Rainy Day Strategies to Cushion Financial Uncertainty

There’s been lots of talk about the U.S. economy over the past year or two and bad news has dominated the narrative. Rounds of lay-offs continue at enterprise companies: Nike announced plans to shed 1,400 jobs in April; Dell cut 10% of its workforce in March (11,000 employees), for the third year in a row; on May 5, the cryptocurrency exchange platform Coinbase announced a planned lay-off of 14% of its staff, or about 700 employees. Even the popular building contractor rating platform Angie’s List announced in January that 350 jobs would be cut this year.

Your one-person Freelance empire may be holding up despite lay-offs and rising gasoline and grocery prices but even those of you who hold the working capital needed to maintain normal business operations, pay living expenses and continue to fund your retirement account may nevertheless have a gut feeling that warns you to spend cautiously and trim expenses to bolster your savings cushion. An analysis of your financial position is how you begin your resiliency campaign.

Assess business financial condition

The road to financial resilience begins with examining the business’ financial position by conducting a cash-flow analysis. The process will reconfirm the sources of your earnings and how much you pay to keep the business rolling. The cash-flow analysis will illustrate how and when revenue streams bring money into the business (receivables) and the timing and costs of operating and other expenses (payables) that take money out of the business. You’ll take the measure of how and from which sources business revenue is derived, as well as your spend for fixed and variable expenses. You’ll also confront the business top line earnings (gross sales) and bottom line (net) earnings. Your mission is to analyze cash-flow over 12 months, and making note of seasonal variations, so that you’ll obtain a big-picture understanding of your entity’s financial rhythms.

The cash-flow analysis invites your business to “tell” you where you’re making money and where you spend perhaps too much and should consider a less-costly alternative. Identifying areas where spending has you leaking cash is especially helpful if local or national economic conditions make clients inclined to limit the billable hours that feed your revenue. Fewer billable hours will magnify those pesky financial gaps and escalate the impact of a cash crunch crisis, should it occur. Ask your accountant or bookkeeper to run the numbers, or contact your local Small Business Association SCORE to make an appointment and obtain some (probably) free and trustworthy business finance management assistance.

Build a budget that reflects financial reality

Kick-off your fat-trimming budget project by reviewing variable and fixed expenses and verifying how each one contributes to maintaining operations, supporting business growth, supporting customer service and the customer experience, or enabling professional development that reinforces your standing as a thought leader and expert in your field. Whatever expenditures do not at least indirectly support the business or your professional position may need to either be funded at a more modest level or eliminated. Developing your revised budgetary focus does not, however, mean that you must slash as many expenses as possible. Your new budgeting approach should be strategic and guided by business goals and economic reality. Here are useful guide posts:

  • Cut expenses that do not support revenue generation, business operations, or the customer experience.
  • Protect spending on marketing and sales functions to encourage revenue, e.g. client acquisition and retention.
  • Build a cash reserve that can float three to six months of business operating expenses.

Use scenario planning to forecast a worse-case possibility and use that perspective to forecast the next 12 – 18 months of operations. What might your finances look like if revenue drops 10%? Next, consider a more disturbing future and forecast the financial challenges you would likely encounter if, heaven forbid, revenue drops by 25%? It doesn’t feel good, but the scenario planning component of your financial defense plan will force you to anticipate how you might manage and inspire you to think of how to cushion those harsh and stressful circumstances with some savvy advance planning. It’s always easier and more effective when difficult decisions are evaluated and potential remedies are devised when you are calm and not in a panic.

Before any storms arrive, remember that your best defense is a good offense. If at all possible, delay major capital purchases, but remind yourself to avoid severely slashing your marketing budget. You may decide to shrink it, but do not lose sight of the power of consistent marketing and its place as one of the three pillars of a healthy business. Companies that maintain their marketing presence during business downturns consistently outperform businesses that sharply limit marketing activities when the recovery arrives.

In fact, refocused marketing strategies and campaigns could surpass the effectiveness of your current, perhaps more costly, activities. Stepping back from certain paid advertisement and instead doubling down on publishing marketing content—which will cost time, that other valuable resource—could yield excellent results. To the best of your ability, and in accordance with what aligns with your business solutions and customer personae and preferences, consider one or more of the following:

  • Invite a client to participate in a written or video case study. It’s a highly persuasive tool that guides prospects to envision how your solution could resolve their challenge or help a mission-critical goal to be reached.
  • Look for opportunities to portray yourself as a thought leader; that could include moderating or appearing on a panel, speaking at a local business or industry conference or other meeting, teaching a credit or noncredit course in a subject that is aligned with the solutions your company provides, or obtaining an invitation to speak in a webinar or podcast.
  • Look for public relations opportunities that will enhance your visibility and strengthen your brand image. If you are teaching or speaking at a venue that’s open to the public, send a press release to a community newspaper or event listing sites. Also, post your speaking or teaching engagement on your website and social media platforms.

