Tag Archives: Allocation

Where Should You Focus the Business? Four Recommendations

Situation: A company has experienced limited growth and profitability for the past five years. It is also short of resources. They have invested a lot of time and effort in a new technology which has yet to bear fruit. The CEO seeks advice on the company’s future direction. Where should you focus the business?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • Continue to support BOTH business – the core product line and the new technology – but rearrange priorities to boost revenue and profitability growth. Simultaneously, focus new R&D investment in the company’s core product. This has three principal benefits:
    • The company’s primary expertise is in its core product line. This product is its principal source of revenue and has the greatest potential for profitability and growth.
    • R&D and start-up production of new iterations of the principal product is less resource intensive than the new technology.
    • Further, sales of the core product are far less cyclical than the market for the new technology, and therefore more promising to a small, niche company.
  • Looking at this recommendation sequentially, the group recommends that the company:
    • Continue to sell the current product line a well as existing complimentary products to maintain revenue and profits.
    • If additional work or resources are needed to mature the new technology, have someone else take the lead role in R&D and private label the technology for the company.
    • Focus all new R&D investment on improvements to the core product.
    • Refocus market research on current and potential customers for the principal product line to determine their greatest needs to guide product line innovation.
  • The company needs access to advanced equipment to support development of the core product line. Consider creative ways to gain access to this equipment at little expense.
    • Look for advanced equipment that is available at distress or liquidation-sale prices by companies who made poor investment decisions.
  • Find a partner that wants to focus on the new technology, but who also wants and needs the company’s expertise in its core product line.
    • The company focuses on the core line; let the partner develop the technology.

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In Challenging Times Do You Cut Losses? Three Considerations

Situation: A company lost money last year, but turned the corner with a profitable final quarter. One of the company’s divisions continues to lose money, though the losses are small compared to the total picture. The CEO is considering cutting this business. What factors should the CEO consider in making this decision?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • What expense factors contributed to the loss?
    • The biggest factor was allocation of vehicle and space expense. This division has seasonal revenue but carries the allocated expenses for the full year.
  • Make sure that your allocated expenses are fair to the business. Do overhead allocations reflect utilization? Unless closing the business eliminates vehicles or space, if you terminate this business these expenses will be borne by the rest of the company.
    • Study your allocations by shifting the allocation made to this business to other businesses. What is the impact on their profitability?
    • If you find that the current allocation does not reflect utilization and adjust accordingly, does the business still lose money?
    • If this division covers its direct expenses along with most of its allocated expenses, a small loss in this division may be preferable to a reduction in profitability of other businesses from closing the division.
  • How strategic is this division to the overall business mix?
    • Is this business essential to your product/service mix or just a customer convenience? If you terminated the business will customers be upset?
    • Do competitors offer this service, and would you be disadvantaged by discontinuing it?
  • What are the alternatives?
    • Can you raise prices to increase profitability and refuse business that does not meet this pricing?
    • Can you restrict the offering to less price sensitive customers?
    • Can you refer customers to other vendors or sub out this business?
    • Can you reduce the scope of the offering while adjusting pricing to enhance profitability?
    • Can you source other labor alternatives to reduce cost?

Category: Strategy, Service

Key Words: Profitable, Loss, Division, Business, Critical, Factors, Expense, Allocation, Seasonal, Overhead, Loss Limit, Customer, Price, Competition, Offering, Scope, Labor, Skilled, Contractor

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