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Short Term Actions, Long Term Results In Rough Economic Times

University. of Michigan. Business. School. Short Term Actions, Long Term Results In Rough Economic Times. 2001 Unicon Fall Conference December 6-8, 2001 Ron Bendersky. Introduction. Rough economic times Goal Short term survival Long term strength General Case

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Short Term Actions, Long Term Results In Rough Economic Times

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  1. University of Michigan Business School Short Term Actions,Long Term ResultsIn Rough Economic Times 2001 Unicon Fall ConferenceDecember 6-8, 2001 Ron Bendersky

  2. Introduction Rough economic times • Goal • Short term survival • Long term strength • General Case • How to transform problem/crisis into opportunity • Given unwelcome circumstances how to maximize gains/minimize damage

  3. Introduction (continued) • Qualifications • No easy answers • Tough as it gets • The “people-business performance paradox”--people as an asset or a cost? • Observations and combination of personal experience and research findings

  4. Session Agenda • Orientation • What are the cultural attitudes required in a downturn? • Framework • What is a way to think about competing in downturn? • Actions • What actions can/should be taken in downturn?

  5. The Problems (A Sample) • Economic downturn and aftermath of 9/11 • Travel restrictions • Corporate downsizing • Training budget cuts • Loss of perspective, rise of emotions • Difficult faculty and staff colleagues • Short term actions may cause long term damage • Unintended consequences

  6. Vicious Cycle Low Enrollmentsand Margins • Less resources devotedto innovations inprograms and business processes • Focus on cutting costs i.e., marketing and head count Ineffective strategy • Talented people leave • Program development and innovation slow down

  7. The Opportunities (A Sample) • To slim and streamline • To strengthen people portfolio • To strengthen and balance the program portfolio • Feed the strong • Focus the weak • Build the new • Form alliances with other schools and executive education providers • To gain customer share • To change culture

  8. Vision • Do you have a business-centered vision of your post-recession organization? • As you take short-term actions to cope with the current business situation, what do you hope to achieve in the way of long term results?

  9. Strategy • What is your strategy to emerge from rough times? • Strengthen organizational capabilities • Increase morale and self-confidence • Retain best people • Increase trust/minimize loss of trust • Transform culture to support revenue growth while simultaneously controlling costs

  10. Tactics • What is your operational plan to manage people, processes and financial resources during the downturn?

  11. Orientation • Required cultural norms • Bold • Response times shorten • Must act more quickly • Time for creativity • Use downturn to “clean up” what needs to be done • Focus • Not all things worth doing are worth doing well • Customer • Keep focused on “outside/in”…not a time to look inside

  12. Phases of Downturn Management • Phase I: Within the Business • Focus on being more disciplined and rigorous within the existing business structure of the organization to both cut costs and grow the business • Phase II: Within the Organization • Focus on finding ways to leverage across the organization by cutting costs (shared services, technology investments, consolidation) and growing the business (leveraging ideas and programs) • Phase III: Within the Industry • Focus on finding ways to consolidate and build alliances within the industry

  13. Balancing Costs and Growth Growth Innovation (new programs, services, markets) Costs Increase Revenue/Growth Productivity (raise output per unit of input) Geography (revenue per country) Customer (more customer share) Manage Costs Processes (reengineer work processes) Projects (focus capital investments)

  14. Framework for Balancing Cost/Growth

  15. Framework for Balancing Cost/Growth

  16. Costs Productivity (raise output per unit of input) Manage Costs Projects (focus capital investments) Processes (reengineer work processes)

  17. Actions to Reduce Costs - Productivity • Analyze how to do more with less • Engage employees in ways to improve work and reduce costs everywhere • Use workout type exercise to analyze work: eliminate, do less, do less frequently, do through technology, etc. • Build shared service organization… • Service center: use technology to centralize and standardize administrative work • Outsource: build alliances to manage costs on transaction work

  18. Actions to Reduce Costs - Process • Analyze and reengineer work processes (process mapping, removing time) • PURCHASING: Consolidate suppliers, share costs, improve processes • TECHNOLOGY: Use technology to standardize and gain efficiency, but make sure that technology investments have pay-back • REPORTING STRUCTURE: Consolidate units and how work is organized (remove redundancies) • FACILITIES: Reduce burden by consolidating • WORK REDESIGN: Change how work is done (e.g., teams, layers)

  19. Process(continued) • POLICIES: Modify approvals and policies to control costs (e.g., travel, meetings) • CUSTOMER INTERFACE: Focus on key customers and maintain contact with them • QUALITY: Bring discipline to all work processes—reduce variance, eliminate waste (lean), and do more efficiently • CHANNELS: Prioritize channels for contact with customers and delivery of programs and services • LEADERSHIP FOCUS: Communication and clear standards • MERGERS/ALLIANCES: Share services across organizational boundaries

  20. Actions to Reduce Costs – Projects • Analyze and prioritize projects or investments • Delay some projects • Postpone • Cancel

  21. Growth Innovation (new programs, services, markets) Increase Revenue/Growth Geography (revenue per country) Customer (more customer share)

  22. Actions for Growth (Increase Revenue) - Innovation • Explore ways to innovate products, services, work processes • Idea generation: seek and access ideas from competitors, thought leaders, seminars, customers, creative employees, etc. • Incubation: Sift ideas into pilots by running pilots, doing experiments • Investment: assess market potential to prioritize projects, select key programs and services to invest in • Implementation: Connecting with customers, build market launch strategy (communication, early adopters); find pockets of early success • Integration: connect old to new products, move customers from old to new program or service • Improvement: Continually improve programs and services

  23. Innovation(continued) • Innovate in many areas • Distribution or channels (e.g., web-based) • Customer experience or relationships • Product: core offering • Service: follow-up • Business model: how paid • Fold in customer requirements • Find lighthouse customers • Anticipate customer needs • See world through customer eyes

  24. Innovation(continued) • Prioritize key innovations • Build innovation culture • Think big, act small, fail fast, learn rapidly

  25. Actions for Growth – Customer • Focus outside/in • Think of customers as “unit of value” and define a value proposition for the targeted customers. See their needs, opportunities, and desires. The innovation partner is the customer. • Create customer share • Target key customers for present and future • Forge strong relationships with key customers • Define right channel for serving customers

  26. Customer(continued) • Leverage within the organization • Establish customers * program grid • Move program to new customers • Involve customers with new programs • Build and leverage brand identity in the minds of critical customers

  27. Actions for Growth – Geography • Create geography share • Target key markets for present and future • Build strong visibility and relationships within those markets • Form alliances to move into those markets

  28. Actions • Find balance of cost/growth • Divide 100 points for strategic intent across “cost and growth.” 100 points on cost is easy but dangerous trap • Work through all three phases • Approach people as assets [invest in their development] as well as costs…because they are both • Move quickly ahead of competitors… it is still a competitive game and it is better to lead than respond • Maintain attention on customers… don’t hurt customers by cutting activities or you risk long term erosion of confidence • Exhibit leadership resolve: bold, focused decisions

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