business busy downtown

One of the most painful things businesses have to endure is
economic downturns.


Countless brands fail because they aren’t prepared for periods of
severe economic hardships. However, as a business owner, you have
to expect drops in business activities and prepare for a recession so
that it doesn’t catch you unawares.


Use the following methods to recession-proof your business,
continue operating, and grow even during difficult times.


Let’s get started!

Have Multiple Revenue Streams

This is by far one of the most effective ways to ensure a steady cash
flow and continue running your business during an economic
recession. Even if you have a great 9-5 job or startup that pays you
well, you need to diversify your income streams. Keep your job
but pick a side hustle that brings in extra cash. You don’t have to
work on it 24/7. Invest at least 2 hours a day or less to monitor and
keep it afloat.


There are countless businesses you can start today that don’t
require too much money or time. Brainstorm passive income ideas
and pick one that interests you. Focus on turning it into a business.
Some of the most lucrative passive income ideas to consider are
drop shipping, online courses, blogging, coaching, writing eBooks,
affiliate marketing, and opening an online store.


Consider your skills or interests to ensure success. Choose
something that you are passionate about. Go with what you know
you will enjoy working on years from now to ensure you don’t quit
when things get tough.


Once you pick your side hustle, set sales goals and focus on growing
the business. Use the money you make to grow your business. Save a
certain percentage monthly or as often as you receive your earnings.
Use your savings only during a recession.

Look for investment opportunities and make long-term
investments. Choose businesses you are familiar with and ones you
believe in to avoid losses and ensure returns.
Diversify your investments to increase earnings and your chances
of success. Learn about investing or hire a financial advisor to help
you identify smart investment opportunities, manage your finances,
make informed decisions, avoid losses, and ensure profits.

Manage Your Cash Flow

Manage your cash flow, account for every cent, and know where
your money is going to set yourself up for success. Maintaining a
steady cash flow during a recession is difficult if not impossible, so
do due diligence before it happens.


Consider your main income source. How do you fund your business?
Where does the money you use to run daily processes come from?
Does the business run itself or do you rely on other income sources?
If you use other accounts to keep the company afloat, look for ways
to improve your product or service so that you don’t have to borrow
money from other accounts.


If the business runs itself, pay attention to your key performance
indicators. Where is the money coming from? Which product or
service brings in more money? Which processes generate revenue
and get you more sales? Invest in processes or offers that bring in
more buyers.


Identify areas that need improvement and make the necessary
adjustments. For example, which processes are failing? And Which
ones aren’t as effective as you want them to be? Isolate them and
determine if they are worth the investment.

Another effective way to manage your cash flow is to cut
unnecessary spending. Know where your money is going and
determine whether or not it’s worth the investment. Have a look at
all the memberships, subscriptions, and services you are paying for
that your business can operate without. Cancel unnecessary
subscriptions or memberships and discontinue services.


Use the money you save to fund important business processes and
invest in things that align with your business goals.


Consider the important services or subscriptions you are paying for.
Can you afford to continue paying for those services and
simultaneously grow your business? If not, look for cheaper options.
But make sure you get value for your money.


Managing your cash flow is key to not only running and growing
your business but preparing it for an economic downturn. So,
prioritize it.

Build an Emergency Fund

Build an emergency fund to avoid going through your business
account to cover emergencies or other unexpected expenses. Open
an emergency account and constantly deposit money into it.


Save as often and as you can. Be consistent. Set aside a certain
percentage of your earnings and channel the money into your
emergency account. If you receive money weekly, save weekly. If
you make money monthly, save monthly.


Building an emergency fund is an ongoing process that requires
dedication and proper planning. If you want to have $30000 on your
account in 3 years, take it one day at a time. Save daily, weekly, and
monthly. Be patient and understand that the money will eventually
add up.


Setting aside money for emergencies allows you to continue running
your business, avoid getting into debt, and ensures you don’t use
your business funds to cover unexpected expenses. It is key to
surviving a recession, ensuring a steady cash flow, and keeping your
business afloat during uncertain times.

Focus on Your Existing Customers

Your current customers can give you more sales opportunities and
are key to taking your business to the next level. So, invest in them
and focus on strengthening business relations.


Form meaningful relations with them. Offer exceptional services
to ensure they don’t go to the competition. Don’t just focus on
concluding a sale. Show your customers how much you value them.
Show that you want to make their lives easier and help them reach
their goals.


Identify rising customer needs and cater to them. Offer solutions to
common problems and help them mitigate challenges. Look for ways
to add value to their lives and make their work easier.
Know where your clients want to go, find out how you can help
them get a step closer to the desired destination, and market your
offer.


Offer the best service that they can’t receive anywhere else and
exceed expectations. Meet deadlines or submit work a day or two
before the expected date. Keep your customers talking about the
great service they received from you and how you helped them with
ABC.

Establish effective communication channels and stay in touch
with your clients to get them to think about your brand and ensure
they don’t seek business elsewhere.


Offer free services, massive discounts, and free resources to
maintain relations and keep them interacting with your brand.
Doing this helps you build meaningful relations with your customers
and ensures you keep them for life.


Win back lost clients and turn them into long-term customers. Go
through your client list and highlight all the clients you’ve lost over
the years. Once you come up with an exhaustive list and have access
to their contact details, reach out to them.


Don’t wait for clients to come to you for business, approach them
instead. That applies to your existing customers as well.


Come up with a new project proposal and show it to them. Highlight
the positive impact that it will have on their business to get them to
accept your proposal. Constantly look for ways to keep your
customers coming back and buying your product to maintain
relations.


Doing this makes it easy for you to maintain your client base and
upsell to existing customers during a recession. You have already
proven your expertise, shown you value your relations, established
trust, and formed strong business connections. So, keeping your
customers won’t be difficult because they trust and value your
brand.

