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As the U.S. and global economies begin to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and adapt to strikingly different ways of doing business, many companies are revamping their product lines, go-to-market operations, customer-engagement models, and core business plans.
Clearly, each industry faces its own unique set of challenges:
Think about it from the employee point of view: do you want to work in a high-rise building? Do you want to work at a “headquarters” campus? Does your company seem as capable and solid now as it did just 6 months ago? If you want to work remotely but move from a big city to a small town, should you expect to continue to earn big-city wages?
Despite all that uncertainty, as businesses begin to reopen and to reimagine what their futures might look like in 6 months, or 1 year, or 3 years, there are some fundamental steps business leaders in every industry can take to get a solid grasp on how to move forward into an unprecedented future. Here are 10 such ideas.
1. The Power of the Employee Experience. While lots of companies say, “our most important asset is our people,” not that many businesses actually live up to that ideal. And on the vital front of employee experience, the COVID crisis is stripping away all the pretense and making it plain for everyone to see:
2. The Importance of Being Digital. As we all learned first-hand, every aspect of our personal and professional lives changed rapidly and often profoundly over the past several months. Businesses that want to thrive in this dynamic and sometimes-chaotic new world must be able to move at the speed of the world around them—6-month lag times to catch up or figure out a response or work the kinks out won’t cut it. And to achieve that type of speed and externally focused resilience, companies have to be digital from end to end: from sales to fulfillment to accounting to service and beyond.
3. The Importance of Data. Tied tightly to #2 above, the data imperative provides the raw materials for your company’s re-emergence as a customer-focused, customer-aware, market-savvy and logistically optimized organization. Each of those attributes is indispensable in the new world of fast-changing customer preferences, reconfigured supply chains, new and often unexpected regulatory requirements, and an employee base that’s likely to be largely remote for some time to come. What grade do you give yourself as a data-driven company?
4. The Value of Superb Customer Experiences. The year 2020 might come to be known as The Year of Living Remotely, and that has drastically changed how we work, learn, communicate, shop, and generally experience the world around us. The old way of conducting business is a thing of the past and the new ways require a customer-engagement model centered totally on the preferences of the buyers, and not on the convenience and/or traditions of the sellers. Customers today aren’t just more fickle—they’re more fickle and they’re more demanding and they know they’re in a buyers’ market. In today’s world, superb customer experiences is not just an ideal—it's a requirement.
5. The Need for Speed. In a classic episode of “The Simpsons,” Homer’s shopping for a deep-fryer and Moe tells him about one that “can flash-fry a buffalo in 40 seconds.” In reply, Homer whines, “Forty seconds? But I want it now!” Yeah, that’s a bit over the top, but the remote world we’ve entered is much more heavily dependent on deliveries, buy online pickup in store (BOPIS) and curbside pickup than ever before. A perfect example is the anecdote from #1 above about the 200% increase in online revenue at Whole Foods. And as deliveries become the norm, does anybody really think that either consumers or business customers will accept longer time-to-possession than they’ve experienced in the past? For businesses, that means it’s essential to have end-to-end digitally connected workflows tying together sales to procurement to fulfillment to customer service and beyond. Who in your organization is functioning as the Chief Acceleration Officer?
6. Supply Chains Become Permanent Works in Progress. Traditional supply-chain operations and timetables and configurations were fine in the world of traditional business. But today, with businesses having to reimagine product lines and business models constantly, and with customers becoming more demanding about what they want and how quickly they want it, supply chains are becoming ever-improving works in progress. In your company, who’s in charge of relentlessly optimizing your supply chain? Is it time for you to invest in an ERP system to manage all of these increasingly complex and data-centric operations? Or maybe to upgrade the one you have that was built for a very different time?
7. A Time for Reimagination. What’s going on today can’t be addressed with efficiency, even though efficiency is great; it can’t be fixed by tinkering with operations to gain a few seconds here or a few nickels there, although both of those outcomes are fine. Instead, the challenge of our time is one that calls for the reimagination of:
8. End-to-End Vision and Operations. Lightning-fast and customer-centric operations are simply impossible to achieve in the old-world model of siloed departmental workflows. In a world where everything must be focused on delivering great value and experiences to customers, the workflows across engineering and marketing, sales and service, HR and design, and procurement and logistics must all be interconnected and seamless.
9. Technology’s No Longer ‘Nice to Have’; It’s a Must. In the past, spreadsheets and printouts and faxes and paper-based all-nighters might have been enough to get your business through some big orders or the busy season. But in today’s new and highly demanding world, those tools just can’t deliver what you need. The advent of the cloud gives small and mid-sized businesses access, at very reasonable prices, to the same types of world-class applications that big corporations use.
10. The Need for Trusted and Authentic Leadership. No matter what industry you’re in or what size your company is, every business has been rattled to its core by the COVID crisis and its repercussions. Winning companies over the next 12-18 months must have leaders who deliver not only facts and details but inspiration and hope, and who don’t pursue command and control but instead trust and autonomy. To be able to meet those standards, leaders must have real-time information about the business, employees, customers and operations, and that means some level of technological investment. But on top of that, they have to see that data not as the ultimate objective, but rather as the means by which to chart a course for a successful future in today’s very different world.
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