Business Growth & Strategy

Run it like a turnaround (before you have to), Part 1: Generating profits

Editor’s note: This is part one in a three-part series on how healthy companies can unlock hidden benefits by taking a page from the turnaround management playbook.

Imagine running your company with a focus on where it is generating profit. Imagine trimming or eliminating unprofitable functions, retaining only those aspects of the business that provide the best returns and opportunities for growth.

This is the discipline that turnaround professionals bring to troubled businesses. This discipline, when applied to healthy companies, makes them even stronger. It rallies resources around the company’s core mission, manifesting profitable growth and allowing significant, retentive awards for the company’s key assets: its people.

 

More in this series 

Part 2: Expansion and acquisition 

Part 3: Managing cash flow


Temptations can distract from operating effectively

Many companies have a great set of core products or services. They have developed a competitive advantage in those offerings and understand the specific market subsegments that find value in their purchase. These core activities create strong, sustainable profits.

But then arise the dual temptations of 1) “mission creep”: the expansion beyond these core offerings and 2) “avatar creep”: marketing and selling to customers who do not perceive or receive the highest value from these products or services.

These diversions start out innocently enough, often as tangential add-ons, but are borne not of true market demand, but from an inwardly focused culture. These initiatives may appear to address customer or market needs, but often merely distract management from addressing growing internal problems. They add operational complexities, confuse both consumers and employees, and can ultimately lead to cultural friction and diminished financial performance.

A mission creep example: a company offering a nascent, evolving technology finds that its offering(s) are not performing exactly as anticipated or promised. Customers ask for supplementary or stopgap services, which customer service staff tries to accommodate. Instead of confronting the core issues around product improvements, a spiral of ad hoc deliverables takes hold.

This unsanctioned “sub-division” consumes the attention of your most valuable people, squeezing out bandwidth for critical “must-have” improvements, which would more effectively improve customer satisfaction. This bandwidth shortage leads to more hiring that’s misaligned with the company’s core mission. Before you know it, payroll has ballooned past the point of profitability without cementing core customer relationships.

Here’s an avatar creep example: An industrial services company finds that a particular type of client receives very high value from its services. These clients are large and sophisticated, and their needs align precisely with the company’s services. In an effort to generate growth, the company markets to smaller, less sophisticated customers. While sales to these customers increase revenue, it is at far smaller margins. Customer acquisition and service costs increase, production assets are strained and customer service demands may skyrocket — all contributing to decreased profitability, and if left unchecked, a potential cash crunch.

Deep dive into your core competencies 

Examples of how this looks when acted upon: a healthy restaurant group operating in multiple venues undertook a broad analysis of their portfolio. This analysis revealed underperformance in a distinct segment, which led to shuttering of numerous locations. While revenue decreased, margins strengthened and bandwidth was unlocked, allowing them to double down on their profitable core and pursue a new venue type with far stronger growth potential.

A profitable 3PL enterprise performed a granular review of its client base, which revealed that many of its customers were in fact unprofitable. This detailed analysis resulted in culling 60% of their clients, refocusing on their best clients, and increasing EBITDA margins from 5% to 16%. This allowed the company to explore additional services and expansions that will further serve their core customers and at stronger margins, positioning them to attract additional clients of similarly high value.

In short, when companies take a page from turnaround management, doing a deep dive into core competencies that match specific high-value customer demands and shedding margin dilutive activities, friction in product development/distribution is minimized and sales and marketing messaging is clarified. Costs are reduced, and while revenue may lag in the short-term, increased margins and customer satisfaction open the door to far greater, more profitable revenues in the future.

This also highlights the rigorous due diligence necessary to undertake expansion. It involves an examination of specific customer demands, how they match with the company’s capabilities and a robust buy/build analysis.

Our next post in the series will address this in greater detail.

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About the Author: Mark Taffet

Mark Taffet is CEO of Mast Advisors, Inc., an M&A and strategic advisory firm focused on maximizing value for middle market companies. Mast Advisors provides capital raising services through an affiliation with SPP Capital Partners, a

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