The Business Cycle Predicting Your Future Virginia Engineers Conference September 17, 2009.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Market Analysis Learning Unit 3.
Advertisements

Misconceptions of Marketing Marketing Concept
Concept The various components of the marketing mix must be mixed into a value proposition as per customers requirements Price has to be carefully meshed.
WebSim Click your left mouse button to progress through the demo.
Chapter 2 Copyright ©2010 Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 MKTG 2 CHAPTER Strategic Planning for Competitive Advantage.
Chapter 2Copyright ©2008 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved 1 Learning Outcomes – Chapter 2 1. Understand the importance.
Chapter 14 Promoting Products.
Jeremy Mekdhansarn 10 May 2010 IEOR 190G Chapter Summary.
A Framework for Marketing Management
©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
1 Pertemuan Keduapuluhempat Marketing Strategies for Mature and Declining Markets.
Strategic Financial Decision-Making Framework
The process of developing and maintaining a strategic fit between the organization`s goals and capabilities and its changing marketing opportunities.
Marketing Concept The Competitive Philosophy For Reaching Goals Ted Mitchell.
Small Business Strategies: Imitation with a Twist
-Operations Strategy -ERP – The Power of Information COB 300C Dr. Mike Busing Fall 2002.
RECESSION-PROOFING YOUR BUSINESS: Exponential Growth in Difficult Times Brad Dawson, LTV Dynamics.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall
Planning, Strategy, and Competitive Advantage
Business and Financial Planning. Strategic Project Plan Business Description – the purpose of the business, the product or service provided, an industry.
Copyright ©2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2010 South-Western, Cengage Learning Chapter © 2010 South-Western, Cengage Learning Personal Decision Making 20.1Making Better Decisions 20.2Spending.
Chapter 9 Designing Strategies Management 1e 9- 2 Management 1e 9- 2 Management 1e Learning Objectives  Explain how businesses use planning to.
Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation Chapter 4: New Product Development Process: Managing the Idea Infrastructure.
September 24 & 25, 2008 Documenting Value to our Customers NAW – Large Company CEO Panel Discussion.
COMPETING WITH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Unlocking Hidden Revenue in Current Customers Webinar: August 26, 2014.
战略规划 北京银行. Definitions SBU is the abbreviation for Strategic Business Unit What we have studied so far are SBUs, because each has a unique SBU Strategy.
Top Ten Questions Every Business Owner Should Be Able to Answer Brad Dawson, LTV Dynamics.
Formulating Strategic Marketing Programs. What are the Benefits of Strategy?
GLOBAL MARKETING Marketing Strategy. Benefits of Strategy Coordinates activities among functional areas of organization Defines resource allocation Leads.
Chapter © 2010 South-Western, Cengage Learning Personal Decision Making Making Better Decisions Spending Habits 20.
MT 219 Marketing Unit Two Marketing Environment and Market Research.
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
RECESSION-PROOFING YOUR BUSINESS: Exponential Growth in Difficult Times Brad Dawson, LTV Dynamics.
TruSuccess Business Solutions January 1, © 2007 TruSuccess Advisory 2 Outline  Overview of TruSuccess Business Solutions  Business Analytics solutions.
Tapping Your Unseen Business Potential Fall 2009 Meeting October 1, 2009.
Chapter 17 Planning for Growth and Change. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company17-2 Overview The decision to grow Intensive growth strategies Integrative.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton Value Systems, Value Chains and Value-Based Management The Essence of Organizational Performance Is the Creation of.
1 Objectives and Strategy. 2 Product Life Cycle ODI Dell FedEx Jones Blair AA.
Competing For Advantage Chapter 4 – The Internal Organization: Resources, Capabilities, and Core Competencies.
Chapter 2 Copyright ©2010 Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 MKTG 2 CHAPTER Strategic Planning for Competitive Advantage.
MCS UNS chapter 6 :Variance Analysis
Copyright  2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Management Accounting: Information for managing and creating value 4e Slides prepared by Kim Langfield-Smith.
Contemporary Engineering Economics, 6 th edition Park Copyright © 2016 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Engineering Economic Decisions Lecture.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall2-1 Chapter Two Developing and Screening Business Ideas Dr. Bruce Barringer University.
Chapter 5 IS/IT Strategic Analysis: The Future Potential.
BizBuilder Step 3: Business Plan Presentation. Entrepreneurship, 11 th Edition Mariotti and Glackin with NFTE © 2010 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River,
Management Information Systems Islamia University of Bahawalpur Delivered by: Tasawar Javed Lecture 3b.
Tapping Your Unseen Business Potential Brad Dawson, LTV Dynamics.
L. Marketing Strategies Marketing objectives, analysing markets and marketing, selecting marketing strategies and developing and implementing marketing.
Preliminary Business Plan. Challenge, needs What is the business challenge your product offers a solution to? Describe the pains/costs of not using your.
6 - 1 Making Diversification Work What businesses should a corporation compete in? How should these businesses be managed to jointly create more value.
Slide 9-1 © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall CHAPTER 9 Marketing Strategy Reformulation: The Control Process.
Avoiding Decision Traps & Pitfalls ASA Champions Academy September 21, 2009.
Basics of Financial Management. Introduction to Financial Management Financial Management display the movement of funds (money, capital and other financial.
Name of the Startup. Product / Service Offering Summary You may like to use the following sentence to bring out the key elements of the service offering.
Write here the title of the business plan and your name/affiliation RECOMMENDATION: THE NUMBER OF TOTAL SLIDES SHOULD BE 18. Thessaloniki, 12 September.
Entrepreneurial Strategies. A Major Shift... From financial capital to intellectual capital – Human – Structural – Customer.
Porter’s Competitive Forces
Chapter 9 Cooperative Strategy Student Version
Policies and Planning Premises: Strategic Management
Product life cycle.
Understand that corporate-level strategies include decisions regarding diversification, international expansion, and vertical integration Describe the.
Personal Decision Making
Chapter 2.
-Operations Strategy -ERP – The Power of Information
Chapter 6 The Master Budget and Responsibility accounting
Strategic Marketing Planning
Presentation transcript:

