Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Down the Slope and up Again

Down the Slope and Up Again:
Seven Strategies to Lead Your Team through the Recession
by Ian Cook & Scott Campbell


Wherever you look, news about the economy is bad.

Layoffs abound. Pfizer, a pharmaceutical giant, recently announced 8,000 job cuts. Home Depot, the biggest home improvement retailer in the U.S., said it will eliminate 7,000 jobs. Even the State of California is letting 20,000 go. The economy lost 2.6 million jobs last year, the most since 1945, and it shows no signs of improving in 2009.

Large companies are hemorrhaging. General Electric Co., a bastion of the economy, posted a 46 percent drop in fourth-quarter earnings. Aetna Inc., the third-largest U.S. health insurer, reported a 57 percent drop in profit. Coca Cola, American Express, and J.C. Penney…the list goes on.

Small businesses are similarly feeling the pain. So too are non-profits, where corporate and
individual charitable givings are down significantly while demand for services such as employment assistance, food banks, and shelters are growing.

It’s tough out there. For everyone.

Your employees, no doubt, are feeling the pressure along with you, adding to the challenges you face as a leader. At the very time when you need your people most focused, productive, and engaged, anxiety and stress preoccupy their attention.

Worried about their future with the organization, people gossip and commiserate around the “water cooler,” discussing “what’s really going on with the company,” reinforcing a downward spiral of negativity and pessimism. As job cuts become a real possibility, morale plummets and productivity declines. Following a layoff, those who remain are often overburdened with work and worried that they are next on the chopping block. Stress mounts, and people begin to forget facts and appointments, miss deadlines, and exhibit poorer judgment in their decisions.

What is a business leader to do?

The answer: provide highly effective leadership at all levels of the organization – leadership that keeps employees engaged, focused, and productive in the midst of turbulent times.

Here are seven leadership responses that will help you provide that kind of leadership:

Pay attention to the messages you are sending.
During high stress times, trust in your leadership is challenged. Your employees question your messages, wondering whether you are telling them the truth or have a hidden agenda. They monitor your level of confidence and your attitude towards the crisis. Even if you don’t express it out loud, what you believe and feel will leak out through your behavior. It is what you do, not what you say that employees tune in to.

So, take a good look at your own beliefs and feelings (anxiety, anger, fear, etc.) around the challenges your organization is facing. You may need to work hard at reframing your concerns and worries into positive talk and galvanizing action. Focus on a positive vision for the post-crisis world. Stress to your employees what is still working, highlight your company’s strengths, and proclaim your confidence in your people. Finally, remember that the decisions that senior leaders make must be perceived as fair to all. It is very difficult for employees to see co-workers let go while executives maintain their pay levels and perks. Pain needs to be shared between all in tough times – and it must be perceived as shared.

Make the tough decisions quickly but don’t just react.
Times of economic crisis do require tough decisions. Reducing the number of employees may be absolutely necessary. The same holds true for deep budget cuts, reducing spending, letting go of non-core parts of your business, or cutting back on training.

Once you make a tough call, announce and implement it as quickly as possible. Otherwise, the normal company grape vine will go into overdrive. Rumors will spread with lightning speed, with little concern for getting all the facts straight. Anxiety will spike, resentment build, commitment decline and that all-important trust will rapidly erode.

This said, pressure and worry can prompt us to “just do something.” The temptation is to go into reaction mode and not think about the long-term impact of our decisions.

This is particularly true with layoffs. Reducing head count as a first response to crisis undeniably saves money, but it can be costly in other ways, including:
the loss of good people
increased anxiety and resentment on the part of those still employed
greater stress from increased workloads
lower levels of service

Smart leaders use layoffs as a last resort. First, take a good look at alternative measures such as reduced work weeks or job sharing. This will boost employee goodwill, loyalty, and commitment – the very elements you need during an economic downturn.

Wise leaders act, they don’t react.

Focus on the vision.
The effective leader is able to pursue her vision in the midst of adversity. There are three key elements to this.First, she balances crisis-driven short-term decisions with her long-term, strategic objectives. This ensures that the organization both survives (in the short run) and is positioned to take advantage of better conditions when they arrive.

