In just a few short months news stories shifted from "if there's a recession" to "when there's a recession". Given the events in the US housing and credit markets and the global financial markets, it is pretty clear that we are headed for the dreaded "R" word.
To help prepare your business (whether large or small) there are a few steps you can take to use customer and employee feedback to help recession proof your business. If you work for a larger organization, you can also implement these steps at a business unit, department or workgroup level.
Customer Feedback
Now is a better time than any to reach out to your customers and make sure you are meeting their needs and giving them what they want. With the anticipated slow down, they may be looking for different types of shipment sizes, other options for your products or offerings/packages of your services. Also, by identifying those customers who may be "on the fence" about your company's products or services, you can proactively address this before they leave your customer base.
You can also use customer feedback to get a sense of how much more or less your customers plan on spending with you over the next year. This can help with your business forecasting, hiring and budgeting. It can also be a good platform for discussion with your employees, which brings us to the next section.
Employee Feedback
Once you've gathered feedback from your customers you should share this information with your employees. Make sure your key employees, especially those in sales and customer-facing roles are aware of the key issues. You should then use this feedback as an opportunity to ask employees for ideas on the following (please note, you can ask these questions without gathering feedback from customers but the two work well together):
" how to ensure your customers stay satisfied (or how to improve satisfaction)
" how to reduce expenses, especially if your customers are telling you they are going to be spending less
Getting input from your employees will also help get their buy-in if you have to make some tough decisions on pulling back expenses or accelerating business development efforts.