Chapter 1
Think
Build an adaptive and resilient mindset.
To succeed, CEOs need to have adaptability – the ability to change – and agility – the speed of response. This includes both planning for whatever can go wrong and setting up a structure to respond quickly.
To do this, companies need to utilize a range of information and tools to gain insight into their current operations, performance and market environment and plan for different future environments. These include external insights, such as third-party data and dynamic analytics that can quickly process real-time data and help shape insights into customer demands or concerns. For example, one telecommunications business was able to use social media analytics to determine the negative sentiment caused by service outages more quickly than through internal systems.
Scenario planning that utilizes data to help simulate how a company can be impacted by a host of situations, such as a market crash or a product recall, is another key activity. For example, many organizations have built cross-functional "Brexit-ready" teams to look at potential scenarios and be ready to act once the way forward is clear.
Chapter 2
Plan
Create a platform to reshape your organization.
To give companies the time, space and capital capacity to plan and reshape the organization, they need to develop a platform to demonstrate their ability to be agile, enabling more optionality. To be effective, this needs to happen before a crisis occurs.
Half of the companies that successfully reshaped reset their strategy for growth through new alliances, agreements, partnerships or joint ventures.
Chaper 3
Act
Reshape with agility, building in optionality.
Stress testing, reviewing the portfolio, understanding and engaging with stakeholders, and examining the capital allocation structure can enable company executives to form a holistic view of their business. They can then make data-driven decisions to prepare the company to adapt to both the current business environment and any future disruptions and opportunities. The key is to act on that information.
It is important to develop different options. For example, a company that focuses on selling a business unit to free up cash and improve liquidity can be in deep trouble if the transaction does not go through. But if, in addition to the transaction, the company is driving a rapid working capital improvement plan and the sale and leaseback of equipment, these additional options give the company more paths to solve the problem. If more time is available to reshape the business, then longer term options have proven to be successful. For example, EY analysis shows 59% of companies have successfully reshaped by introducing new products and services, while 64% optimized their financial and operational performance.
Conclusion
Standing still is no longer an option. CEOs, CFOs and the board need to understand the drivers of change that most affect their companies, stress test their assumptions for a variety of simultaneous scenarios to understand the interdependency of events and assess the likely impact in a data-driven, objective way. They need to make sure their organizations are structured to allow a quick and agile response and be ready to communicate with their wider ecosystem of stakeholders when it does. And lastly, ensure leadership takes the bold and fast actions when needed. Only then will their companies be able to reshape themselves to thrive now and reinvent themselves in an uncertain future.
Summary
With investors punishing underperformance more quickly and severely than ever, decisive leadership, data-based responsiveness and the ability to reshape quickly are the key characteristics a company needs in this new environment.