Technology

#Launching a business during a recession is terrifying — and that’s great for your customers

#Launching a business during a recession is terrifying — and that’s great for your customers

My company, Solace, found its footing during the Great Recession. And though a number of successful companies attribute their initial market hold and growth levels to having launched during times of economic downturn, I’m not advocating for doing the same.

Yes, the recession meant we were forced to adapt to different circumstances than those under a stable economy, but it certainly didn’t make starting out any easier.

However, that’s not to say we didn’t learn some invaluable lessons from building a business during one of the biggest recessions of our lifetime. To grow around 2008 we had to step back, look around, and focus even more relentlessly on seeing the world through the eyes of our customers.

Rather than exclusively dialing down on what we were building — an easy default for business leaders during a crisis — we placed our customers at the heart of everything we did. 

This allowed us to see new opportunities and pain points and, coupled with the luck that can arise from work ethic, land important deals. Looking back, it’s not all that shocking that we landed some of our biggest customers (including customers who are still with us to this day) at a time when the macroeconomic conditions felt most fragile.

Our fear engendered a kind of radical empathy for our customers that I’m not sure we would have been able to tap into otherwise.

Launching (or seriously scaling) a business during a recession is not the advisable path forward — after all, 80% of the US’ biggest firms of the last 50 years started out during strong economic conditions. But neither is it impossible; you just need to get serious and strategic about how you are learning about your current and potential customers. I mean going beyond the myriad data points in a spreadsheet to discover their deepest fears.

Though it may feel like your natural inclination, simply catering to their every need isn’t enough. This can even lead you down a slippery slope of constant reactivity that depletes your resources.

Instead, you must get to the root of why their needs are their needs — and figure out how (or if) your product or service can address those core challenges.

Knowing your customers is key to product success

The businesses that come out on top during recessions, aside from those that had massive reserves to better weather the storm, position themselves as “must have” rather than “nice to have.” Under changing conditions, this means focusing on how your customers’ needs have adapted and what’s most important to them right now.

Just because you’ve recently launched your product or service doesn’t mean you can’t pivot to cater to newfound circumstances, but you need to address the pains of the here and now. 

Very few potential customers, when it feels like the world is burning around them, will be ready to talk about how your system will future-proof their infrastructure. But, if you can address their most pressing needs right now while having the wisdom to describe how the events of today are bound to happen again… you are onto something. 

Just take the example of Office Depot’s approach versus that of Staples during the 2000 recession. While Office Depot cut its workforce and took on a defensive strategy, Staples expanded its team to support its new high-end categories, including personalized printing and tech services.

The addition of these offerings was in tune with what Staples’ customers needed at that time and resulted in the company being 30% more profitable than Office Depot in the following three years.

Credit: Mr Stan Zemanek
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