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![]() Seven ways to stay up in down times by Dave Anderson The only thing worse than wading through a business downturn is to do so without a strategy. Business as usual doesnt cut it when markets, consumers or other conditions beyond your control turn against you. The old saw, what doesnt kill you makes you stronger is little consolation when business is slow. Follow these seven steps to stay up in down times. Focus on your core Dont panic-spend on advertising Dont kill your capacity to produce Training builds up your only sustainable competitive edge and increases your production capacity. If you reduce it, you contribute to your own demise. Training is not a luxury and its not a cost. Its an investment. When times turn down, take the opportunity to train up a notch. Reduce entitlements. Reward The weak links in your organization determine the speed of the rest of the team. They are a restrictive force. Just as a chain cant pull more than the weakest link allowsregardless of the strength of the other linksyour overall production will be compromised by your weak links as well. Weak links lower the collective self-esteem of the whole team. They compromise your standards and impair your credibility as a leader. They are a distraction; they sap morale and break momentum. The team attitude toward weak links normally starts out with lets help him or her and when no improvement is seen, the attitude changes to one of resentment. Top performers feel cheapened and diminished working in an environment where others dont contribute and cant pull their weight. Its worth mentioning that the most devastating weak link in your organization is a bad manager. Bad managers should be given less rope because when a bad manager hangs himself he tends to hang a lot of other good people with him. Use down times as a chance to clean up your roster. Cut once Once you have finished, bring everyone together. Explain what youve done and why. Tell them to put it behind them. Reassure your people that everyone and everything that remains has been strengthened by these cuts. Now that they are finished, everyone can focus and get back to work. Dont develop a losers limp Until you and the other managers accept that the biggest threat to your organization comes from the inside and not the outside, you will continue to misdiagnose and mistreat your most serious problems. Typical ones include lack of leadership, hiring standards, performance expectations, accountability, a cohesive leadership team at the top, vision, strategy, urgency, people-development and a growth environment. These are the inside threats you must go to work to eliminate day-in and day-out. Stay positive A good coach uses honest communication to encourage, motivate, listen and direct. Good coaches also give fast feedback and consequences for deficient performances. Stay focused on the big picture and remember foremost that the best time to fix the roof is when the sun is shining. When better times return its not a license to coast, become complacent and think youve arrived. Instead its the best time to train, coach, clean up your roster, set standards that create urgency, make the tough decisions, implement necessary changes, take risks and lead from the front. If these things are done when things are rolling people will stay sharp and focused. Let them know theres still room to improve. When business starts to pick up again, develop a mindset to run up the score rather than sit on the ball, and the next downturn will find you bulletproof rather then wearing a bulls-eye. Dave Anderson is the author of No-Nonsense Leadership: Real World Strategies to Maximize Personal and Corporate Potential. He is a peak performance author, trainer and speaker for sales and leadership. For more information go to: www.LearnToLead.com, or call . back to top back to online exclusives |
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