60+ Ideas to Help Your Startup Survive the Coronavirus Recession

Written by dannylosch | Published 2020/04/05
Tech Story Tags: recession | startup-advice | marketing | survival | management | founder-advice | coronavirus | startups-top-story

TLDR 60+ Ideas to Help Your Startup Survive the Coronavirus Recession: Get financing before you need it. Control your spending and control your spending. Re-cast revenue budgets and forecast revenue and budgets. Receive feedback from your customers via SurveyMonkey and publish the results to establish yourself as the industry expert. Communicate clearly and often to your team, keep them calm, focused and confident. Set realistic expectations of coming changes and set realistic expectations. Keep your talent happy, healthy and productive (WFM, mental health resources, flexible schedules, etc)via the TL;DR App

1. Assess your current state
  • Cashflow is the #1 reason why businesses fail (so get financing before you need it)
  • How much cash do you have? 
  • How much available credit do you have?
  • What are your options for raising capital quickly?
  • How high is your burn rate?
  • How is this already impacting retention, NPS, sales volume, leads, etc?
  • Create scenario plans for levels of revenue decline (10%/20%/etc)
  • Does your org structure make sense if revenue declines by 20%? How about 50%?
  • Which metrics are falling? Which are improving?
  • How are current customers behaving? What are they asking for?
  • What projects or products are you currently investing in? Should you continue?
  • Consider applying for a SBA loan, but don’t expect a quick turnaround
2. Control your spending
  • Renegotiate any vendor contracts 
  • Renegotiate your payment processing rates (it’s easier than you think)
  • Restructure any loans with your lenders before it’s too late
  • Ask for a rent abatement 
  • Take advantage of Amex Business 2 month interest-free deferral
  • Identify any non-accretive or redundant staff and carefully consider layoffs
  • Eliminate any unnecessary expenses, travel/event expenses
  • Freeze hiring for non-crucial positions
  • Consider revising comp plans and bonuses
  • Consider an internship program for cheaper labor
  • Use freelancers to fill gaps (there is an abundance of freelancers now)
  • Sublet extra office space
  • Sell off any underutilized assets, furniture, equipment, etc
  • Many durable goods providers are offering significant bulk discounts — take advantage of them
  • For unavoidable expenses, prepay them for a discount (most vendors love this)
  • Consider trading your product/service in exchange for a service you need
3. Change up your marketing
  • Cut low ROI marketing spend
  • Incentivize prepayments with discounts or value adds
  • Don’t want to spend cash? Set up a simple referral fee for advertisers and affiliates
  • Jump on industry publication ads that need to be filled (at a discount)
  • Survey your customers about their plans/predictions/fears via SurveyMonkey and publish the results to establish yourself as the industry expert 
  • Consider buying media assets now that your audience consumes, as they’ll be discounted and many will not survive (yes, you can buy blogs, referral partners, Facebook groups, Youtube channels, Instagram accounts, Amazon accounts, etc.)
  • Offer a free trial or promo pricing
  • Sell gift certificates to past customers/prospects to provide quick cash
  • Take advantage of free advertising credits from Facebook (link below)
  • Adjust your messaging
  • Host webinars for your audience to educate them around the changing landscape of your industry
  • Build trust and a long-term pipeline through timely/relevant/useful content
  • Offer deals to your warm audiences via retargeting ads
  • Search for new channels and run controlled experiments
  • Add more generous incentives to your existing affiliates to increase referrals
  • Stay in touch with your database and deliver valuable information like industry predictions, case studies, tips for thriving, etc
  • Podcast ads, Spotify ads, Native ads, Snapchat ads, FB/IG, print, ads in newsletters that your audience reads are all emerging opportunities to get in front of your audience
4. Communicate clearly and often
  • Present your plan to your team, keep them calm, focused and confident
  • Address your team’s concerns directly and set realistic expectations of coming changes
  • Keep your shareholders and investors informed of your status and plans
  • Make yourself accessible to staff to assuage their fears and to solicit feedback
  • Explain the reasoning and context behind any new changes
  • Listen to your managers and leaders
5. Keep your talent happy, healthy and productive
  • Offer perks to keep talent happy (WFH, flexible schedules, mental health resources, etc)
  • Share WFM tips and advice
  • Make employee assistance programs easily accessible
  • Solicit feedback from staff and managers
  • Kill any cynicism or negativity quickly, as it is harder to course correct with remote staff
  • Do what you can to keep morale high
  • Maintain a regular cadence of an all-hands virtual meeting to keep everyone informed
  • Allow your team to have some fun with Slack and the virtual environment
6. Re-forecast revenue and budgets
7. Go where the attention/demand is now
  • Restaurant? Get listed on Postmates, DoorDash, GrubHub, etc
  • Retail? Get an online store up and running asap on Amazon, Walmart, Etsy, Shopify
  • DTC? Facebook CPMs are dropping as online usage explodes and inventory expands
  • Online usage is surging, make sure you have a presence on the sites/resources your customers frequent
8. Keep current customers happy 
  • Make sure NPS is high
  • Check in with phone calls and offer to help in any way
  • Do things that don’t scale (help will go a long way and will be remembered long after this subsides)
  • Is there anything of value you can add for free now?
  • Track product usage closely 
  • Watch for trends in customer support (this is a great source of opportunities and ideas for pivots)
  • Ask your current (happy) customers for referrals and reviews
9. Accounts receivable 
  • Collect what you can without burning bridges
  • Consider offering credits to customers with hardships
  • Don’t let this slip, cash is king
10. Get a contract CFO to assist if you don’t have one already
11. Get cozy with competition
  • How are competitors adapting? And how are their customers reacting?
  • Would it be mutually beneficial to partner with a competitor or adjacent company to offer a bundled package of products/services? 
  • To save costs, can you co-market with a competitor or market to each other’s databases?
  • Find out if they’re letting staff go, you may be able to scoop up high quality talent 
  • Find out if they’re struggling, you may be able to acquire them for a lot less than you’d think
12. Innovate
  • Now is the perfect time for a hackathon to uncover new features, products, use cases, markets, etc
  • Have your entire staff bring you their best ideas and opportunities
  • How can you repurpose your existing tech or services to serve a sector who is thriving?
  • Who will need your services even more after the lockdown is over?
  • Who will need your product more in 6 months?
  • The world will change because of this, how can you benefit?
  • What are your customers asking for now? How can you reconfigure your offer to add value right now?
  • Who is continuing to spend money? Can you serve them?
  • Can you help your customers adapt to these sudden changes with a new feature or service offering?
  • How can you make life easier for your current customers?
  • If you’re a product company, what service could you offer to increase the value of your product? Coaching? More advanced support? Professional services? 
  • What adjacent markets are growing? How can you enter and offer value?
  • What internal tools/systems have you developed that can be productized and sold to a new type of customer? 
  • Pay attention to trends — where is money being spent? who is continuing to spend? What is there a large demand for? What will be needed in 6 or 12 months from now? What supply chains are breaking down? 
  • How can you virtualize an in-person event? Trying on clothes virtually, virtual open houses for real estate agents, virtual whiteboards for teaching, etc.
RESOURCES:
These are difficult times. I’m here to help if you need it. Shoot me a message at [email protected].
Do you have any ideas or resources to add? Comment below.
Previously published at https://medium.com/@danny.loschiavo/50-ideas-to-help-your-business-survive-the-downturn-in-2020-90ccb19e1532

Published by HackerNoon on 2020/04/05