Second, she uses her vision to be alert to opportunities that may arise in the midst of the crisis. For example, if delivering an outstanding customer experience has been part of her competitive strategy, diverting precious limited resources to maintaining that level during the downturn will garner even deeper customer loyalty, securing her competitive advantage in the long-term.

Third, she and her leadership team provide direction and hope to her employees by continuing to emphasize the vision. This frees up workers psychologically to focus their energy on the work that needs to be done today.

Keep people informed.
Based on a genuine desire to protect your people from anxiety and keep them focused on their tasks, it is tempting to hold back information about what difficult decisions you are planning on making, or on how the firm is really doing, or who will be impacted by your decisions.Yet, communicating openly, frequently, and as candidly as possible has never been more important. During difficult circumstances, employees want and need to feel a closer connection to their leaders. People prefer difficult news to no news.So, ramp up the degree and frequency of communication. And make sure it’s two-way! Here are a few suggestions:

Increase your leadership team’s visibility and accessibility. Walk around more than usual.
Use email, company intranets, newsletters, and other means to keep people in the loop.
Hold town-hall meetings, department meetings, and lunch discussions to provide a format for people to ask questions and have their emotions and concerns heard.

Acknowledge, without minimizing, what you hear about what they are feeling.
When people grossly exaggerate the likelihood of a negative outcome, calmly suggest that the possibility is very remote.

Involve people with today.
The busier people can be, the less they will be inclined to dwell on worries and “what if” thinking.

So keep a shorter term focus than normal:
Recognize and celebrate small victories and accomplishments, even completed pieces of a larger project. It builds morale and creates a sense of momentum and progress.

Place special emphasis on places where people touch the customer.

Encourage employees to look for opportunities everywhere to do things more efficiently or try something new. This keeps everyone thinking about “what’s possible, instead of “what’s wrong.”
When you hear someone complaining about something, gently reframe their thinking by first acknowledging, “Yes, it is frustrating.” Then, ask them, “what can you do about it?” You are refocusing them on things they can either influence or control. This builds their sense of empowerment.

Demonstrate caring – even when letting people go.In global research conducted by the Towers Perrin group, the number one driver of high employee engagement is a sense that the leaders of the company genuinely care about the well-being of their employees.

When you must lay employees off, how they are treated is crucial. Those who remain will respond to the thoughtfulness and caring demonstrated in your downsizing process with increased commitment to your organization. People know tough times require tough actions, but they want to know that their former colleagues have been treated with as much consideration as possible.

Invest in your leaders and key players.
It is easy to ignore your best performers during tough times, relying on them to do their jobs while you focus on managing the crisis. This is a mistake. If your A-players feel ignored or taken for granted, they may consider greener pastures elsewhere, either during the downturn or certainly when times are good and competitors come calling.

Make sure that you stay connected to these individuals, keeping them enthused about their prospects with your company and about the organization’s future. Due to their professionalism, top performers may not complain to you, but rest assured, they experience the same anxiety and doubts as your other employees do.

As for your top leadership team, spend some time, perhaps in a low-profile retreat meeting, to build cohesion so that team members address their own fears, affirm their belief in the enterprise, speak with one voice and together commit to successfully bringing the organization through the dark times to a brighter future ahead.

Coach your mid-level managers and supervisors on how to talk to their direct reports when negativity, resentment and despair arise.

Taking care of your leaders and your top talent will give your organization an immediate and enduring edge over your competition – who may well be floundering, searching frantically for a tactical solution to turn things around in the short run.

In Conclusion

Tough times do end. That’s the good news.
But until they do, effective leadership is one of the few keys you have to surviving and ultimately thriving.

These seven leadership responses offer a roadmap to navigating this tumultuous environment and arriving at the best possible destination on the other side.
1 Towers Perrin White Paper, Managing Amid Market Turmoil: Top Priorities for Business and HR Leaders.
(1636 words)

Ian Cook, presenter and consultant, works with managers who want to increase their effectiveness as a leader and build a stronger team.

