Five essentials for SME’s to survive the Corona chaos.

by | Mar 25, 2020 | Governance, Management | 0 comments

It is too easy for those not at the front lines of a crisis to brush aside the practical difficulties of day to day survival, in favour of the fluffier, albeit no less important longer term questions and issues.

Currently there is a flurry of activity from political leaders, roused from their partisan politics by this virus, resulting in a raft of measures that is challenging for owners of SME’s to understand, and access. However, it is essential that your spend the time, in a rational way, to understand the measures that will impact your business, what the qualification guidelines are, and how the assistance is to be accessed.

Many businesses are fighting for survival in the face of that Black Corona Swan that flew in and crapped all over them.

The five things business owners should be doing today.

Cash flow forecast.

Cash is the oxygen of business, survival without it is impossible. Having a clear view of the cash coming in, and going out over the immediate future is vital to making informed decisions. I always favour a weekly rolling 13 week forecast in most circumstances, and certainly in this one. There are plenty of tools out there, but a simple spreadsheet, filled with the input of your debtors and creditors ledgers, along with the bank reconciliation and a sales forecast will give the answers you need.

Do it now!

Cash ‘runway’.

You need to know how long your cash reserves will last in the event that you are suddenly trading at a loss, which is broadly illegal. This calculation goes hand in hand with the cash flow forecast, but requires you to break costs up into fixed and variable components. Those who regularly review their Break Even will have this information to hand. The provisions in the Corporations Act that refer to the personal liability of Directors who allow trading at a loss to continue, will be altered to accommodate the Corona virus, according to the PM’s March 22 statement.  As yet I have seen no detail about this change, so be wary.

Communicate, communicate, communicate. Talk to major customers and those prospects that were about to be converted, to understand how their businesses are being impacted, and what you might be able to do to assist them. Talk to your staff, include them in the decisions around how best to preserve the business so that there is a job there when things recover.  Taking holiday leave, unpaid leave, long service, job sharing, all may play a role. When you as the boss are getting really tired of having the same conversation,  over and over, you might just be getting to the point where you are being heard.

Government assistance.

Both state and federal governments are setting out, with it seems common dual objectives, for the measures put in place, which are still evolving.

  • Provide assistance to those whose employment dissolves. This includes a specific Corona income supplement, the ability to draw down on superannuation accounts, reduction of social security deeming rates, and direct payments to households.
  • Provide assistance to businesses to keep employees working.  This is the crucial one, as it is businesses that will provide the impetus for recovery. From April 28, the government is providing up to a maximum of $100,000 to be used to cover overheads, and keep staff. There is also included in the second package, a payment equal to the withholding tax on wages and salaries, of up to $50,000. The government has also put in place a specific Corona virus assistance scheme to assist access to working capital, by guaranteeing 50% of new loans by banks to eligible SME’s. To fund this measure, the Reserve bank has announced a lending facility to the financial institutions that will reduce the costs to those institutions of lending to SME’s.  The states and territories have all weighed in with measures that relate to businesses operating in their states. Ignoring the stupidity of the federated system that results in an inconsistent patchwork of regulations, resulting in complication and confusion, you should investigate the specifics, and understand how you will be effected. In NSW for example, the government has announced they will waive payroll tax, and will being forward planned reductions in that awful tax on employment.

Be of service.

These are tough times, that induce a sense of desperation, which too often ends up being seen by others as the ‘hard sell’. This is the wrong time to be seen that way. Instead, set out to be of service, to use your resources to help mitigate the impact on others. They will respond positively, and remember. This does not mean you do not sell, obviously, but it does mean you do so only with the best interests of the buyer at heart, not your own. And, for heavens sake, stop those silly brand managers sending out those patronising ‘Covid-19 measures for your safety’ emails to anyone and everyone whose email address they collected in some way over the last decade. We do  not want to hear from you, but will remember you clogged up our inboxes at a vital time when things get better.

It is a lot, on top of the day to day battle for survival, but spending your time wisely, on the things that will make a difference, is the best investment you could make at this time.

 

Header photo credit: David Brim,  davidbrim.com