Outside Voices: Small Business

What to Do When Sales Are Down?

By Becky McCray

Posted: February 12, 2009

When you have less business to do, it can either be tempting to do relaxing or distracting activities, like browsing the Web, or it can feel odd, not knowing what to do. Here are three things to work on right now.

Invest in your people. If you have less business and less work to do, take the time to do training. You don't need to add any cost to do this. Set up in-house classes. Walk through the back room, and build product knowledge. Talk about a new skill or concept over lunch. Take advantage of the billions of free training resources online.

And with all the layoffs from big companies, now is a terrific time to recruit new talent. Experienced people with strong skills are out there.

By the way, this still applies even if you are the only person in your business. Build your own skills, too.

Be more valuable to customers.

If you have fewer customers, spend more time going above and beyond to serve them.

Steve Finikiotis, principal at Osprey Associates, says, "Tough times bring tough problems for clients. Get very clear about what they need help with, and do that well."

Now is the time to be an all-star with your customer service. Give more value. Do more for your customers. Ask more, and listen more.

Cut costs.

Yes, I know everyone has told you this already. But as Justin Cowan, owner of Element Fusion, points out, "This seems obvious, but you'd be surprised how many people try to keep business as usual or try to save face in front of employees by keeping things as they are. Everyone knows the economy is down; it's OK to cut/downgrade/change things to bring your costs in line with the changing climate."

Becky McCray is a small-town entrepreneur, the co-owner of a liquor store and cattle ranch. She writes about small business and rural issues, based on her own successes and failures. As a consultant, she helps small businesses and small-town governments get things funded and get things done. Becky is also a noted speaker on small-business issues. She blogs at Small Biz Survival.

The Research Business

Rarely do we have the patience, tolerance and overall fortitude to do something about change. Patience suffers even more when that change appears or is in reality adverse to us. Businesses seem to get the back draft of this human tradition and pull away from their internally entrenched docks at the wrong speed to make the needed transitions.

I believe there are a 4 significant ways to overcome the "ADD effect" when times are seemingly good or bad - it isn't often that markets are headlined any differently than the extremes anyway:

1. Build research into your business - at every level. This doesn't mean a department should be created or bolstered. It means that you should charge your people with finding their most important success indicators, which should be metrics, and publicize them for the company to see (no, not necessarily P&L stuff. Believe me, there are an amazing amount of numbers in your business that would shock you when correlated to some of the biggies. The invention of certain metrics will be proven or dis-proven through the process and that is a good thing. It runs norms and ghosts into a more clear reality. Some end up in the trash bin where they always belonged...). Make it a daily headline and the definitive outcomes you can expect are better focus and promises to the business. After a short time you will then experience true involvement and collaboration around same goals - from all areas of the business. Don't make it too formal that people don't challenge the results or measurements. Don't make it too informal where it's hard to stick to subject.

2. Codify your key processes that result from learning the fundamentals on how things get done vs. what's been done already. You know the adage: "Teach once. Learn twice."

3. Do these things on as many levels of your business as you can in small town hall meetings/huddles each week. Maybe even twice per week. You won't believe the cross-training that can occur just from everyone being in the same room with some form of ownership in what's publicized.

4. Build a strong and focused performance management system. No matter what the business climate is, people need a solid framework for what performance means. Points 1-3 make it easier to do this. It should be as concise and focused a document as possible - have no fear of the one-pager. A second page should have well-documented monthly updates on the reviewer/reviewee's performance scores and rationale. This is the boat most often missed. Performance shouldn't be discussed and evolved in 3-6-12 month increments. It can be officially scored in that timeframe, but it should be scrutinized monthly. If nothing else, it will serve a greater periodicity of motivation and relationship-building for a superior and his talent.

Organizations who build themselves on research will be prepared for the reality of changes that face them regardless of market headlines and realities.

E of NE @ Feb 22, 2009 10:07:24 AM

Challening time for business

Investing or cutting costs - this is a question. Most of entrepreneurs are conservative enough to invest in their people. Good alternative is investing in marketing professionals to increase sales. Sometimes it is zero investment. I've heard about AntiCrisisMarketing.org guys who share their professional skills as a charity. Offer is limited, for sure.

Cutting costs shouldn't affect your clients, neither old, neither new. But, a kind of special 'anti crisis' offer in a menu should be there.

Boleo @ Feb 17, 2009 04:57:07 AM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

Outside Voices: Small Business

Outside Voices: Small Business

Read commentary about the day-to-day of running a small business from some of the top bloggers in the small business community.

advertisement

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!