Scott Campbell is an accomplished speaker, trainer, and author, with clients throughout the world. He is the President and founder of Personalities At Work, a leadership development consortium.

To book a training seminar, team facilitation or keynote presentation, call toll-free at: 1-888-FULCRUM (385-2786) or e-mail: Contact Us
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Friday, February 20, 2009

In times like these, people need motivation

News
Hamilton Spectator, Febraury 14, 2009
Meredith MacLeod


Motivational speakers are in demand more than ever and they're up to the task to encourage people to share their optimistic outlook and to provide the spark that gives them the courage in hard times to pursue their goals and dreams.

George Torok

George Torok initially rejected the title 'motivational speaker.'

"I thought no, I have content. That term is associated with fluff and nothing being real."
But after 12 years of speaking to entrepreneurs, executives and employees about marketing and presentation skills, Torok realized that's exactly what he was.

"I have content packaged with entertainment and motivation. Content without motivation is useless because nothing happens without motivation."

He finally started calling himself a motivational speaker.

"In times like these, people need motivation more than any other time. But people don't always buy what they need, they buy what they want."

And in times like this, it's a tough sell to encourage people, who are watching their co-workers get laid off, to work harder, increase sales, cut costs, do things differently.

"There is definitely resistance but people eventually come around."

Calls are up for speeches and for one-on-one coaching in presentation skills. Torok typically does close to 100 speaking or training engagements in North America each year.

He says people see the thousands he gets paid for a speech and think it's a glamorous life. Torok says they don't see the hours going into writing and rewriting material, researching a company, making calls, writing articles.

"It's constant learning. If I'm going to teach people, I have to know 10 times what they know or it's not useful to them.

"Then it's about what you can say that will help the company make that money back."

Read the rest of this article at the Hamilton Spectator.

View the video. (George Torok is fourth on the video and worth waiting for.)

------------------

George Torok
Motivational Business Speaker
Canadian Motivational Speaker



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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

THRIVING IN A RECESSION: Part 2

Thriving in a recession: Part 2
by Mark Elwood


WATCH YOUR CASH FLOW

Any business can run out of cash, even a profitable one. As an example, says marketing expert Ian Mishkel, small retailers can get pinched when they have to buy inventory that does not turn into cash for a while. Cash is king, so plan your cash flow. Start with a simple spreadsheet. In columns across the top, enter the months of the year. In the rows down the side enter your sources of revenue. Below these, list all your major expenses into the future. Be sure to include your own salary, plus a provision for taxes, as well as reserve funds. At the bottom subtract expenses from revenues each month to obtain your month-end balance. This becomes your opening amount for the next month. It sounds basic, but few entrepreneurs do it.

Under normal conditions, you might estimate about three months out. In tougher times, consider projecting your cash for up to a year. At some point during this period, expenses will continue, but revenues will stop. Your projection will show a shortfall. That’s where you will need to dip into your savings, or take advantage of a line of credit. Include those in your cash flow. Then, any new business that comes in will be a bonus, and will reduce the need to dip into savings.

Here is what is important about this approach. By making a decision now that you will borrow six months from now, you remove the pressure of having to make a sale this month. The result is that you can remain cool and calm, knowing that your cash flow plan will sustain you through the year. This minimizes short term worrying. As Toronto based chartered accountant Rubin Cohen says, “When you maintain your composure, you are more successful than when you are desperate.”

BEWARE OF EXPENSE LEAKAGE

Financial planners such as Michael Chow from Stonehaven Financial Group and Derrick Lahey from RBC Dominion Securities warn about expense leakage. All the minor daily expenses that we pay little attention to create leakage. Together they can be a real burden, because nothing adds up to much, but everything adds up to a lot. Consider how much you spend on coffee, cigarettes, chocolate bars, muffins, road tolls, cell phone calls, your Blackberry, coffee, your cable bill, credit card interest, coffee, and newspapers. Oh, and did I mention coffee? When you track your expenses for a month, you will be surprised at the impact of small expenses. Cut out the things you thought were essential, but really aren’t.

