Naomi Simson’s small business strategy checklist
Australia has always been a nation of innovators. The black box flight recorder, Google Maps, WiFi technology and the pacemaker are just a few ingenious Australian inventions that have changed the world.
And since COVID-19 changed the world, this innovative mind-set is more important than ever for the survival of small businesses.
One of the greatest challenges right now is that we have never been in this situation before – there is no playbook. But we can put together strategies to help navigate our businesses through this difficult time and protect the startup ecosystem.
Here is my defensive and offensive strategy checklist for small businesses, because at the end of the day we’re all in this together.
Your defensive strategy checklist
1. Get on top of your checkbook
Start by going through every single line item in your balance sheet and decide whether it can be reviewed, pushed out or cut. With this level of attention to detail you might find costs you didn’t know you had – such as hosting fees of unused email accounts.
When Red Balloon’s CFO went through our balance sheet he assigned an owner to each line item, allowing them to be the decision-maker on whether something got cut or reviewed.
2. Be transparent with your employees
3. Ask yourself what resources you need to scale
4. Flip your business model if you need to attract customers
If a potential business partner entered the Tank and pitched an inner city pub that also moonlighted as a corner store, I would have said “I’m out”. But we have seen some incredible business pivot success stories come out of this situation. If you need to attract customers in this new world – flip your business model.
The first thing we did at Red Balloon when COVID-19 hit was ask ourselves: “What can we reinvent or reimagine when it comes to experiences?” We came up with a whole range of at-home experiences - which opened us up to a global audience. A whisky tasting in Sydney Harbour can now be done virtually from anywhere in Australia.
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Your offensive strategy checklist
1. Track customer sentiment
Use social media to understand and shift the customer sentiment of your brand before starting any marketing campaign.
What business owners need to understand as we evolve and adapt to a new world, is that our neuro-pathways have changed and what we now accept as a social norm might not be what it once was. There will be some things we will take on as social practices that will benefit the whole of society and need to be applied to the business experience.
2. Make your marketing empathetic
3. Communicate your business values and do good
There is not one person that I’ve spoken to that hasn’t mentioned the benefits to the planet from us being in lockdown. We’re seeing green turtles hatch on our beaches in Far-North Queensland! As a business owner, it’s important right now to take your community on a journey of sustainability that aligns with your company’s values. Doing good is no longer a “nice to have” for small business, it’s a must and it’s what customers expect.
If you would like to hear more from Naomi, sign up to her biweekly briefing Handpick.
Learn more about growing your small business by downloading our Small Business Growth Toolkit.
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