Out of The Fire
Repositioning Independent Distribution
Neil Gillespie and
Allen Ray
Part 2: After The
Fire
In Part I we looked at how the fire was started: by economic
intervention that created “bubble” demand and extremely liberal credit. The
result was an economy with poor roots. The growth distributors enjoyed was
unsustainable, so planning baselines have shrunk to minus 20% or worse.
Distributors reacted defensively to protect current business, while cutting
back on people and expenses. Better performers, however looked deeper for
answers in more places. Some even touched on the key to genuine growth
opportunities, which we will point out in this edition.
Here’s a complete list of the findings once more. We’ll pick
up at finding 6 in this article.
1.Past growth was largely artificial: the new
planning baseline is -20% or worse. 2.Distributor reactions were primarily defensive. 3.GP%, inventory turns, receivables performance
slipped a bit, net profit a lot. 4.Good performers tend to be realists vs unbridled
optimists. 5.Good performers looked deeper for answers and in
more places. 6.Surprise: good performers cut more sales people.
What do they know? 7.Everyone is afraid of “the weather” (the
direction of the nation). 8.Growth opportunities: the usual sources won’t
deliver, the new sources are still “suspect”. 9.Distributors need to broaden their growth
horizons while improving productivity to increasingly
turn gross margin dollars into profits. 10.Manufacturers
executed their usual tactics to curtail expenses.
6. Surprise: Good Performers Cut More Sales People
As a reminder, good performers are defined as those with
sales variances of -5% or better. Poor performers had 20% or greater declines.
There were fewer good performers, as you might expect.
Here’s the really interesting points:
·Good performers had almost twice the tendency to
cut inside sales
·Good performers had almost 70% higher tendency
to cut outside sales
·Good performers had roughly half the tendency to
cut Travel and Entertainment expense
We suspect that good performers understand the concept of
marginal profits when volume rises. You keep people when they are marginally
profitable. Like we said, if there hasn’t been a fire in a while, these people
can produce some profit, but not as much as the really good people. In a fire,
they turn unprofitable. You probably should have let them go if you could have
found a better salesperson before the recession. Since they are not that good,
it’s logical to cut them.
You may still be scratching your head about the T&E
expense. So did we, at first. Good performers cut this a little, but didn’t cut
off the resources to their better performing salespeople. They needed to keep
customers in the game. T&E helps you stay close to customers: the number
one baseline action in a recession. So does marketing expense. Good performers
cut this less as well.
Conclusion: Good performers
let the fire do its work with marginal performers. They keep funding things that help good sales
producers stay close to the customer.
7. Everyone is Afraid of “The Weather”
We suspected that many businesses were reluctant to invest
due to the extremely “different” direction of the federal government. The
Health Care Bill, Cap and Trade, Tarp Bailouts, takeover of General Motors,
heavy-handed investments of taxpayer money in major banks, plans for increased
marginal tax rates, hidden future payroll tax increases and frozen credit has independent
business owners in a funk on business investment, hiring and general optimism.
Independent business people tend to be politically
conservative. Many are Subchapter S Corporations or Limited Liability
Corporations with pass-through income that will be severely threatened if the
current administration gets its way with taxes. Small businesses with 500
employees or less create over 60% of new jobs in this country but the
government seems to be ignoring that despite executive branch lip service.
Our survey respondents are nervous about all this. When it
comes to the direction of the nation, they are very nervous. This is affecting how they think about the economy,
their industry and their long-term futures. We suspect that when the offending legislation
has all passed (or not) and we know what we’re dealing with, some of the uncertainty
will lift and business will get a little better. Maybe.
Issue
Nervous
Very Nervous
The direction of the nation
35%
55%
The economy
61%
28%
The industry you serve
58%
21%
Their long term futures
49%
28%
Inflation or hyperinflation in the economy
41%
32%
Inflation in your products and markets
51%
16%
Deflation in your products and markets
22%
13%
8. Opportunities: The usual suspects won’t deliver growth, the new suspects
are purely “suspect”
Distributors don’t think residential, commercial or
industrial expansion will deliver the growth as in the past. Whereas they are
probably correct, their thoughts on the sources of growth sound like they swallowed
the green Kool-Aid. When asked to indicate where growth will materialize,
Energy, Wind Power, Solar Power and LED lighting dominate the answers. They
tend to think of these as both technologies and market segments, as they show
up as open-end answers to questions about growth prospects in both these areas.
We can forgive them. They don’t have much to go on besides the green stuff.
During 2003-2008 housing led the way for the rest of the
economy but that bubble violently exploded. Will solar, wind and LED lighting
be nearly as big? Most likely, they will be nice niches, but neither artificial
bubbles nor major sources of sustainable growth unless you’re a niche player. Time
to look for more ways to grow.
Independence Can Be
An Advantage
The feistier independent businesses (about 20% of the
respondents came from national chains) indicated they had an opportunity to
gain share vs national chains that cut back resources in their markets. They
could be right. We interviewed some distributors whose owners stepped up their
personal calls on key accounts. An owner with decision-making autonomy beats a
branch manager without, goes their theory. You can be your own judge of that,
but we tend to think it's true. The best independent distributor in a trading
area is almost always the market share leader in a segment like industrial,
OEM, project construction or residential construction. Why not get out there
and test your strength some more? Go with what you are.
