SURVIVING A RECESSION
The secret to surviving a recession is opportunity recognition. The first step in opportunity recognition is to know and
believe that there will always be opportunity for those who seek and pursue it.
Regardless of how bad the economy may seem, people still buy and sell. People
still have needs to fill and businesses have products and services that meet
those needs. When the economy goes south, however, there is mass fear and
concern and the perception is that the entire world may completely cease to
function. This is patently untrue. Even in the Great Depression of the 1930's
the world continued to function and 75% of Americans had work and jobs. Some
people actually became wealthy during the Great Depression because they were
able to identify opportunity and capture it.
One of the great examples of success during the Great Depression is the motion picture industry. People were so distressed
and fearful about their economic condition they needed emotional relief and a
means to escape. The movies provided that relief, no matter how brief and
temporary. The movie industry identified need and opportunity and filled it at a
price people were able to pay. Opportunity always exists, even though it may be
harder to recognize in tough times because it takes a different form.
In good times, opportunity comes in the form of just doing more of what already works. Opportunity in good times assumes the
continuation of the normal and capitalizes on things remaining normal. In bad
times, opportunity comes by abandoning things that no longer work and finding
new things that will work, based on new needs. Recession itself is a great
opportunity for those who choose to see it that way. It's just that the
opportunities may look different and they might require us to leave our comfort
zones. Now we are down to the real stress that a bad economy produces; the
stress of change and the need to leave our comfort zones! Sometimes that means
taking a new road.
Sometimes taking new roads leads you in a completely different direction than you had originally
intended, with favourable consequences. Here's a great example: In 1927, a young
married couple started a hot dog and root beer stand called The Hot Shoppe. They
had many years of success but they saw greater opportunity along the new
highways being built across America. They opened a motor lodge for travellers to
sleep overnight. That venture helped J. Willard and Alice Marriott build one of
the greatest hotel chains in the United States. In 2007, The Marriott
Corporation was handling over 50,000 reservations a day!
If you see something that needs to be done and you have the opportunity to do it, don't let someone else seize the
opportunity. Be bold and step up to the task. If you are the first person
to see that something needs to be done, you are probably the best person
to do it. That is the action you need to take when you identify opportunity.
But, what is it that helps us recognize new opportunities?
The people who have trouble recognizing opportunity are most likely the same people who are unwilling to leave their comfort
zones. What is a comfort zone? First and foremost it is a mental state in which
people lose the momentum to pursue a vision because they have accepted where
they are as the best they need to be or do. Identifying and capturing new
opportunities always requires strategic change and the nature of strategic
change always disrupts comfort zones. That is why change is a big deal to people
and is so difficult to achieve. The pain that accompanies change can be
financial, physical, or emotional, but regardless of the type of discomfort
created by change, recession and hard economic times demand that you embrace it
if you intend to remain competitive and effective.
Comfort zones are called comfort zones because they are comfortable! The only thing required to remain in a
comfort zone is to close yourself off to new ideas and refuse to change. Over
the years, I've learned that nothing very interesting or innovative ever emerges
from a comfort zone, except more plans to make the comfortable more comfortable.
Comfort zones impact all of us. When people in organizations become too
comfortable, it's because they have lost the momentum to pursue their vision.
Why? Because they've accepted where they are as the best they need to be or do.
Recession and hard times require a different response.
So, how do you survive a recession? First, you embrace a mind-set that relentlessly pursues new opportunity. Don't close
yourself off to new ideas and change and become an expert on what people need
and want. In a recession, people may want some things that are different and
someone will have to fill those needs. Second, read lots of books, magazines and
other publications that may expose new needs your product or service might be
able to meet. You will probably discover that people still want your product or
service, but just need to see it differently.
This brings us to the final piece of the puzzle on surviving a recession. You must be able to articulate a powerful value
proposition for your product or service that will resonate with the felt needs
of your customers and potential customers. Understanding their deepest felt
needs is the key to understanding the value of what you have to offer. Talk to
your customers and prospects. Discover their problems and concerns and you will
discover your opportunities!
