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LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive...and Thrive

February 19th, 2009 @ 12:13 pm

6 Comments

Categories: Academics, Career, Marketing, Schools, Strategy

Tags: Shoe, Professor, Vermeulen, Marketing Research, Marketing, Stacy Blackman

Last week on his Random Rantings blog (always an interesting read), London Business School strategy professor Freek Vermeulen tried to answer the question on everybody’s mind these days: Who to turn to in a downturn? Lots of analysis covers companies in decline, but it’s probably more helpful to take a page from organizations doing particularly well despite the tanking economy.

Vermeulen takes a look at three operating models and challenges you to think about how you could apply these ideas to your company to weather the storm. His first advice is to mimic the British supermarket Morrisons–not Waitrose. Stateside, that comparison is something along the lines of be Vons or Stater Bros., not Gelsons or Whole Foods. Or, if you want more extreme, be Walmart. In tough times, offering products or services at a lower price keeps customers coming back. Is there anything you can do to lower cost options for customers, even at the expense of quality, he asks?

Next up: be a shoe repair shop, something Vermeulen calls a no-brainer. Right now people are looking for ways to extend the life of what they already own, so businesses like car or shoe repair shops are booming as people put off new purchases. Maybe it’s time you thought of a product or service that will help your clients get more out of their old shoes. The professor suggests you consider offering upgrades of existing technologies, or perhaps offering marketing services that extend the life cycle of your client’s product.

Finally, and little surprise here, Vermeulen says act like a business school. What better time to do an MBA than during an economic crisis? When the new crop graduates in two years or so, the crisis will have likely blown over, and these guys will be the first to ride the wave up again.

 
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  •  
    1

    hodderclan@...

    02/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive?and Thrive

    I can only agree, I did an MBA in the last downturn and it was a killer qualification during the recovery. In the 73 recession we dropped prices for all our products provided our customers consolidated their orders with us and gained over 20% market share that year. Great advice.

  •  
    2

    johnmach

    02/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive

    This is one way to go about it.

    But I wouldn't agree with this business model - would prefer to focus on quality and ensure my risk management processes are in place to ensure that I make it through the leaner times. At the end of the day if my product/service is unique and extremely difficult to replicate then there will be demand for it regardless of the environment.

    As to doing an MBA during a time of recession, I think it is the best time to figure out where exactly you stand. It is probably one of the toughest times to get into a good school.

    At the end of the day survival of the fittest is the zeitgeist.

    But it was definitely an interesting read.

  •  
    3

    jojoroberts

    02/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive

    Creative thinking is important during a recession as he is suggesting, however I do not agree w/compromising quality. Reputations live way past economics. Being fair w/o gouging or getting greedy. Most companies who didn't leverage their equity will survive and show the strong survive. Its with nature as well, the weak are the first to go. Its only fair, the smartest companies learn not to be greedy, pay their debt off early, and stash cash for leaner times. It is not rocket science.

  •  
    4

    aparks@...

    02/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive

    Ideally one can subscribe to the Professor's tips,but in the real world larger businesses are not always so flexible as to be able to change their whole course on a dime (pun intended). There is such a thing as not reacting to the media-hyped hysteria, remaining calm, and continuing with business as usual (juggling budgets internally to perpetuate the same great service and/or products for which you are known). Cutting your cost only lowers the bar for all. It does nothing to address the fact that the client still wants and expects the same "quality" product/service. And is unhappy with lesser services. Allowing the client to drive value is asking to have others assign a value to your services/product. There will be some clients who will drop off your radar over price, but you have to ask if perhaps they are really better suited elsewhere. Where the service is less and the quality poor?

  •  
    5

    Innovation Speaker

    02/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive

    Freek was always a fun speaker when I went to London Business School. Too bad it is not a video. wink

    I'll have to check out his blog.

    @innovate

  •  
    6

    Stephen Isienyi

    02/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: LBS Prof Gives Three Tips to Survive

    In an economic downturn, the organization that places more emphasis on keeping its existent customer base satisfied while continuously improving its cost structure survives the day. I suppose that it would have a lot to do with increasing value added activities at the expense of excessive trimming back-end costs. This is because if your customers cannot see how certain back-end activities benefit them, they would not be willing to pay for it. More especially in a recessionary economy in which every dollar is hard-won.

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