Improve Your Marketing Strategy

Your marketing strategy is key to building brand awareness,
reaching your target audience, attracting sales, and taking your
business to the next level. So, invest in it.


Come up with an effective strategy that allows you to continue
promoting your brand despite economic downturns.


One mistake that most companies make during a recession is cutting
back on marketing. Don’t make the same mistake. You want to retain
your customers, acquire new ones, remain on top of their minds,
and turn them into long-term clients. The only way to achieve that is
by setting aside a budget for your marketing processes and ensuring
you continue to advertise your offers during difficult times.


Use content marketing to build and strengthen customer relations,
hold on to existing customers, attract new sales, and continue
operating during economic hardships.


Understand your target audience to provide content they are
interested in. Use your content to add value to your followers’ lives,
nurture leads, and turn prospects into customers. Curate content
that caters to their needs, provides solutions to pressing issues and
makes their lives easier.

Share promotional content that caters to different needs. Target
high-paying customers and low-paying ones. Create offers that
appeal to different types of people and ones that meet various
needs.


Use different pricing strategies to ensure sales. For example,
value-based pricing, promotional pricing, psychological pricing,
bundling, and premium pricing. Doing this ensures you continue
selling your product or service and sets you up for success.


Constantly monitor your pricing strategy to determine what works
and what doesn’t.

Automate Business Processes

One of the main reasons that lead to business failure, bankruptcy, or
job loss during a recession is biting off more than you can chew.
That means hiring too many employees when you are only starting,
expanding your business too early, investing money in processes
that aren’t working, and using services you don’t need.


So, instead of hiring more staff, look for ways to get the job done
effectively without onboarding new employees especially if you
can’t afford to. Answer key questions before hiring more people; “Is
this the right time to hire more employees?” “Why do I want to get
more people on board?” “Is it going to benefit the company and how?”
“What role are the new workers going to play. Will it help us reach our
goals?” And “Is hiring permanent employees the only option we have?”
Answer these questions to determine whether or not hiring is the
best move, make informed decisions, and avoid losses.


If you notice that getting more people onboard benefits the entire
organization, look for alternative ways to access the skills you need
without hiring permanent staff. For example, work with contractors
or freelancers.

If you aren’t seeing ROI for your marketing efforts and want more
people to join your sales and marketing team, train your existing
team instead. Find out why they are underperforming and provide
solutions. For example, if they complain about too much work and
inadequate resources to meet deadlines and reach customers,
provide the required resources.


Automate repetitive tasks and enable them to work more effectively.
For example, invest in email marketing software to reach out to
potential customers, create professional emails with minimal effort,
nurture leads, and maintain client relations.


Research the top marketing software to use and train your staff to
familiarize themselves with it.


Some of the best email marketing software to look into are Constant
Contact, Active Campaign, and MailChimp.


If your team complains about failing to keep up with social media
comments and send timely responses, use social media monitoring
software like Sprout Social, Hootsuite, BuzzSumo, Buffer,
HubSpot, and Sendible.


Use automation software to save time, money and avoid downsizing
employees during an economic crisis.


Other processes to automate are invoicing, purchase orders,
customer support, and contracts.

Use Xero, Zoho Books, QuickBooks, FreshBooks, and Sage
Business Cloud Accounting for bookkeeping services.


If you have multiple startups and are only starting, delegate some of
your work. Work with people you trust or search for freelancers on
Fiverr, Upwork, Guru, PeoplePer Hour, and any other freelancing
platform you choose.


Delegating tasks helps you rapidly grow your business, meet
deadlines, build your reputation, and enhance sales. It also makes it
easy for you to focus on more important tasks that have a direct
impact on your business and ensures you are well-prepared for any
crisis.

Improve Your Main Offer

Improve your main offer to grow your customer base and keep your
business afloat during uncertain times. Find out what you are great
at and capitalize on it. Identify your strong point and use it to attract
sales, maintain your reputation, build your brand image, and
continue business operations.


Answer key questions; “What is your value proposition?” “What sets
you apart from the competition?” “What is your best service or
product?” And “What is one thing that people love about your brand?”


Once you answer those questions, focus on making it even more
appealing to customers. Look for areas that can be improved or offer
more of what your buyers like. For example, if people are drawn to
your brand because of the 50% yearly discount you give to repeat
customers, offer a 50% discount on that particular product or
service twice a year.


If buyers favor your business to the competition because of the
yearly contests you host and the exciting rewards that come with
the events, host the competitions 3 times a year. The goal is to give
customers more of what they love and keep them coming back.


Stay one step ahead of the competition and always look for
opportunities to outshine your competitors.

Improve your main product or service to retain your customers,
attract prospects, and increase your conversion rates. Study the
competition and find out how you can make your offer more
appealing to clients. Identify your top 3 competitors and analyze
their strategies. “What is one thing that people love about their
businesses?” “What captured your attention the second you visited
their websites?” “What do they have in common?” And “What are their
weaknesses?”


Identify what works and what doesn’t. Focus on their weaknesses
and improve where they lack. Offer free services for something they
are charging for, slash prices, or offer double value for packages
similar to yours. For example, if you sell accounting software and
notice that the competition has 4 services for the first package, 6 for
the second one, and charges separately, improve your offer. Offer 6
services on your first package and 8 on your next one.


If you sell merchandise, offer free shipping plus a 10% discount to
returning customers or ones who have been in business with you for
more than 3 years.


Doing this helps you quickly grow your customer base, increase
sales, build loyalty, and turn first-time clients into recurring
customers. It also makes it easy for you to remarket to your buyers,
win back lost clients, and get them to buy more of your product even
during a recession.