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Hardcover The Upside of the Downturn: Ten Management Strategies to Prevail in the Recession and Thrive in the Aftermath Book

ISBN: 1591842964

ISBN13: 9781591842965

The Upside of the Downturn: Ten Management Strategies to Prevail in the Recession and Thrive in the Aftermath

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Book Overview

Never waste a crisis. Some businesses--and some people--will emerge from today's economic tumult stronger and more dominant than when it started. Others will weaken and fade. It all depends on... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Common sense, a contrarian and a touch of ERM

Great to see someone take both a contrarian view and be willing to go on record for it and to apply common sense to the results that quantitative models and their owners projected. Hunkering down is easier to do than to do the extra work, strategy, and risk management needed to thrive over the next few years. Gary W Patterson the FiscalDoctor Author of Stick Out Your Balance Sheet and Cough: Best Practices for Long-Term Business Health

A must for all CEO's

This book was insightful and provided much needed perspective for these turbulent (and opportunistic) times. This is an easy, must read for all C-Suite Execs

A brilliant analysis of "why this historic downturn is so rich with possibilities"

Although in dispute whether or not (as some insist) the Chinese character for the word "crisis" has two meanings, peril and opportunity, the juxtaposition of the two helps to explain Geoff Colvin's response to a question many business leaders now ask: "How can my company survive and then prevail during the current recession, and eventually thrive in its aftermath?" What he recommends are ten management principles (none of which is a head-snapping revelation) that can guide and inform efforts to achieve the objectives indicated in the question. It is important to keep in kind that Colvin is a hardcore, world-class pragmatist who has an insatiable curiosity to understand what works, what doesn't, and why...and then share what he has learned with others, with the hope that the information and advice provided will prove helpful to them. I should add that all of his material is anchored in real-world situations. Also, that he is especially talented writer. In the introductory chapter, Colvin observes: "Performance in the Tour de France is a lot like performance in business and, for that matter, in virtually every realm: the worst, most difficult conditions bring out differences in competitors that were not previously apparent. Such conditions turn leaders suddenly into laggards and vice versa. They determine the winners and losers. Periods of extreme stress and challenge are reliably when dramatic competitive change takes place." In this context, I remember the outrage expressed by golfers who played in a U.S. Open years ago. The rough was too high, the fairways were too narrow, the greens were too fast, etc. In response to the uproar, an office of the U.S.G.A. replied, "We're not trying to embarrass the world's greatest golfers. We're trying to identify them." That is what the "difficult conditions" to which Colvin refers do. Warren Bennis and Robert Thomas characterize them as a "crucible" from which some leaders emerge stronger, others do not. Colvin devotes a separate chapter to each of the ten management principles. Wherever appropriate, he also offers an explanation of especially important issues or developments. For example: Why "this historic downturn really does offer new, similarly scaled possibilities. The reasons are specific and hardheaded" (Pages 4-9) "Why we don't have to wait for the recession to end to see the new world that it's creating - to glimpse the next episode in the story" (Pages 19-24) How to examine the most significant changes - in six key categories that shape performance -- in a company's competitive world (Pages 27-34) Given the "enormously destructive power of this recession," which lessons does it suggest that will help business leaders to understand what that its risks are and how to manage them effectively (Pages 137-144) Colvin observes, "A tendency to avoid reality, to minimize bad news, may lie deep in a corporate culture. [That may also be true of what James O'Toole apply characterizes as `ideology of

Drawing the right lessons

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.

A good read to help you find a prosperous path through the current financial crisis.

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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