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How to manage your business in a recession

January 29th, 2009 No comments

There’s no script for running a company in this historic downturn. So what the heck do you do? Here are ten ways to weather the storm.

By Geoff Colvin, senior editor at large
Last Updated: January 8, 2009: 5:31 PM ET

(Fortune Magazine) — Exciting as it is to be living through historic economic drama, you can’t just stand by and watch. You have to act – yet you have no script.

So much of today’s turmoil is unprecedented that we can’t find much guidance by looking to the past. For managers across the global economy, as well as for Team Obama on its way to Washington, today’s great question is, What do we do now?

Managing in any recession is difficult; managing through this one is especially hard because it’s different from previous ones in multiple ways. Most immediately significant, employment is plunging more steeply than in a long time – by more than two million jobs last year, more than during the previous two recessions, and this one is far from over.

At the same time, U.S. consumer spending is falling sharply. In the third quarter it sank at a 3.1% annual rate, the steepest decline since 1980 – meaning that managers who have made it through the past four recessions have never confronted anything like it. Best Buy (BBY, Fortune 500) president Brian Dunn said recently, “In 42 years of retailing, we’ve never seen such difficult times for the consumer.”

The drop is worrisome because consumer spending is more than 70% of America’s economy, and while it may rise quickly or slowly, it almost always rises. During the whole of the last recession (2001), consumer spending never declined at all; its growth only slowed.

Compounding the problem, consumers are more deeply in debt than ever, an immediate concern for companies that lend to consumers; American Express (AXP, Fortune 500) CEO Ken Chenault calls this “one of the most challenging economic environments we’ve seen in many decades.”

Longer term, consumers’ balance sheets are so ugly that many executives believe this recession may linger as people slowly rebuild their finances. Dunkin’ Brands chairman Jon Luther says, “This downturn will not have a typical V-shape, where it bounces right back. It could be a couple of years before consumer spending goes up again.”

Consumers aren’t the only ones deleveraging. Companies are too, and on a more massive scale than ever seen before. That means business-to-business firms are also suffering. Cisco (CSCO, Fortune 500) CEO John Chambers predicts that his company’s sales will decline for the first time in five years.

Deleveraging is typical in a recession, but because boom-time leverage had reached unprecedented levels, the reverse process may become particularly violent. Deere (DE, Fortune 500) CEO Bob Lane cites current deleveraging as a main difference between this recession and previous ones: “The U.S. economy has never been through anything like this, and we don’t know what the effects will be.”

Yet another important difference – the credit crunch – affects even those companies that are reducing debt, but especially those that aren’t. Virtually all firms depend on a constant flow of credit to carry them smoothly through the ups and downs of business fluctuations. While it’s entirely typical for lenders to get more cautious in a downturn, the near freezing of credit is something else again. Even companies able to pay higher interest rates may find that credit isn’t available from the usual sources at any price.

Making this recession unique above all is its sheer interconnected complexity. Consider this sequence: The U.S. housing bubble bursts, pushing U.S. consumer spending down, leading to less demand for imports from China, causing slower growth of the Chinese economy, thus decreasing demand for copper, pushing copper prices down to their lowest levels in almost three years, causing big problems for you and your warehouse full of copper. You can conduct pretty fancy scenario planning and still not be ready for that – and it’s safe to say we’ve barely begun to see the rippling effects of a recession in an information-based, truly international economy.

Don’t wait

Yet that’s the environment in which you must manage. How? Insights and practices from global executives, consultants, and others suggest several steps you can take now.

As usual in these situations, much will depend on how quickly you move. It’s human nature to avoid confronting bad news and to imagine that today’s troubles will pass more quickly and easily than they really will. Virtually everyone Fortune spoke to recommends the opposite: Assume conditions will be worse than you actually expect.

“You identify areas where you think you can be more efficient by assuming the worst-case scenario,” says Intuit (INTU) CEO Brad Smith. “Then you end up saying, Why don’t we just do that anyhow?” Facing the coming reality before your competitors do can make a big difference in which of you stays healthy or even who survives.

It must be said that some of the most effective moves you can make for prospering through a recession are ones you established a long time ago. In times like these the strong get stronger and the weak get eaten. In the tumultuous third quarter, while Washington Mutual and IndyMac Bank were failing, Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) – which got out of subprime mortgages in 2001 – attracted $21 billion of new consumer deposits as consumers ran to safety. When the Wickes furniture retailing chain filed for bankruptcy earlier this year, more than 100 truckloads of furniture were on their way to its stores; a Milwaukee retailer that had remained financially solid, Steinhafels, bought the contents of several at bargain prices.