The Business Cycle Predicting Your Future Virginia Engineers Conference September 17, 2009

Copyright Materials This presentation is protected by US and International Copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, display and use of the presentation without written permission of the speaker is prohibited.

Learning Objectives 1.Participants will learn and apply the “Power of R” – developing specific offerings for every phase of the business cycle 2.Participants will learn how to leverage the business cycle for their competitive advantage 3.Participants will learn about the five components that comprise every organization

How do you predict your future?

Prediction Alternatives ? Strategic planning has become an administrative “rite” for many businesses

Prediction Alternatives ? Adding 5%-10% to last year’s budget numbers is another way to predict your future

Prediction Alternatives ? Some businesses just “do it on the fly”

The Natural Business Cycle Reward Reinvest Review The Business Cycle Release Research

Research Phase Develop new offerings based on omissions or opportunities in the marketplace

Research Phase Characteristics of this phase include environmental, industry and competitive analyses.

Research Phase The definition of innovation is when your competitor becomes your customer

Referred to as the “market bet” Release Phase

Substantial capital spent on advertising, websites, social networking and “beta” customer trials Release Phase

Firms that “re-start” their businesses every 2 years are caught in a non-viable offerings loop Release Phase

Favorable phase for owners as customers and revenues are increasing exponentially Reward Phase

Monies expended during the Release phase are recovered and cost of sales drops dramatically Reward Phase

The end of this phase is marked with shrinking profit margins, higher levels of re-work and increased customer scrutiny Reward Phase

Free cash flow is reinvested into expansion activities Reinvest Phase

Horizontal and Vertical acquisitions are common during this phase Reinvest Phase

Only have 12 months to complete reinvestment activities – otherwise begin to short-change internal project initiatives Reinvest Phase

What worked? Research Phase

Exploit Your Competitor’s Cycle Realize that your competitor is on a unique cycle that can be exploited for your benefit

Exploit Your Competitor’s Cycle During the Release period, it may be in your best interest to push counter-messages to market

Exploit Your Competitor’s Cycle Even during the Reward phase, there is an opportunity to “beat” your competitor

Exploit Your Competitor’s Cycle And, when you phase “mirrors” your competitor’s try the “follow me” approach

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle And, no surprise, your customer has their own business cycle!

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle This is where AIM comes into play

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle Assessments are quantitative studies that calculate the impact of certain actions or inactions

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle Implementation services are the core activities that your firm sells

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle Maintenance offerings provide long- term service care of implemented solutions

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle For most of the phases, your customers have some “monies” to invest in analysis and maintenance activities

Leverage Your Customer’s Cycle The goal is to effectively time the Reward and Reinvest phases – as these are periods where customers have significant dollars to spend

Maximizing Your Future The Corporate Component Model Environment Strategy Operations Technology Organization

Those aspects that are not controllable by you but necessary to operate your business Environment

The objectives of your business inline with environmental and business cycle realities Strategy

Create an optimal model to achieve your strategy - devoid of people and technology Operational Model

Automate the operational model with technology Technology

Now, add the people back into the model – bringing the operation to life! Organization

There has to be a desire to change Change Management

1.Every business has a natural business cycle that predicts future operational characteristics; 2.This cycle can be exploited to “beat” competitors and leveraged to maximize customer value; 3.Once the cycle is predicted, use the corporate component model to build your business to achieve desired results Key Points

Thank You! Contact Information: Brad Dawson LTV Dynamics