Tag Archives: Efficient

Is it Better to Sell or Downsize? Four Perspectives

Situation: A company is losing money and has been approached about a merger. The CEO’s ideal outcome would be to get cash on the table, integrate with the merger partner and continue business. The other alternative – downsizing – may hurt company morale. What are the best options available? Is it better to sell or downsize?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • The realities of mergers: 70% of mergers fail, and the merger process often leaves founders with a minority stake in the company. The experience of others with partners has been disappointing – it’s better to control your own destiny. Look at all alternatives before you jump into a merger. You founded the company and have brought it this far. The company will be a different company following a merger, and not the company that you founded or have led to date.
  • The message to your potential merger partner: Be a reluctant bride. “We are making improvements to return to profitability and I’ve joined a board of CEOs who are consulting me through the process.” If the partner sweetens the offer to keep the merger on the table, make sure that you get 51% of the merged company and retain control of your own fate.
  • Downsizing: Others have found the downsizing experience wrenching, but with more positive results than they expected. A 10% cut resulted in a 30% increase in productivity. Employees once thought to be critical were not missed post-layoff. The employees generally understood more about the situation than the CEO knew, and those remaining responded positively to a restructuring that allowed them to keep their jobs. Some companies used a layoff as an opportunity to cross-train employees and increase company flexibility.
  • Smoothing the layoff process: Communicate with the employees. Let them know the truth and share enough of the situation so that they understand. Challenge employees to come up with ways to save money or make processes more efficient and cost-effective. This can have a remarkable impact. Consider a cross-the-board salary reduction as a temporary alternative to layoffs. Position this as a layoff to restructure expenses – this keeps you on the right side of employment law. Obtain assistance from a personnel consultant who can help to handle the process effectively.
  • Smoothing the layoff process: Communicate with the employees. Let them know the truth and share enough of the situation so that they understand. Challenge employees to come up with ways to save money or make processes more efficient and cost-effective. This can have a remarkable impact. Consider a cross-the-board salary reduction as a temporary alternative to layoffs. Position this as a layoff to restructure expenses – this keeps you on the right side of employment law. Obtain assistance from a personnel consultant who can help to handle the process effectively.

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How Do You Focus on Doing Things Right? Seven Recommendations

Situation: A CEO is concerned that her company is not as efficient or effective as it could be. Of the key activities where the company is focused, few have any obvious connection to the customer or the customers’ needs. How do you focus on doing things right?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • Create a set of cost graphs to parallel the company’s revenue graphs. If these are put side by side, does it indicate that the company is doing some things that add relatively low value and profit? What happens if resources are shifted away from less valuable activity?
  • Concentrate resources on doing one profitable thing well. Become best in class at this one thing. This may both increase the value of the firm and help to focus future development.
  • Bring in a senior level marketing research person or marketing manager with marketing research experience to determine what the customer wants, how should the company compete, and what current customers may be willing to pay for its software.
  • Strengthen the primary product – it represents 90% of sales. This is where the company has the best understanding of both its customers and the market. Look at what it takes to become enterprise wide with the company’s largest customers. Expand vertical capabilities and build $1 million accounts to $5 million a year.
  • The company already has a diverse group of clients, many of whom are huge.
    • How deep is the company in each of these clients? It may be easier and less expensive from a sales standpoint to go deeper into these clients than to bring on new clients.
    • Look for ways to make current $1 million clients $5 million clients by selling what the company currently sell to more of their divisions and locations.
    • The key to executing this strategy is to listen closely to what clients’ needs are and adjust or customize the offering to better meet their needs.
  • Focus on solutions and reduce the cost of solution implementation. Consider becoming more vertical in one key implementation and become the best at that.
  • Create a relevant framework for the company’s strategy. For what purpose is it necessary to do the right thing? If the purpose is to exit in 2 to 3 years, this yields a very different strategy than if the objective to dominate the company’s market in a 5 to10 year period.

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