[My views are my own]
I’ve spent the past decade obsessed with helping companies to transform.
As a senior leader at two of the biggest business transformations of our era, I’ve been honing my “Comeback Playbook” or plan for “Return to Growth.”
Recently, I’ve been thinking a lot about how this “Transformation Blueprint” would be applied to the high growth disruptors that have collapsed over the past 9 months.
My top ten list for collapsed disruptors is:
- You are at war. Preserve your cash. Reduce your burn rate.
- Assume that the next period of boom conditions is a long way off. Your focus now should be on preservation/survival.
- Get real with your shareholders, board, employees, and customers. Get out ahead of what may possibly be tougher economic conditions in the next six to nine months.
- Garner alignment at the board level. You don’t have time or energy for managing the warring factions.
- Downturns almost always result in a rationalization of competition. You want to be one of the survivors to benefit from more rational market conditions on the other side.
- Slow the pace of growth, and focus on fixing the machine. What are the three critical path items that you have to improve/fix over the next six months. Margins? Customer churn? Overhead costs?
- Evaluate your leadership team, and their direct reports. Conditions in the market for hiring talent are likely to become more favorable. Upgrade where necessary.
- Coach your team. Most have probably not lived through the Global Financial Crisis or the Dot-Com Crash. They will likely need to develop new mental models for how to operate. Help them to adapt to a war environment.
- Consider a combination with a peer. Use the merger as an opportunity to reduce overhead costs while doubling down on your best talent — especially salespeople, engineers and product development.
- If you are generating cash (or you’ve got excess capital), consider equity repurchase. Read up on Henry Singleton of Teledyne in Chapter 2 of The Outsiders by William Thorndike.
If you are interested in engaging further in this conversation, I’d love to go on the journey with you. Please subscribe to my newsletter/blog. The link is at the top of the page on a desktop browser and at the bottom of the page on a mobile browser. Also, please follow me on Twitter, connect with me on LinkedIn, and post a comment below. I’d love to know what you think.
Greetings! Very useful advice in this particular article! It is the little changes that produce the greatest changes. Thanks a lot for sharing!