Atos Consulting has offered its top 10 tips to
businesses on how they canimprove
business performance this yearwithout
jeopardising long-term objectives.
Paula Sussex, CEO of Atos Consulting, said, "The real challenge
business leaders, financial directors and IT directors face is
balancing the short-term needs of the business with the longer-term
strategies already in progress.
"Short-term measures where cost reduction is concerned can be
risky to key elements of business success such as staff retention,
new product innovation and ultimately customer service."
To help survive the current climate and prepare for the upturn,
Sussex's tips for businesses are:
- Contact long-term suppliers and seek their input into the cost
reduction process. Together you can drive forward the joint
cost reduction projects on the basis of reduced revenue but
increased profitability.
- Avoid the traps. A 2007 survey of 180 senior procurement
managers by Atos Consulting concluded that over half felt that the
constant focus on in-year savings limited their ability to
implement more advanced sourcing strategies. In some plan cases the
impact of this was to deliver 3%-5% savings in one year at the
expense of 8%-12% in the next.
- Engage more closely with your workforce to prepare not only for
the current downturn but also for the subsequent upturn. To do
this, your
workforce needs to be flexible and scalable.
- Do not stop investing in existing staff.
Re-skill your existing workforce, focusing on value for money
in the back office and retaining your customers in the front office
roles.
- Increase scrutiny around operational spending and costs - any
cost reduction needs to be aligned to business strategy rather than
by putting a blanket percentage cut across the organisation.
- The
workforce morale implications of a downturn are more difficult
to predict - it is important to be a good leader, particularly when
sailing in uncharted economic waters.
- It is important that businesses do not lose sight of staying on
the growth trail. When the future is uncertain, it can be tempting
to just "batten down the hatches" and try to "ride out the
storm".
-
Do not cut back on business development or product development
budgets - keep your products or services current and creative. Too
often, companies cut back on the new products or services that
represent the future of their business. Then once the upturn
arrives they find they cannot catch up with the market's
expectations and demands.
- Ensure that you are providing your customers with the highest
level of customer service to protect prices and present new reasons
for customers to remain loyal.
- Do not plan for the short term - plan for the inevitable
upturn. Exploit rather than shelter from the downturn and decide
whether your enterprise will bask or bake in the face of economic
climate change.