Diversify revenue streams

If your Freelance entity offers just one product or service, you are potentially quite vulnerable to the winds of economic instability. A shift in the competitive landscape, or a new tech product, for instance, can threaten your ability to make a living. Especially in a solo earner household, if revenue earning opportunities become scarce, the outcome could be difficult.

You might not see a quick fix for your problem, but you could create one by asking a question. That is, it could be worth your while to ask clients with whom you are currently engaged if they might be interested in expanding the work you do for them? Frame your proposal in a way that illustrates a desirable and tangible competitive advantage that the client’s company would obtain when your expanded work is implemented. Your clients may help you make lemonade of the lemons and provide you with a new income stream that you hadn’t considered. A complementary service that can be delivered as an add-on or upgrade might also inspire a client to envision how you might bring more value to his/her organization. Similarly, tiered pricing that offers a lower cost basic option as well as a higher-priced premium alternative that provides more extensive service, could bring a new revenue source to your organization.

Then again, it may be more feasible to develop an external revenue stream and explore the possibility of a side hustle. You may have noticed that most mentions of side hustles involve an entrepreneurial angle but that does not have to be the case. Traditionally, a side hustle was an under the radar job that wasn’t discussed with your colleagues. Just 10 years ago, a side hustle could have found you plowing snow in winter, clearing out dead leaves in autumn and performing basic yardwork such as weeding, mowing lawns and pruning forsythia and rose bushes in spring and summer.

BTW, independently or traditionally employed workers who take on a side hustle are for the most part not in financial distress. In fact, those who earn $150K annually are more likely to have a side hustle than those who earn $25K – $50K per year. But regardless of your financial circumstances, a side hustle is a way to future proof your financial position and build a cushion against financial uncertainty.

Leverage external financial resources

Grants, SBA loans and alternative lending programs are created to support business leaders as they plan to scale or aim to increase working capital that’s intended to protect viability during difficult business conditions. If rumors of possible economic uncertainty reach your ears, envisioning what a survival plan for your entity might look like is smart thinking. Sooner rather than later, make it a point to research your options, so that you are apprised of eligibility requirements and timelines that will allow you to prepare and survive.

If your business is carrying significant debt, understanding the landscape of small business debt relief options, including what’s available through programs like those outlined by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, can be the difference between survival and losing your beloved business. Also, revisit external financing strategies that match your repayment timeline to your cash-flow cycle.

In closing, be aware that economic instability that periodically occurs in your marketplace is not unusual. Every independently employed professional, traditional business owner and even employees will experience financial challenges at least once. Business leaders who consider financial resilience a given for which they consistently prepare, instead of an emergency response that’s cobbled together in a panic not only survive financial fluctuations, but often emerge stronger once “normal” business conditions return.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © New England Coin Exchange Cranston, RI

Be A One-Person Powerhouse

Freelancers continue to refine our business practices as we observe and respond to the mega-trends that impact the global and national economies and, to some degree, affect the way nearly everyone on the planet lives and works. As we move through the mid-point of the 2020s, Freelance professionals are redefining success. We never intended to be builders of corporate empires that employee thousands, but we do intend to build and sustain a profitable business entity.

We believe that we can thrive as leader of a single-person business entity, a one-person empire, where we demonstrate our appeal to a discrete segment of the marketplace. We demonstrate also our grasp of customer needs within that market segment and we deliver services and/or products that our customers value. While aware of the time and cost saving advantages of turnkey processes and operational efficiencies, we reject the notion that one size fits all and we’re happy to build in a degree of flexibility that makes available personalized solutions tailored to address customer needs and concerns.

Niche is the new big box

The Freelance solopreneurs whom I’ve come to know over the years are too smart to try to be all things to all people. Instead, smart, successful Freelancers like you rely on market research to discover customer segments that are most interested in your category of services or products and then learn how to position your company to win business within those marketplace segments. Freelance solopreneurs will be interested to know that leading U.S. market researchers have validated this strategy and now forecast that in 2025 and beyond, start-up entrepreneurs who focus on a niche market will prosper while those who attempt the “all things to all people” big box approach will be on the wrong path.

Globalization is driving this emerging trend, as are AI-powered marketing communications tactics. Together, these powerful forces have made it both uncomplicated and cost-effective for even a business entity headed by a Freelance solopreneur to attract prospective customers in any geo-location that has internet access and invite them into your company’s buyer’s journey and community of followers. The possibility of developing a thriving niche market for your services or products that consists of people from around the world is real and is expected to become the norm for one-person shops as it is for multi-national conglomerates.

