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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A good read to help you find a prosperous path through the current financial crisis., July 1, 2009
This review is from: The Upside of the Downturn: Ten Management Strategies to Prevail in the Recession and Thrive in the Aftermath (Hardcover)
I took a scuba diving training course when I was a teenager so I could go diving with my brothers. Of the many helpful things I took away from that excellent course, one principle more than any of the others has found its way into every aspect of my life: "panic kills". The sudden economic changes we are going through now (and will continue to face over the coming months and years, despite rosy government predictions) too often cause us to react without careful thinking. We get the urge to do something! Anything! In order to get away from the catastrophe. But this kind of panic is exactly the wrong thing. Conversely, we can also get the urge to just sit down and wait to die. Also, a mistake and a more obvious one. But both are urges can be very strong and hard to override in order to do something more intelligent.
This book by Geoff Colvin can help you take a bit of time to rethink how you want to face this financial downturn. The Great Depression was awful for many families (including my parents' families), but for many others it created opportunities and many fortunes began during that crisis. This brief book shows you how to find a door opening instead of staring at the door that just slammed shut.
Colvin spends two chapters explaining how this downturn can present opportunities for you and your business and what the new global financial normal means. The ten principles mentioned in the subtitle are each given a chapter: 1) Reset your priorities, 2) Protect your people because they are a vital asset to your business, 3) Relationships are changing, so take charge of the change, 4) Take a fresh look at your business model - it might need to adapt to seize fresh opportunities, 5) Manage for Value, 6) Your customers have new problems so create new solutions to help them, 7) Don't panic and cut prices; have some courage, 8) Increase your operational discipline and get healthier faster, 9) Take a deeper look at all the risks your company faces, 10) Spend time on growing yourself.
The last chapter talks about how you should operate in good times to be ready for the next sudden downturn.
Colvin has lots of helpful insights and good arguments for the principles he lays out. He uses examples from the real world to illustrate his points as well as his own persuasive arguments. Again, this isn't a big book or a major work of business philosophy. However, if recent events and your gaze into possible futures leaves you feeling anxious and queasy, this book might be just the kind of think to settle your stomach and help you think through your situation so you can get yourself pointed in a confident direction and begin moving forward again.
Reviewed by Craig Matteson, Ann Arbor, MI
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Well positioned between policy, business and politics, August 28, 2009
This review is from: The Upside of the Downturn: Ten Management Strategies to Prevail in the Recession and Thrive in the Aftermath (Hardcover)
The Upside of the Downturn by Jeff Colvin provides a business view of the current economic crisis and raises questions executives should be asking about their company, customers and themselves. This is one of set of books that have been coming out since Ram Charan's Leadership in an era of economic uncertainty debuted last year. The other notable book on this topic is Jim Collin's How the Mighty Fall and Paul Krugman's The Return of Depression Economics and the Crisis of 2008.
The Upside of a Downturn falls somewhere in between Charan's pointed advice directed straight at the CEO and Collins discussion of the forces that pull companies down. As such, The Upside of a Downturn provides more of a business magazine view of the economic crisis and what businesses should do rather than a hard academic or business book treatment of the subject. This view is understandable as Colvin is the Senior Editor at Fortune.
Colvin's writing is clear and the use of company examples is helpful even if some of them provide only a passing reference more than in depth analysis. Colvin peppers his view on the crisis with memorable quotes and observations that will provide you with sound bytes of wisdom.
This is a good book and worth the read. But it is more of a discourse on the events that have happened, the responses of marquee named companies and bringing together points from other parties than anything else. Colvin leverages his extensive network of contacts and interactions at Fortune as well as studies from the major business strategy-consulting firms like McKinsey and Booz, Allen etc.
Overall recommended but not a must drop everything and read now book. This is more of a buy it for an airplane book than a go to a quiet place to read type of book. I am smarter for having read this book and it was time well spent.
Strengths:
Provides a good framework of 12 chapters focused on different aspects of the opportunities and issues created by the current global economic crisis. The view is comprehensive and focused - something hard to do when discussing the global economic crisis/recession.
Chapter Nine - Price with courage is perhaps the best chapter in the book and a strong reminder of the implications of price and the risks associated with pricing decisions that people make every day. Pricing is one of the things that everyone things they know, but they do not and this chapter shows the difference.
Chapter Eight - Create new solutions for customers' new problems are helpful and bring a fresh perspective on customer behavior and responses to it.
Chapter Seven - Manage for value is a fairly strong chapter with a focus on measuring the economic profit of your operations and product lines.
The book stays away from policy prescriptions and presents the facts, observations and opinions of leaders. This is a welcome aspect of the book as it informs rather than tries to re-educate the reader.
Challenges:
The book is decidedly U.S. centric, which really does not hit you until you look at the companies, data and references. People outside the US will find the book interesting and its general principles applicable but recognize its U.S. centricity.
The descriptions of what has happened and the mentioning of big name companies gets a little repetitive throughout the book. These gets to the point that you can bypass paragraphs and even skim whole pages because the discussion has been made before - particularly in the middle and final three chapters.
Chapter Six - Reexamine your strategy and business model is particularly weak and discusses generalities rather than providing suggested tools or actions. In this chapter you see the differences between journalism and consulting.
The book is light on specific prescriptions, which is consistent with the author's intent to raise questions and position the crisis as the basis for opportunity. So if you are looking for more of a road map I would suggest Charan or Collin's books.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Drawing the right lessons, July 3, 2009
This review is from: The Upside of the Downturn: Ten Management Strategies to Prevail in the Recession and Thrive in the Aftermath (Hardcover)
My mom told me that "all experiences in life are good ones, but only if you draw the right lessons from them. Otherwise, it is just something that happened to you." My mom and Colvin would have gotten along. In 171 pages, he sets out how to draw the right lessons and what to do now. Here is one gem: "they'll never forget what you do now." Think about employees, clients, vendors and your intereactions with them. How are you treating them in these dark days? If badly("hey employee you have no where to go so just thank me for keeping you around"), then they will bolt when things turn around.And don't give into what Colvin calls "ancient instincts" and resort to layoffs to solve your problems. That's like the generals who fight the last wars. Years ago, it was the role of people to make the machines run; now,the role of equipment is to enable people. So, understand that layoffs have a hugh cost, not just in severence payments but in lost intellectual capital. There is lots more. A valuable and inspiring read , not about success, but about opportunity.
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