9. Distributors Need to Broaden Their Horizons for Future Growth
Taking more risk leads to higher returns. Serving the same
markets in a flat to shrinking market yields steady decline. So what are
distributors waiting for? The survey responses overwhelmingly indicate that
distributors rush to protect key accounts. But they get less and less
aggressive when it comes to getting more from current accounts, taking share
from competitors' customers, launching new product lines, approaching new
market segments, expanding geographically or tackling even more exotic growth
strategies like vertical integration.
When asked what they would have done differently or done more
of, most distributors offered ideas in this general order:
1.
Better asset management, especially inventory:
cut sooner to conserve cash
2.
Cut headcount expenses sooner
3.
Step up sales aggressiveness
4.
More expansive marketing strategies before the
recession started
The bigger thinkers thought it was a good idea to expand
geographically with startups and acquisitions before the recession. They mentioned getting into different market
segments and selling different products they didn't' sell yesterday. They think
of growth as additional sources of profits that will help them weather the
storm. We'll bet they think like Chuck Steiner of Branch Electric did years
ago. "Don't put in a ten person branch when a two person branch will do." There
is a way to do it without betting the whole farm. Get his CD from NAW and
listen well. Chuck overstocked "A" items to increase his service advantage in
the last recession he faced. He profited handsomely especially when the market
started growing again.
This open-end comment
holds the most promise, though:
"We changed our market focus and adapted our company to focus
on niche markets. It has worked very well. Our sales are flat to slightly
increased while our competition is off 30% or more".
We love this person, wherever they are. They didn't leave
their identification on the survey, but they did leave a big clue for the rest
of us. The more you specialize in something, the better you become, so segment
your business into niches and create differentiated offerings to each. This
company seems to have touched on the first fundamental of growth: optimize your
core, and then add more segments to it. We hope they are reading this, because
they will probably get right on the things we say next, if not already.
Distributors struggle to grow on multiple "fronts" and with optimizing
operations productivity. The answers to what they struggle with must be interpreted,
however.
Since we think distributors have a narrower definition of
growth opportunities than we think is healthy, their definition of "fronts" is
narrower than ours. If they broadened it, "Growing on more than one front"
might rise to the top of the difficulty list. If they realized that a business
plan included plans for distinct market niches with descriptions of value
propositions, operations, sales, products, services, marketing and individual
pro-forma contributions, they might not be so quick to say it was easy.
If business plans are so easy and it's easy to get capital
for growth, then why did a third of credit applicants get turned down and two
thirds of them get less than half of what they asked for? Sounds like the
business plan isn't fetching many admirers. Banks rent money. They want you to
show them where the money will come from and how you're going to get it. Not to
mention some liquid collateral. That dead inventory and glob of receivables
over 90 days doesn't qualify. When you're shrinking, you tend to accumulate
more of these. That's why you get a lower line of credit against your current
assets.
More difficulty
Less Difficulty
Wedging
into competitor's customers
Get
capital to fund growth
Growing on
More than One Front
Identify
market segments for your products that will grow faster than the rest
Hire or
develop people to head up growth initiatives
Improve
productivity with better business process engineering
Research
and Develop services to improve customer productivity
Investigate
the potential to sell new product lines to existing customers or the same
product lines to different customers
Improve
process efficiencies with technology
Write a
complete business plan that will impress potential investors or banks to fund
growth
Conclusion:
Develop a new framework for thinking about an expanded set of growth opportunities.
Do this on a platform of increased core productivity. This will grow the rate
of profit as well, generating dramatically more cash and retained earnings, not
just revenue.
10. Manufacturer Actions: The Usual
Distributors spotted manufacturers doing the same things
they usually do in recession, only more. They cut back technical support, field
sales and co-op marketing expense. They stepped up share gaining tactics like
inventory buyouts to get on shelves a little bit. They tightened up a little
bit in a number of areas like SPA claims and returns, but not much. Most of
what they squeezed, according to our respondents, was field and technical
support headcount and funding co-op marketing. These things have the biggest
short to medium term payoff.
Next: Part III: Rebuilding with a Stronger Core
Analyzing how organizations react under pressure delivers starter
clues for how to grow. For example, most distributors rush to protect and grow
existing customers. Some graduate to taking share from competitors. Those are the first things you do. But
what else?
If you reverse the movie on decline, you can see how things
grow. Here's how: Just like listening and responding to customers can create
whole new businesses and brings in more revenue, reversing the process and limiting
your activity to pursuing orders for existing products without listening for
new opportunities is slow destruction. You're turning the wheel the wrong way, you're
not looking out on the edges of your business for growth.
Neil Gillespie is
a veteran distribution consultant, speaker and author. Neil worked for GE and
Eaton corporations before launching his distributor consulting practice in
1995. Gillespie helped Roden Electrical Supply of Knoxville to grow more than
500% over 11 years while more than tripling EBITDA percentage. Neil has
distilled his profitable growth methods in his Eight Steps to Breakthrough
Growth. His book Discover Your Core, Then Go For More will be
available in early 2010.
Contact Neil at neilg@shamrockgrowth.com
Allen Ray has 45
years experience as a distribution business owner, information systems,
marketer of product data and consultant to wholesale distributors. Allen
advises clients on strategies to stop "Profit Leakage" and create a
scalable business that returns an increasing percentage of gross margin dollars
to net profits. Allen is collaborating with Neil to help distributors adopt the
Eight Steps to Breakthrough Growth, providing expertise in "Leadership
Productivity" and "Pricing for Maximum Gross Profit Dollars per Order".
Contact Allen at allen@allenray.com