WAYS TO MANAGE YOUR BUSINESS DURING A PANDEMIC
As
the COVID-19 pandemic spreads, protecting your startup or small businesses
means having a plan. To keep your company healthy during the coronavirus
outbreak and positioned well for success when it’s over, take advantage of
these seven contingency and business planning tips.
1. Put health and
safety first
If
you’re a solopreneur or sole proprietor, prioritize your health first. Limit
your travel and increase home office communication and collaboration tools. If
you have employees, keep them informed of travel restrictions, government
announcements, and offer them work from home options. If that’s not flexible
and your business is considered essential, take steps to decrease virus
transmission risk at your place of work. This includes social distancing,
splitting shifts, and frequent sanitization. It’s also wise to establish
procedures for staff to report if they are feeling unwell, are absent, or if
they suspect exposure to the coronavirus or infection.
2.
Assess the impact on operations
Include
timeframes in your assessment that consider the impacts of the pandemic if it
becomes a three-month, six-month, or one-year problem. For example, if critical
personnel became sick or had to look after family members, how will your
business accommodate these changes? Try to identify others who can step in and
learn key tasks such as retirees, family members, or independent contractorsand freelancers. If your customers close operations for a few weeks or months,
what impact will that have on your revenue forecast and sales cycle? Telework
has fluctuated during this crisis and should be accounted for in your plan.
Implement work from home policies and technologies that support collaborative
and secure at-home work.
3.
Reach out
Develop
a communication plan to reach out to your clients, partners, suppliers,
investors, and other stakeholders. Keep them aware of your business policies at
this time, any changes to operations, or new ways you can serve or collaborate
with them.
4.
Be ready to adapt
COVID-19
is changing our lives in ways and at a scale we could never have imagined. The
business plan you had 90-days ago isn’t what it is today. You need a plan to
adapt and reconfigure your business for each stage of this crisis. If it’s a
short-term problem, then cutting costs and other variable spending like
marketing, new hires, and travel may help you through. If your business has
seen immediate impacts, look for ways to support your client needs or diversify
your products and services during this time. For example, dog walking companies
are keeping revenue flowing in creative ways. Some are helping clients in
vulnerable age and health groups by doing their grocery run. Others are finding
new clients among at-risk groups or families with home-schooled kids who are
suddenly in need of a dog walker. It’s hard to look and plan too far ahead.
However, if the pandemic and lockdowns continue for several months to a year,
then you need another contingency plan; one that looks at renegotiating fixed
expenses, cutting benefits, even layoffs. If you're not sure how to make
changes to your business, seek a business
strategy consultant to help you devise a plan that works for your
situation.
5.
Evaluate your finances
Any
emergency plan should account for financial risk and impacts. Regularly update
and track your cash flow forecast and look for opportunities to reduce
non-critical expenditure. Also, review your accounts receivable and assess any
credit risks. Do you have a financial safety net that you can draw on? Many
business owners have savings they can draw on. Another option is to secure a
business line of credit before you need it, so you can draw on funds during a
disaster or pandemic. Alternatively, consider a financial consultant or small business financial assistance
programs to help you cover business expenses such as those administered by the
Small Business Administration (SBA). Under the CARES Act, the SBA is providing low-interest
disaster recovery loans up to $2 million to businesses impacted by
the situation. These loans, funded by banks but guaranteed by the SBA, can be
used to pay fixed debts, payroll, accounts payable and other bills. Long-term
repayments up to a maximum of 30 years keep payments affordable. The CARES Act
also offers small business owners a $10,000 advance on an Emergency Economic
Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) that does not have to be paid back. The program
provides loans up to $200,000. In addition to SBA loans, the federal government
is also offsetting paid sick and paid leave costs for employers with an
employer tax credit, equal to 100% of benefits paid. Self-employed individuals
will also benefit from an additional $600 in unemployment insurance for up to
four months – an important safety net that they generally don’t qualify for.
Some states have also implemented financial assistance for the
self-employed. For example, sole
proprietors and single-member LLCs that can demonstrate COVID-19 impact can
qualify for grants between $5,000 and $10,000.
6.
Stay on top of the fast-changing compliance landscape
If you operate
an LLC, keep an eye on shifting developments at the government level that
directly affect your work such as filing documents and turnaround times. Many
Secretary of State offices have eliminated expedited services, while others
have removed or greatly restricted counter service. Keep abreast of Secretary
of State availability and other impacts on our COVID-19
resources page. Having a remote workforce can also introduce new
state compliance requirements that must be considered such as state payroll and
income tax filing, or the need to register to do business in a new state.
7.
Be prepared for the light at the end of the tunnel
With
your employees safe and healthy, and your operational and financial impacts
mitigated as best you can; take stock and think about how you’ll successfully
restore operations when the COVID-19 pandemic is over. This is likely to be a
life-changing event that could bring a wealth of new opportunities for startups
and small business owners. Look for immediate gains like renegotiating contracts with suppliers and vendors. Listen to your customers and find ways to
serve them. Find ways to introduce greater efficiencies into your business,
such as reducing your physical footprint by making permanent your work from
home policies. And consider your financial situation. None of us knows what’s
coming next or if we’ll face a pandemic like this again in our lifetimes. But
it pays to have a plan to bring your business through emergencies like COVID-19
and ensure it’s in a strong position for recovery once it has passed.
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