Reinvent and Rescue Your Failing Business

Those of you who follow astrology know that the planet Mercury is currently in retrograde meaning, as a result of an optical illusion, the planet appears to be moving backward in its orbit. Mercury began to retrograde on August 5 and the phase ends on August 28. The third and final Mercury retrograde of the year will occur November 25-December 15 (the first retrograde Mercury of 2024 was April 1- 25). All nine planets can appear to retrograde and it is said that when they do, the effect can scramble our best laid plans. For example, signing contracts is said to be ill-advised during retrograde Mercury (and also during retrograde Venus, Mars, or Jupiter). However, there is an upside associated with the downside of retrograde Mercury—you may be able to rectify what went off the rails.

Astrologers claim that Mercury is the planet most closely associated with business activities. You would never launch a business during retrograde Mercury (or retrograde Venus, Mars, or Jupiter), when the planet seems to be orbiting backward, because the venture would almost certainly fail—you want forward movement to get things rolling. Instead, astrologers advise you to use retrograde Mercury to figure out whether a failing enterprise can (or should) be rescued and is worth the effort and money needed for the resurrection.

The prefix re– conveys the spirit of retrograde and signals that it’s time to pause and reflect on what has transpired and anticipate how the outcomes might influence next steps. The ancient practice of astrology recommends using retrograde Mercury to revisit, reconsider, repair, recuperate, or reimagine what appears to be broken but, with careful reassessment and cost-effective reengineering, can be successfully rebuilt.

Oh, why not? Do not allow the heartbreak and frustration you feel as your dream of entrepreneurship crumbles convince you to abandon ship too soon. You owe it to yourself to discover what might respond to a well-executed pivot and put the remedy in motion.

Review what went wrong

Conduct a thorough post-mortem to reveal which factors caused the failure. Was it the product or service offered, or were you too far ahead of a developing trend? Did you overestimate the size of your target market, or become too optimistic about demand for your offering? Were there operational problems that, e.g., interfered with product manufacturing or delivery, or was cash-flow the problem?

A comprehensive review of financial statements, sales data and customer feedback will help you recognize the glitches. With an accurate diagnosis of what has not been working, you can redirect your focus and develop a reinvention strategy.

Rethink the business model

A business model describes how the venture will make money—methods the company will use to sell the product or service to customers and how the business will drive sales, for instance. A business model also determines the type of products and/or services that make sense for the company to sell and how to effectively market and brand those products or services. The will identify the ideal customers the company should aim to capture, the depth of customer demand and anticipated operational and selling expenses. Miscalculations in the business model planning are almost certain to eventually result in unmet revenue expectations. Appropriate market research is the remedy for an ineffective business model. Study direct competitors and industry trends.

Reconfirm customer demand

Understanding your target customer’s needs and priorities is integral to start-up success, so obtaining psychographic data will help you clarify what is essential to them when they shop in your product category. Whether or not your business failure was a lapse of product-market fit, identifying and then learning how to communicate your offering’s value proposition is a key component of brand-building and achieving sales revenue goals. An insufficient product-market fit results in the product or service failing to resonate with prospective customers and results in weak demand.

Revisiting the buyer persona of your ideal target customer will also be instructive. Let your market research lead you to identify the right customer, the right product-market fit and just maybe, reveal a niche target audience with a readjusted offering, that differentiates you from competitors and paves the way to a loyal customer base that is your springboard to sustainable growth.

Reassess pricing

Pricing problems limit sales revenue, whether you’ve priced too high or too low. Incorrect pricing is often implicated in cash-flow and revenue difficulties. Get your bearings by researching three or four competitors to verify the price tolerance range for your product or service category and get an idea of how you might readjust your pricing—and maybe customer payment options, too. Being flexible and creative with how customers can purchase and pay for products and services—on your website, on social media, on consignment, with free delivery—can boost sales and build your customer base. But first, do your price comparisons to ensure any new pricing is competitive and fits your market tier and brand, whether luxury, midlevel, or economy.

Reexamine the sales strategy

Again, make it easy for customers to do business with you, whether you are a bricks & mortar shop, sell on line, or offer your wares through a subscription service. Also, shipping and delivery should be easy and priced at a level that customers accept.

Furthermore, inefficient or cumbersome business procedures can drain time and resources away from serving customers and growing the business. Investigate technology—marketing, financial, operational— to simplify workflows, delegate tasks, improve organization, speed up processes and reduce expenses associated with day-to-day operations.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © iStock for TheSchoolRun. The solar system.

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