Posted at May 9, 2020
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100 Real Recipes of Success for Businesses After COVID-19

100 Real Recipes of Success for Businesses After COVID-19

 

The start of businesses re-opening has begun, there is a question that is floating around in entrepreneurs’, laid-off, furloughs, and managers, and “Will things ever go back to being normal for businesses?”

 

According to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and resources from Wikipedia, since 1785 there have been 47 recessions in the United States. Economic expansion duration between economic slowdowns average about 3-years, the depression of 1929 is the one notable exception to that rule.

 

The challenge for many businesses will be to take each subsequent expansionary period as an opportunity to make structural shifts in their strategy that would mitigate the effects of the next downturn. Unfortunately many companies do not prepare for the unexpected.

 

According to the NFIB is that during this COVID-19 disaster, 92% of small business owners have said that they had suffered negative effects as a result of the pandemic; 5% of small business owners said they were not affected at all.

 

Here are a 100 ways to make the business successful after COVID-19

 

  1. Assess the Financial Damage
  2. Take a second look at your business plan
  3. Consider whether you’ll need funding to recover
  4. Revamp your budget to account for new spending
  5. Develop a timeline for rebuilding
  6. Create a contingency plan for the next crisis
  7. Establish a remote work option
  8. Reduce meetings and travel
  9. Give employees flexibility
  10. Communicate transparently with your customers
  11. Volunteer on behalf of your company
  12. Take social media and amplify messages
  13. Choose credits over refunds
  14. Order (More) take out & Delivery
  15. Use your expertise to help struggling businesses
  16. Organize your expert friends to share knowledge
  17. Offer free office hours
  18. Advertise free offers from SaaS (Software as a Service)
  19. Provide free access to your service or platform for specific groups
  20. Research & Recommend funding options
  21. Extend payment terms
  22. Shorten payment terms
  23. Create a coronavirus resource center
  24. Encourage your employees to buy from small businesses
  25. Adjust your methods of support
  26. Set up a cash fund or grant
  27. Don’t panic, take care of yourself, and keep calm.
  28. Tap into resources provided by government and financial institutions
  29. Make a 3-month financial plan
  30. Find the opportunities
  31. Upskill your staff
  32. Invest in your marketing if you can
  33. Reassess & Reallocate your marketing budget
  34. Change your delivery method
  35. Focus on your existing customers
  36. Establish a resilient culture
  37. Create broader ecosystems based on social collaboration
  38. Employ agile, elastic workplace models
  39. Build a human and machine workplace
  40. Adopt a distributed global services model
  41. Adopt new ways of working: contact centers & remote access
  42. Improve contact center management: Data, workflow and analytics
  43. Augment and automate service: Virtual agents
  44. Enlists partners for help
  45. Let chefs be experts in their communities
  46. Practice new safety protocols
  47. Find inspiration in others
  48. Stay in touch with staff & guests
  49. Consider the whole restaurant supply chain
  50. Be patient & prepare for the future
  51. Advocate restaurants behalf
  52. Communicate your safety measures
  53. Get the word out that you’re re-opening
  54. Bring back your regulars
  55. Welcome neighbors’ and locals
  56. Boost your visibility in search results
  57. Rapidly identify the skills your recovery business model depends on
  58. Build employees skills critical to your new business model
  59. Launch tailored learning journeys to close critical skill gaps
  60. Start now, test rapidly, and iterate
  61. Act like a small company to have a big impact
  62. Protect learning budgets
  63. Smart security kiosks stop the spread of the threats
  64. Adjust hours of operation
  65. Back-up dependent cate
  66. Community relief fund
  67. Community services
  68. Customer accommodations
  69. Financial assistance
  70. Government support
  71. Relaxed attendance policies
  72. Production, distribution, and logistical support
  73. Supply chain impacts
  74. Health & Safety
  75. Hiring works
  76. Remote work & modified schedules
  77. Corporate leadership
  78. Takes care of their employees
  79. Takes care of customers
  80. Maintains reasonable pricing
  81. Giving back to the community
  82. Go above and beyond the safety standards & recommendations
  83. Don’t overreact or underestimate the circumstances
  84. Communicates in a transparent and timely manner
  85. Represents strong moral principles, such as integrity
  86. Demonstrates expertise in their industry
  87. Have an established track record of responding well during the crisis
  88. Delivers a message of hope and optimism
  89. They show compassion
  90. Provides a sense of hope
  91. Encourages hand-washing
  92. Promotes social distancing
  93. Rehire previously/laid off employers
  94. Hire new employees
  95. Communicates with your clients or customers more often
  96. Find 20% of actions you need to take that will drive 80% of your results
  97. Act fast with a minimum viable product mindset to quickly launch new offerings
  98. Good team spirit
  99. Focus on retention strategies and stopping the bleeding

Be Human.

  1. Be helpful. Keep marketing but be mindful.

 

Conclusion

 

America is re-opening and many small businesses will be facing the challenge and will also need to re-adjust to succeed.

 

 

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