variety of industries and range in revenues from $300,000 to $25 million. (Don't let this article's revenue range limit your consideration of Hannum & Co.....JH)

Friday, June 19, 2009

Four Common Mistakes to Avoid in Running Your Small Business

I'm not sure of the source of this article, but it contains some good information...


You are the master of your domain. And as a small business owner, your domain is nothing to sneeze at. So let’s make it a little easier by learning from other people’s mistakes. The following are four of the most common mistakes made by small business owners.

Mistake #1: Knowing it All
You have chosen your industry wisely. You are already an expert in your field. So much so, that you have a business dedicated to your area of expertise.
But wait a minute. Just because you are an expert in your field does not mean you are an expert in running a business.
A friend of mine who is a tradesman was recently downsized and decided to use it as an opportunity to hang his own shingle out. He figured he was on easy street: he had loads of customer contacts and referrals coming his way, and after a lifetime of perfecting his trade, he was truly an expert.
So it stands to reason that he was more than a little surprised when the business floundered and ultimately failed after some initial success. What happened?
What my friend sadly missed in the equation of setting up his own company is that there is so much more to having a business than providing the product or service in question. His lack of ability to manage the books, file taxes and understand his write-offs, meet legal requirements, and manage employees was immediately telling. On top of that, he was unable to collect receivables effectively, and his lack of ability to stay organized meant unreturned phone calls and disgruntled employees being sent on wild goose chases. Before long, he lost customers, then employees, then eventually, the entire business.
Being an expert does not mean you are a good business owner.
So do you already know it all - really? If so, great. You have circumvented common mistake number one. But if you think there may be just a few teensy things you could stand to learn about running a business, it may be in your best interest to learn these skills from an expert, instead of from the school of hard knocks.
Find a mentor, or take some training. It doesn’t have to be expensive; many local government offices offer free courses to encourage entrepreneurs.

Mistake #2: Doing it All
Being everything to everybody will make your business a ticking time bomb. Without delegation, there is a good chance you will burn out trying to do tasks that are a struggle for you, but would be a cinch for somebody else. If you manage to hang on to your sanity in the process, you may end up losing sight of why you got into business for yourself in the first place. I’m fairly certain it was not so you could spend all your days and nights working.
Effective delegation involves three steps:
1. Trust Your Employees and Contractors - Those who have trouble delegating ultimately have a hard time trusting somebody else to do the job as well as they can (I can attest to this). In some cases, an employee may indeed breach that trust by incorrectly or irresponsibly doing the task assigned. Be patient: if they do it again after you provide extra guidance, then it is time to reconsider their role.
In other cases, you may realize that your employees can do the job at hand even better than you can. By trusting them to take it on, you may be pleasantly surprised with what you find.
2. Trust Your Clients - If you pass on the management of a client account to an employee, trust that they won’t leave you. Assure your clients that you are still at the helm. In fact, to provide the service you really want to, you cannot always be the one answering the phone, sending statements, or even providing the service in question (depending on just how much you wish to delegate).
3. Make Yourself Redundant - A functional principle of good business management is to set it up so that it can run smoothly with or without you. By clearly setting out business procedures for all areas of the company, anybody can take on the job and the customer should be none the wiser.
You may not have ambitions of being the next huge conglomerate, but at some point you will take time off – be it a vacation or illness or otherwise. Your business ideally will not suffer as a result of your absence. A solid indicator of success in business is if you can step away from it and continue to enjoy a passive income from a distance.

Mistake #3: Getting Too Much, Too Soon
Expenditures commensurate with running a business are ugly. It is easy to “need” this item and that, before you even make a dime in income. In some cases the needs are legitimate. In other cases, you can creatively steer clear of spending more money than you need to.
Here are a few tips to avoid the cash crunch by buying and managing sensibly:
1. Although buying in bulk is generally a long-term frugal gesture, it could put you in a tight spot right now. If it is a stock item, confirm that there is sufficient demand for everything you buy before taking the plunge. If it is an office item, ask yourself if you can do without. Remember: cash is king. Without it, your business will be in trouble. Sinking your cash into too many paperclips – despite an eventual need for them - might be disastrous.
2. Although buying equipment outright is generally a better financial option than leasing, sometimes leasing will leave more money in your pocket. If you only need the item in question for a limited time, or if it will be obsolete at the end of the lease term, then spending less and leasing will leave more cash in the accounts, giving you more solvency. If you do have to buy outright, consider used equipment over brand new ones.
3. Avoid state-of-the-art equipment. Sure, that fancy printer does everything except walk the dog, but you will save money by buying second-hand. Liquidation auctions are a great place to acquire business equipment for pennies on the dollar.
4. Don’t be afraid to deeply discount your stock. If it is not selling, be ruthless. The longer it sits on your shelf, the longer it will take for your bills to get paid.

Mistake #4: Ignoring Tax Until Tax Time
Your year-end accounting could be a shocking experience if you have not made proper allowances throughout the year. Consider the various forms of tax, mandatory employer benefits, and anything else your accountant can come up with. (Remember mistake #2: delegate and get an accountant.)
Cash in hand does not translate directly into profits. Without making the necessary deductions along the way, you could be in for a nasty surprise.
Avoiding these 4 mistakes is not a guarantee of your business’ success, but it will help you avoid the common pitfalls that sink many small businesses.