I'm not exactly sure when this recession will hit bottom. Most likely, the bottom will not be remarkably different (economically speaking) than today. The rate of job losses has dropped dramatically from the peak but we are still shedding jobs. Many employers have frozen wages and some have asked employees to take more days off without pay.
All of this belt tightening has made the American consumer afraid to spend money. This is not a completely negative fact of life. When Americans do not spend as much money on non-essential goods and services, the loss of demand drives prices down in the short run. If you were waiting to purchase replacement equipment, furniture, china, glassware, silverware, and kitchen utensils, you should consider making a small investment in the future now.
If you never started a customer loyalty program in the past, you are probably looking at your base clientele in your dining room this month. Patrons who have shunned the bad economy, their New Year's resolutions, volatile weather patterns and the new frugal approach to life here in the states are your fans. Get out in the dining room and say: "Hi! Thanks for joining us tonight. Would you like to join our new frequent dining club?"
January in a recession will often produce a low sales number. If you take the sales figure at the end of January and multiply by 12, you will have an excellent figure for forecasts, budgets and business plans. Could you break even if every month this year looked like this January? If you answer yes, you will make money this year and beyond. If you answer no, you have work to do.
Pretend it is never going to get better than this month. What would you do differently?
By forcing your company to confront the possibility of 2010 staying at the current levels, you will drive your team to innovate. These innovations will provide the path to the future and will create positive cash flow now.
If you are swimming in excess cash, should you open a new location? Like any recession, the market will over correct on the downside. Better days are in the future. If you wanted to open a new location in 2006 and decided to wait, today may be your lucky day. Construction costs have dropped, existing restaurant space is everywhere and experienced professionals are looking for employment.
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2 comments:
This is not a completely negative fact of life. When Americans do not spend as much money on non-essential goods and services, the loss of demand drives prices down in the short run. If I were waiting to purchase replacement equipment, furniture, china, glassware, silverware, and kitchen utensils, I should consider making a small investment in the future now.
Absolutely correct Term papers! This is an opportunity for some properly positioned companies.
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