Rebooting the organization – challenges and rewards ahead

The current lockdown will result in incredible innovation as entrepreneurs adapt to the present environment and think out of the box as they look to the future.  Ideas will be generated by existing organizations as well as from startups, and by people who lost their jobs due to the shutdown.

Each source represents opportunities as well as challenges to a marketplace that is certain to see changes from what we all considered “normal” as recently as a few months ago.

These innovations will span a wide range of industries and market segments.  Some will be in the obvious area of health care and related products and services.  We have already seen this in the companies that are developing more sophisticated and rapid virus tests, vaccines and other preventative measures as well as in the broad category of PPE.

Several technology products that enhance telecommuting, group meetings and broadband have already come to market, even as relatively new Zoom has become the “go to” vid conferencing tool and despite it having been hacked.  Examples of this are Google’s recent announcement of its new online conferencing Gallery View product and Facebook’s competing Messenger Rooms.

New stories and characters for movies and TV will be created as a result of the shutdown, and some will likely reflect the “new normal.”  With virtually all production currently halted, and release/broadcast dates delayed to later this year and into 2021, the development/production pipeline needs to be restarted soon to keep it full into the future.

As the economy begins to open and gains traction, regaining the rhythm of the pre-lockdown business environment is not a foregone conclusion.

When the US and global economies rise to the pre pandemic levels of high employment/historically low unemployment rates and solid consumer confidence, investors will know that the pent-up energy of the past few months needs a release.  Nothing quite spells success like a high energy team developing and coming to market in the new paradigm on the horizon.  In fact, it is quite possible that new development will occur at an accelerated rate.

Success requires a well thought out plan including a roadmap for execution.  A business plan without well thought out strategies & tactics is merely sheets of paper.  Investors know a solid business plan when they see one and will reject any that do not meet their standards.

Through the years, we have consulted with a wide range of companies, large and small, in business and strategic planning, reviews of operations and organizational analyses.  Following are our broad predictions of what many of the challenges and rewards may be as we move forward collectively as a society.

Challenges/risk factors

  • Startups generally face the challenge of securing financing, of rapid and cost-effective product development, and, perhaps, most importantly, of assembling the right team that has the ability to implement the plan for the business.
  • Businesses that had been operating for years will need to rethink the plan for their business. It is unlikely that it will be the same post lockdown as it was pre lockdown.  Reevaluating the business with fresh and current thinking after the hiatus is wise.
  • Regaining the rhythm of daily operations may be difficult, especially if key people in the organization do not return.
  • Furloughed employees may have been offered positions with other companies and may accept those offers as they reassess their careers.
  • Existing businesses may not have enough capital to reboot their businesses at the same level as pre lockdown, thus hampering their ability to regain market traction quickly.
  • Loan programs may not be structured to assist all existing businesses due to size of company, number of employees, location(s) and other factors.
  • Existing businesses that operated adequately before the lockdown, albeit with operational and organizational deficiencies, may not be able to reboot efficiently in the new environment.
  • Companies that furloughed or laid off significant numbers of staff may have a difficult time hiring quickly enough in the new environment to reboot their businesses, even if demand continues for their product or service.
  • Critical supply chains vital for products and services may take time to ramp up again thus delaying the rebooting of their customers’ businesses.

Rewards/success factors

  • A well thought out plan can reward the founders and the investors if the product/service gains traction in the marketplace in what may be a competitive environment.
  • A few months ago with more job openings in the US than people available to fill them, finding the right team – not just management and the founders – was difficult. People were not changing jobs. The new environment may prompt many workers to seek new and different work, thus enabling companies to choose from the best available.  The labor market will be competitive.
  • For those that retained their jobs during the crisis, their pent-up demand for products and services unavailable to them during the lockdown may prompt spending that would, in turn, fuel other businesses, thus creating a multiplier effect in various industries.
  • Consumers who prefer the new ways of doing things during the lockdown may want to continue those ways under the “new normal.” Online purchasing has skyrocketed during the lockdown.  It will not revert to pre lockdown levels.
  • When entertainment production resumes, the supply chain infrastructure, cameras, stages and, of course, personnel, are expected to benefit from the surge in demand.
  • With the likelihood of a concerted effort to bring manufacturing back onshore, numerous business opportunities will be created, for new and existing businesses, and for jobs. This has the potential of changing the ways in which the products are manufactured, using newly created tools that bring economic as well as operational efficiencies at many points on the supply chain.

We have been successful in providing a knowledgeable and independent perspective to business. This experience will be valuable to companies attempting to gain traction in the new paradigm and new business environment that is on the horizon.

Getting back to work on the right foot is critical.  What was before may not be what is now in the new normal.

 

As for The Shindler Perspective

NAB Show – Many of us have missed attending various conferences and other events during the lockdown, including NAB Show, which would have been last week. This photo appeared on the cover of Broadcast Engineering NAB 2009 issue. We are pictured along with hundreds of our closest friends. Spot us?

Space Tourism – April 28 was Space Tourism Day, commemorating the first space tourist Dennis Tito’s flight to the Space Station on April 28, 2001. We were honored to meet him at an event on the 10th anniversary of the flight in 2011.

SpaceX is scheduled to launch Crew Dragon to the Space Station on May 27 with two astronauts on board. This will be the first manned launch from US soil in a vehicle manufactured in the US since the Shuttle missions ended in 2011. The capsule will be used in the future to carry space tourists.

Star Wars – Speaking of space, we are just a few days away from Star Wars Day, May [the] 4th. Star Wars has been an integral part of my career as written a couple of years ago in Star Wars – the Stories Awaken.

Contactless payment – We have long been fans of contactless payment, using Samsung Pay. While we have not seen recent stats, given the current environment of minimizing contact with one another, we expect one of the future trends will be more people using smartphone apps like Apple Pay and Google Pay. In the next few years, we predict that the use of cash, that has passed through countless dirty hands, will continue to decrease.

Comics reflect reality

Space food – Crew Dragon and its crew will bring food to the Space Station. This is Speed Bump’s recent take on the topic.

Hard work – 40 hours a week at a dreadful job is work.  60 hours a week at a challenging and exhilarating job can be fun.

Work is supposed to be fun, when it stops being fun, it is work. And that is no fun.

Here is Dennis the Menace’s take on the topic of hard work.

Rebooting – Most of us also understand the term rebooting in the context of restarting a computer or other electronic device. That was not always the case as is seen by Alice in this Dilbert comic from 2001.

 

Roberta and I hope that all of our readers are faring well during this time and preparing for the rebooting of their organizations.

 

For The Shindler Perspective

 

Marty Shindler

1 Comment
  • As always, a well thought out and well written article. Quite frankly, I look forward to the new normal, whatever that will be. Perhaps that will include less pollution and emphasis on green solutions now that we’ve had a forced reduction in fossil fuel emissions and a sense that a cleaner world is possible. Perhaps e-conferencing will catch on as the norm to the point of not being a bit of a novelty and reduce much business travel that has been largely unnecessary for decades – and this from someone who is a hugger (born and raised in NYC). Whatever changes are in store, I know that both of you will be a source of sage advice, as you have always been. Good health to both of you, your family, and your readers.

    April 30, 2020 at 12:21 pm

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