There is a different kind of leakage at the other end of the financial scale – big expenses for the cottage, private school education, a second car, the kitchen renovation, membership dues at the club you rarely use, outstanding credit card debt, a home theatre, and many others. These are the big-ticket items that are harder to cut in the short term, but also create a financial strain.

The minor daily expenses are mostly just stuff. The big expenses are mostly just possessions. But what many people really want are the things that cost somewhere in the middle. They want more experiences in their lives. They want dinner dates, trips to the zoo, vacations, lunch with a friend, a day at the spa, and theatre tickets. Creating experiences is also about purchasing time for them by hiring others to free up time. Someone to clean the house, a virtual assistant to conduct clerical tasks, baby sitters, and handymen. By controlling the big expenses and the small ones, you’ll have more money for the medium-sized expenses that pay for great experiences. Do what you do best, and delegate the rest.

Another aspect to money management is saving. Are you having trouble putting money aside? Dump your coins into a jar at the end of each day. They will add up fast and you can use what accumulates for “mad money” – a special treat or a night out once in a while to celebrate.

SMILE AND BE GRATEFUL

When you look back at the past, there is often temptation to be regretful or wish longingly that things had turned out differently. Unfortunately, you create negative energy when you use phrases like these:
· “I should have cashed my stocks…”
· “I missed a chance to buy that house…”
· “If only I had followed his advice…”,
Regret drags you down. You should learn from you mistakes, not dwell on them.

Looking in the other direction towards the future, anxiety can be just as much of an energy drain:
· “I’m worried I won’t have enough money”
· “My health might not last.”
· “I might lose my job.”

Gratitude on the other hand, is appreciating what you have right here and right now. If you are healthy, if you have a family, if you have customers, and if you have friends, then you have everything to feel good about. Gratitude trumps regret and anxiety any time. So pause, reflect, and find joy in all that you have. The moment you are in now is pretty special. Remember – some day, these will be the good old days. Celebrate your success.

Thriving in business is about getting sales, but it is also about having a positive outlook. We are entrepreneurs. We make choices for ourselves. We choose our own path. We succeed where others can only wish. So go out and thrive. Do the things that are nourishing, productive and positive. And keep smiling. After all, your time is worth it.


Mark Ellwood is the president of Pace Productivity Inc., a consulting firm based in Toronto, Canada that shows employees how to gain three hours per week on their top priority activities.


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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Recession Perspective

A good recession is like a warm enema.

You will be uncomfortable anticipating the event, strangely stimulated during and feeling much better after.


George Torok
Host of Business in Motion
Motivational Business Speaker

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Monday, February 09, 2009

Thriving in a Recession Part 1

THRIVING IN A RECESSION !
By Mark Ellwood

Part 1


As a fellow entrepreneur, you are probably wrestling with the challenges of the current business climate. Your customers have postponed projects. Your hot leads are less plentiful. Your bank account is strained.

You are not alone. But what differentiates you from others is your ability to make smart choices, prudent decisions, and cost effective initiatives. Some of my colleagues and I have shared a few ideas on how to thrive during a recession. So I thought I would pass on some simple ideas on how to succeed.


STICK WITH YOUR CORE OFFERING

When business wanes, it is tempting to try something else, to introduce a new service or offering that is markedly different from your core business. But consider this. Would it really be any easier to convince someone to purchase your new product or service than it is to convince them to buy what you already offer? Probably not. You have a strong reputation; you have a unique offering that is valuable to your customers. You have spent years perfecting your business model. So stay on course. You provide great value – you just have to be patient while your prospects come around to realizing the same thing. If your customers are planning to go bankrupt, then drop them. But most aren’t. Most plan to grow sometime soon. Then be there for them when they do.


TAKE TIME TO PLAN

Time study research we have done on entrepreneurs shows they spend nine hours per week on forward-thinking activities such as market research, new product development, marketing planning, and team coordination. Also included in this is time spent each day planning their schedule, updating appointments, and figuring out whom to call. Invest the time to look towards the future, and the future will arrive with success. Make a to-do list each day consisting of items you can actually complete, not just stuff you will “work on.”


