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7 Steps to Being Recession Ready in 2019

Is the economy slowing down? Is the commander-in-tweet stirring the proverbial pot? Is HGTV skewing the real-estate market again? These are all factors to consider when preparing for the next recession.

Here are 7 Steps to Being Recession Ready in 2019

 

#1 Be Prepared

It is important to start planning now for a potential recession because timing is key to lessoning the impact of a recession on your company. Time is the enemy. Planning can take anywhere from 1 to 6 months, depending on the size of the organization. By having a plan in place now, if and when the recession hits you will be prepared and will not have to react to the recession but execute your plan.

 

#2 Engage the Sales Team

Sales is always key but especially critical in a recession. The sales team needs to utilize their existing tool box, marketing automation, email marketing, speaking engagements, etc. and be more diligent with their prospecting. Nurturing existing clients for incremental sales is key as well as creating new products or services in the recession that keep those clients around.

Other considerations – Align Sales and Marketing

 

#3 Manage Upwards

Owners and the C-Suite may overlook many things in a recession but cutting costs will be their first objective.  Do you have your plan B ready? Will your marketing budget and team survive?

#4 Cut the Right Costs

The first places business owners should look to cut costs is with reoccurring service or technology fees that are not being used by the company. Auditing software, tools and those reoccurring costs can reduce the bottom line without impacting the business or customers. Are all software licenses being utilized, are all software subscriptions being used, etc.

Tips from previous recessions:

 

#5 Turn to Technology

Investing in technology is not a foolproof method for avoiding the impact of a recession but it can soften the blow. For instance, instead of having a call center, can an AI chat bot on your website facilitate a customer experience or purchase in the same manner? If so, that technology can improve customer satisfaction and reduce overall operating costs. Technology should always be evaluated but if you are more than two generations behind on a technology upgrade when a recession hits, you may find it more expensive to service your business or clients in the same manner.

 

#6 Ease Fear

When a recession hits the immediate fear if the impact on employment. Communicate with your employees to let them know what cost saving plans you have in place before layoffs become a reality. If you believe in the people you hired, they will perform for you if you ensure their job safety. If their job is uncertain then performance will drop and have a greater negative impact on your company. Be transparent in the conversations. Sometimes people will be more willing to take a temporary pay cut over unemployment.

 

#7 Deliver Value vs. Cutting Price

In 2008 and 2009 consumers cut their spending to Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs – food, water and shelter. Homelessness spiked during this time so those are the bills people pay first. The bills that are avoided are the ‘extras’ – the monthly Stitch Fix box, Comcast cable, gym memberships and other items not necessary for everyday life.

Instead of looking to cut price, in 2009 Netflix changed their delivery system to provide value to their customers and drive membership. During the last recession, Netflix gained 3 million members. This was due to their new tv/movie streaming plan, which allowed subscribers to stream an unlimited amount of entertainment a month, along with their disc-delivery service.

By adding a variety of price plans and different services, Netflix became notable for what they did, the value they delivered, their customer service, and eventually brand recognition. As of today, Netflix continue to grow with over 117 million subscribers.

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