While the multi-nationals, however, pursue millions of prospective customers and compete in markets that are often saturated. Standing out in those marketplaces is a challenge that only big fish can afford, sometimes by advertising during the Super Bowl, for example. In stark contrast, those who dwell in micro-niche markets will devote most of their marketing resources to creating trust and legitimacy, demonstrating expertise and authority and building relationships and loyalty. Establishing a presence in a micro niche market, as would a Freelance solopreneur, isn’t just about selling products or services—it’s nearly as much about creating a community where customers feel a sense of belonging.

Because Freelance solopreneurs occupy a unique, personalized, space, customers are inclined to perceive you as an expert who understands their needs on a granular level and capable of solving their unique goals and challenges. In 2025 and beyond, Freelance solopreneur entities will use niche targeting combined with AI-powered analytics, marketing and customer service tools to fuel smart and sustained growth that supports a personalized boutique approach to their B2B or B2C venture. You can promote a brand-enhancing perception by showcasing the following:

  • Communicate capability, quality and consistency

Big business has the financial wherewithal to invest millions in branding, while Freelancers and other small business owners can effectively build and promote their brand, goods and services by adopting a niche market focus to achieve a similar effect by being consistent and integrating personalization and polish across all forms of communication and at every customer or prospect touchpoint. Get the ball rolling with a comprehensively cohesive brand visual identity that begins with an intuitively designed, fast-downloading, sleek, professional-looking website; you can carry that ethos into high-quality marketing materials that create an image that reflects capability, trust and legitimacy.

  • Be a thought leader

A solopreneur Freelance consultant can appear to be a nationally recognized authority if s/he is featured in respected industry media outlets. Establishing yourself as a thought leader confers respect and credibility that makes your business entity appear substantial and established. People tend to assume that everyone who is presented in the media as an “expert” of some sort who presides over a large business that generates an annual income that’s well into six figures and maybe more.

You can use that perception to your advantage: it is well worth your while to seek opportunities to publish your own insightful articles in reputable magazines or journals. Furthermore, you will do well by searching for opportunities to take on speaking roles at conferences, even if that means moderating a panel and appearing on podcasts and webinars whose reputation, while perhaps not blue chip, are nevertheless positioned to create for you the impression of authority and influence.

  • Show social proof at every opportunity

Incorporate social proof into your branding strategy by inviting happy customers to give online or print testimonials that describe how your service or product has solved their business challenge or helped them to achieve an important goal. Alternatively, you can ask customers if s/he would mind if you wrote up a case study that details how your product or service enabled that customer’s goal to be achieved or challenge to be overcome.

Customer success stories, which are brought to life by testimonials and case studies, are highly effective marketing tools and they deserve to be spotlighted on your website and social media platforms. You will provide still more examples of customer success stories when you encourage happy customers to post user-generated content (which includes testimonials), and also reviews on platforms such as Yelp, Google and LinkedIn. You might also request permission from certain customers (more prestigious, that is) to display their company logo on your website.

Another highly effective demonstration of the social proof of your brand reputation among your business community peers and colleagues is to display on your website the business and/or community awards that you’ve either won or for which you’ve been nominated. Seeing the names of recognizable authorities associated with your brand makes you look well-respected and trustworthy—because we are judged by the company we keep.

Inform local media outlets when you’ve got something great to crow about by sending a press release to announce your newsworthy achievements (e.g., a nomination for a business award) or your participation in a well-known charity or community event, such as helping to sell Girl Scout Cookies, supporting the Little League team, or sponsoring a marathon runner who is raising funds for a local hospital or other charity.

  • Expand your online presence

A business that is favorably mentioned in multiple media outlets more than once a year looks much more influential than a business that is mentioned on a single platform—infrequently. Maintaining an active presence on LinkedIn and other social media sites, contributing your insights to industry forums and getting your articles included in relevant publications reinforces the credibility of both you and your business entity.  Occasional press coverage in online or print media outlets, guest blog posts and other articles and social media activity, especially when taken together, can readily give your Freelance solopreneur consulting entity the impression of a capable and respected, if not locally powerful, enterprise. Being cited by industry sources, contributing to discussions and publishing original insights give the impression that you’re a major player, even if you’re running a small operation.

  • Deliver white-glove service

Freelance consultants and SMBs would be wise to develop exceptional customer experiences, including after-sales support services where necessary. B2B customers will greatly appreciate a seamless onboarding process, as well as automated follow-ups and structured client communications—all of which create the impression of a well-oiled machine, whether your company is a team of 20 or a solopreneur entity. Modern tools allow small businesses to operate with the efficiency of much larger organizations. A website and social media chatbot, AI-powered customer service and cloud-based collaboration tools make it possible to efficiently serve customers on every continent. When you create a strong digital infrastructure for your business entity, regardless of the number of workers on your team, you can operate at a level that is as capable and trustworthy as any enterprise-level competitor. You can become a one-person powerhouse!

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: © Keerthana Kunnath. In Kerala, India female bodybuilder Chitra Purushotham shows that she is a powerhouse.