INVEST IN YOUR BUSINESS

At any time during the business cycle, growth-oriented companies should invest in three major areas; a) research and development, b) marketing, and c) human resources. As an entrepreneur, you should do the same, but without spending massive amounts of money.

To get into R & D mode, conduct some customer research; or complete a survey of current practices so that you can write an article. Meanwhile, create a price list for new services that you have always wanted to offer and that are consistent with your mission.

Then, invest in marketing. This starts with understanding what drives your marketing machine, whether trade shows, demonstrations, centers of influence, referrals, or pay-per-click advertising. Know what works, and do more of it, not less. Spend on marketing. Update your web site. Send out a newsletter. Attend a trade show. Just don’t cut back.

As for HR, how about upgrading your own skills? Or developing strategic partnerships? Become a virtual company – don’t hire staff, hire team members on contract. And bring on a virtual assistant to let you focus on the most important aspects of your business. Preciosa Leal, who leads Alliance Business Solutions says, “A resourceful virtual assistant can cost effectively provide an instant boost to your productivity.”


STAY IN TOUCH

Find ways to stay in touch with your customers and prospects. Be empathetic, not pushy. They have enough people chasing them for their business. As Scott Worsley, owner of The Film Buff says, “We are constantly being marketed to.” The world doesn’t need another blog, another announcement that you have updated your web site, or another offer to send an information kit. On the other hand, what they would appreciate from you is your expertise and the good value you offer. To stay in touch, you can:

  • Make copies of relevant articles, or write your own. Mail them to your best customers. (Yes, try real mail once in a while. It might just stand out.)
  • Suggest a value-added service that you can offer over the phone at no charge. For instance, conduct a “check up” after a seminar, offer to review a marketing plan, or provide a coaching tip.
  • Visit your customers. Print broker Jeff Biggs of Inkwell Marketing delivers materials to his customers, giving him another opportunity for contact.
  • Offer creative financing for projects they would like to do now but cannot afford. Invoice them later. Or charge the full price for one part of the project, while offering the other part at no charge.
  • Call to offer congratulations, birthday greetings, or best wishes for an upcoming holiday. If there isn’t one coming, make one up. Everyone appreciates a smile.

Business coach Warren Coughlin says, “A recession simply means that supply exceeds demand. People are still buying, you just have to stand out from the crowd and find those who are ready to make a purchase decision.”

--------------
Watch for part 2.

Mark Ellwood
http://www.getmoredone.com/
(416) 762-3453

Mark Ellwood is the inventor of the TimeCorder and author of at least three books on how to use time wisely. (Some call that time management. But you can’t manage time; only your use of time.)

Books by Mark Ellwood:
Get More Done
A Complete Waste of Time
Cut the Glut of E-mail
Order his books here

George Torok
Business in Motion


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Monday, February 02, 2009

Monday Morning Manager

MONDAY MORNING MANAGER
Harvey Schachter's guide on how to handle everything from overflowing e-mail to meeting overload

BEST PRACTICES: Magic Man-ager: Consultant George Torok helped David Copperfield pull off an illusion on a Las Vegas stage - and took away some lessons for business.
HARVEY SCHACHTER

February 2, 2009

George Torok had a chance not only to watch the illusionist David Copperfield live in Las Vegas, but go on stage and assist him with a segment of his performance. The business consultant from Burlington, Ont., was randomly chosen as a volunteer, and held an empty wooden bucket from which the entertainer drew a live duck. He has no idea how that feat was accomplished, but brought back some business lessons that he shares in The Secrets of David Copperfield on zeromillion.com:

There is no magic
You will not reach success in any field because of magic. Even Mr. Copperfield does not claim magical powers. He points out his secret is illusion.

The power of Illusion...
Read the rest of this article at the Globe & Mail
-------------------------------

The Globe & Mail is Canada's national business newspaper.

George Torok

Canadian Business Speaker

Host of radio show Business in Motion


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