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Introduction
Businessās greatest customer opportunities and risks are determined by how well customers are managed through economic cycles. Despite the fact that 65% of a businessās existence is managing customers in hyper-competitive economic transitions, it is predominated by reactionary approaches and guesswork.
Whether it is how consumers change their buying behaviors or how businesses change their spending behavior through economic cycles and transitions, they both are predictable and addressable.
This book focuses on the unique business knowledge, skills, and underlying disciplines to enable any business to optimally address these distinct customer opportunities, challenges, and risks created as customersā transition through economic cycles.
For the past decade, many industrialized nations have experienced strong growth with an unprecedented availability of financial resources. This fueled excess expenditures bordering on decadence. It was a sharp contrast to the Great Depression, the biggest crisis experienced by the world economy. Boom and bust are extremes in the continuum of economic cycles and each generates specific consumer behaviors.
If we hearken back to previous generations especially ādepression babiesā spending was characteristically stoic with patience and endurance toward oneās lifestyle, i.e. if they didnāt have it, they didnāt spend it.
This is in direct contrast to behaviors during these recent boom times. Consumers conspicuously consumed. They were able to leverage homes and other assets to gain access to extra money and so have been able to purchase more. However, they were also able to go further into debt. Credit cards have enabled us to spend more money than we actually earn. From a behavioral perspective, this has created an expectation of material entitlement beyond that which most generations could typically afford.
During 2008, the economy tanked. Real estate plummeted. Peopleās life savings were shattered, i.e. cut in half. Jobless claims reached a 26-year high. Consumersā behaviors changed, and changed quickly.
What happened to businesses? What happened to their customers? Those businesses that were prepared and able to proactively use the economic turn as an opportunity flourished. Those that werenāt struggled to survive and in some cases, disappeared.
What was the difference?
That was the question we asked ourselves. So following the 2008 melt-down, we at the Centre for Information Based Competition started tracking:
⢠Consumer behavioral changes
⢠Business behavioral changes
⢠Businessesā response to behavioral changes
⢠How business changed buying behavior.
And using that data determined which core business competencies were critical to sustained success during changing economic times.
Research methodology
The research was global in its nature. It crossed numerous industries including but not limited to: financial services, telcoās, retailers, travel, manufacturing, and consumer goods. Both small businesses and Fortune 100 companies were tracked. To that mix we added insights from consumers, business leaders, and economic forecasters.
Key findings
The research showed that there are three areas where successful and disappearing businesses differ:
⢠The first is in understanding the science of their customersā buying behaviors. This includes knowing who their customers are and how theyā re feeling. It also includes how the drivers of a buying decision changes as economic factors change.
⢠Second is leveraging loyalty within their consumer base. This requires a thorough understanding of the different kinds of loyalty and the financial benefits of each.
⢠And third is maximizing the core business competencies to not only proactively adapt but to use the changes that occur within the economy.
Beyond these three key areas of difference, the research also illustrated how ācommunityā is playing an ever-increasing role in the success of businesses. This includes the physical communities. It also includes the virtual community. Itās the latter that is having significant impact on how customers and businesses interact, particularly during these changing economic times.
Summary
Economic cycles have both boom and bust periods. Businesses seeking long-term success need to thrive in all economic environments. Those companies who continue to achieve this have done so by having their core business competencies focused on meeting the predictable customer changes in a way that continues to leverage loyalty.
Simple - but how do they do it?
We have split the book into 10 chapters (Chapter 1 being the Introduction, and Chapter 10 a Summary) to answer that question.
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Chapter 2 - Predicting/Preparing for Economic Transitions: How businesses can best predict and then prepare for any economic transition or cycle.
Chapter 3 - Science of How Consumersā Buying Changes over Cycles: How consumersā buying changes relative to (a) reprioritization of needs, (b) changes in how they perceive value, (c) in the context of how economic conditions influence (a) and (b).
Chapter 4 - Consumer Loyalty Strengths/Vulnerabilities in Cycles: How different loyalty types endure varying economic conditions.
Chapter 5 - B2C Approaches for Dynamic Consumer Needs/Value Tradeoff: Proven consumer tactics optimized for different economic cycles.
Chapter 6 - B2B Approaches for Different Economic Cycles: Proven approaches, transformation strategies, and business case methodologies for economic conditions.
Chapter 7 - Mastering Information across Economic Cycles: Strategies and tactics for leveraging information to optimize business through economic transitions.
Chapter 8 - Managing the Employee Factor through Cycles: Strategies on managing employees through economic transitions and cycles.
Chapter 9 - Leveraging the Power of the Community (Physical and Online): Strategies and tactics for leveraging the physical business community as well as online communities.
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By sharing our research learnings, we hope to help businesses get and keep customers through periods of boom and of bust.