Remember that for next time. For now, what’s done is done. No matter what shape your business is in, it will benefit from following these ten recommendations.

It’s hard to be upbeat in a recession, but it truly is an opportunity. Marathoners and Tour de France racers will tell you that a race’s hardest parts, the uphill stages, are where the lead changes hands. That’s where we are. When this recession ends, when the road levels off and the world seems full of promise once more, your position in the competitive pack will depend on how skillfully you manage right now.

Reporter associates Steven Gray, Christopher Tkaczyk and Yi-Wyn Yen contributed to this article.

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Netbooks could be the next hit cell phones

January 29th, 2009 No comments

AT&T looks to sell mini-laptops, bundled with wireless data contracts, for prices like $99 or less. Is the gambit brilliant or foolhardy?

By Jon Fortt, senior writer
January 28, 2009: 10:28 AM ET

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(Fortune) — Glenn Lurie knows Silicon Valley better than most telecom industry types. As AT&T’s point man on the iPhone, he was the guy who camped out in Cupertino and hashed out the blockbuster iPhone launch with Apple. The next big game in his sights? The netbook.

That’s right, the netbook, that shrunken, low-priced laptop that lately has been a rare bright spot in the moribund PC industry. To hear Lurie tell it, AT&T’s next hit phone might not be a phone at all, but a netbook with built-in Internet access that works anywhere you can get a cell signal.

Get ready for the clincher: Sign up for a two-year contract, and you might get your new PC for $99 or less.

The upshot is that the “free phone” phenomenon that helped make handsets ubiquitous in the U.S. isn’t just for phones anymore. The first signs of change came this past holiday season when, working with AT&T (T, Fortune 500), Radio Shack offered a $99 deal on an Acer netbook, a promotion that went “extremely well,” Lurie says. “That Acer one’s a great example of how partnerships are going to work. That was Radio Shack coming to us saying, ‘We’ve got an idea. Can you help us?’ ”

As president of AT&T’s new Emerging Devices division, Lurie hopes to do a lot more of those deals. His mission is to get just about everything except phones connected to AT&T’s broadband network — laptops, GPS devices, cars, games, medical equipment, “all the way to dog collars,” he quips.

It’s only January, but he’s off to a fast start. At the annual Consumer Electronics Show gadgetfest earlier this month, Lurie teamed with Sony (SNE) and Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) to announce that a new Sony camera will use AT&T’s wireless network to automatically upload photos, and Dell will discount its $449 Inspiron Mini 9 netbook to $99 when buyers sign up for an AT&T data plan. (Of course, there’s a catch: The price gets to $99 only after a $349 mail-in rebate, so you’ve got to front the money and trust the fickle Rebate Fairy to follow through.)

Why is AT&T helping to fund netbook discounts? Well, such deals have already proven popular in Europe and Asia, and U.S. carriers are looking for effective ways to lock customers into data contracts. Even in this tough economy, carriers are spending billions to boost their network speeds and out-duel the competition. But the carriers know bragging rights to the fastest data connection aren’t worth much unless customers actually sign up. They have a hunch that cheap netbooks will get customers to commit to two-year data plans, just like free phones did for voice.

The plan could backfire. AT&T doesn’t know yet whether netbook users will prove to be as loyal (and profitable) as, say, iPhone users. If they’re not, the discounts could turn out to be a waste of money. And there’s certainly no guaranteed that even the lure of a cheap netbook will get the masses to increase their monthly phone bills in the midst of a punishing recession.

But the titans of the PC industry certainly seem to be rooting for the idea of signing on with carriers. Kevin Frost, who runs the consumer notebook division for Hewlett-Packard (HPQ, Fortune 500), said last year that part of the company’s vision is to make laptops as ubiquitous as cell phones, and working with folks like AT&T fits in perfectly.

What about Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500)? Lurie won’t offer specifics of course, but during our chat he mentions that he just sat down with Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook a few minutes earlier. Will AT&T ever sell a discounted MacBook? “We’re having conversations with lots of folks,” Lurie says. “I would very much like to do more business with Apple, and hope that we do.”

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