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Predicting/Preparing for Economic Transitions
Understanding the macroeconomics which drive business cycles is key to developing a relevant strategy to manage through economic cycles. This last economic contraction, while not totally unique, followed an understandable pattern over past economic history. In this last economic downturn, some equated the business dynamics to a āhangover after a bingeā, i.e. economic contraction after a global liquidity binge.
Many parts of the world had experienced a long global liquidity bubble that was fueled in large part not only by home prices in the US but also in places like the UK, Spain, and Ireland. As well, factors of equity markets in places like China drove a big run-up in commodity prices not limited to oil (which may have represented the last hurrah of the liquidity bubble). Investors were looking for the next best place to put their funds as the housing market came crashing down.
We also saw a rise in oil prices from 2002 to 2007 driven via strong economic fundamentals. The end of that run was largely due to speculative commodity trading. This significant factor was intensified by the strong growth in China. As China came off a blistering run of expansion, investors started moving into commodities as the global economic conditions began to unravel.
Simultaneously, the binge on liquidity driven by greed came unraveled when the US financial markets began to fall apart. The US banks have had so many toxic securitized loans themselves that in itself would have been bad. But they had also sold such loans overseas to UK and European banks - e.g. in Austria, Sweden, and Spain. These banks in turn made loans to private sector borrowers in emerging Europe. Homeowners in places like Hungary started buying euro denominated mortgages, which added to the huge exposure of European banks and their subsidiaries. All these available funds for both lenders and borrowers encouraged everyone to take on risks - risks that they perceived to be very low.
Once the bottom started falling out of the real estate markets, the bottom fell out of the lending frenzy. Within regional markets, areas such as emerging Europe were spinning their own web of liquidity bubbles, e.g. Hungarian households were borrowing in euros and Swiss francs in hopes that they would hedge against exchange rate differentials.
This all may appear to be a unique perfect storm of economics ⦠but it is not. History is full of financial and market calamities, which coincide with each other. It is a fact of business life. Bad economic and business cycles happen. Good economic and business cycles happen. All businesses can count on both in varying degrees of severity.
Historical examples
1620-1637 Tulip Mania1
Tulip Mania (or Tulipomania) is an extraordinary event in the history of cut flowers. It refers to a period in the Netherlands, in the early 1600s, where speculation on tulip bulbs reached fever pitch resulting in extremely high prices being paid for single bulbs and the inevitable crash. People won or lost massive amounts of money gambling on the color of the flower produced by tulip bulbs, which in those days was unpredictable.
News of the massive profits speculators were making quickly spread, and by 1634 even tradespeople were becoming involved. One current day view on why this happened is that it was not caused by irrational speculation or greed, but rather by a Dutch parliamentary decree (originally sponsored by Dutch investors made wary by the Thirty Years War in progress) that made the purchase of tulip bulb āfutures contractsā a fairly risk-free proposition.
Either way, this flood of new money caused prices to escalate rapidly in 1635, with many people buying on credit. By 1636 sales were structured by unofficial ācollegesā or stock exchanges that held auctions at local inns. Speculation had also started on futures - in other words on the accessibility and price of bulbs at a specified future time.
It is problematical to convert seventeenth century tulip prices to modern currencies, as many were sold for livestock and houses. As an estimate, the average annual income in 1620 was about 150 Dutch florins. If we assume that this is comparable to $50,000, then in 1620, at the start of the tulip mania, a single bulb changed hands for about $330,000. Fifteen years later, in 1635, 40 bulbs were sold for 100 times this sum i.e. $33 million, or $825,000 per bulb. The record sale was in 1636 when a single bulb of āSemper Augustusā, a striped carmine and white variety, sold for between 5000 and 6000 florins (depending on the report you read), which equates to between $1.67 and $2 million. The actual price for this small bulb, thought not to be of flowering size, was 4600 florins plus a coach and two dapple-grey horses.
The bubble ruptured in February 1637 when the soaring prices could no longer be sustained and there was a huge sell-off. Prices plummeted and many people were financially destroyed. While official attempts were made to resolve the situation to the satisfaction of all parties, their efforts were in vain. In the end individuals were stuck with the bulbs they held at the end of the crash - no court would impose payment of a contract, since the debts were judged to be sustained through gambling, and therefore not enforceable by law.
This was not the only time in history when flowers became the object of frantic market speculation. Smaller booms followed with tulip bulbs in Istanbul in the early 1700s, and in the Netherlands with hyacinth bulbs in 1734, and gladioli in 1912.
1720 South Sea Bubble2
The South Sea Company was a British joint stock company that traded in South America during the eighteenth century. Founded in 1711, the company was granted a monopoly to do business in Spainās South American colonies as part of a treaty during the War of Spanish Succession. In return, the company assumed the national debt England had built u...