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As the COVID-19 pandemic progresses, manufacturing executives have been forced to consider the “new normal”. Businesses have faced notable change over the past year. Even for the many manufacturers that were considered “essential”, social distancing, mask use, and virtual meetings have replaced handshakes, trade shows, and face-to-face collaboration. As we face the one-year anniversary of COVID related changes, how will the pandemic continue to impact our operations?
Even without COVID, manufacturers should consider external forces that could affect their businesses; however, the pandemic has reemphasized the importance of this analysis. External forces are those that we cannot control, and their unpredictability can make them somewhat difficult to assess. As a result, some manufacturing executives choose to focus on areas they can control – pursuing new customers, adopting new technologies, or implementing lean processes, for instance. However, by analyzing and reacting to our external forces, we can look for ways to mitigate their impact or capitalize on them to strengthen our businesses. For example:
- Several hurricanes (or external forces we cannot control) that have affected the Gulf of Mexico area have impacted the supply and cost of certain plastic resins. To mitigate this risk, some plastic processors choose to increase their raw material inventories during peak hurricane season or dual-source these materials with suppliers in different geographies.
- The rise in dietary restrictions (an external force we cannot control) has increased the demand for certain products. Many food manufacturers have added gluten-free or dairy-free products to their offerings to satisfy those with such restrictions.
- The rapid pace of technological change (an external force we cannot control) has affected many manufacturers. By adopting additive manufacturing technologies, manufacturers can provide rapid prototypes more quickly than they can with their traditional processes.
You likely have evaluated how the pandemic has and will continue to affect your business. In addition to this key impact, consider three additional areas of external forces:
- Customers.
- Why do your customers buy from you?
- What value do you bring to them?
- What new technologies, innovations, or trends are your customers seeing, and how can you help them? For instance, manufacturers who supply the residential construction market may consider curb appeal trends, while those supplying retail stores may consider needs for social distancing.
- Competition.
- Who are your competitors?
- Are new competitors entering your market?
- Why do you lose business to your competitors?
- Are they offering different value to your customers?
- Should you look for ways to improve the value that you offer?
- Other External Forces.
- Political: How can politics affect your business? We anticipate President Biden’s administration could invoke policy or tax changes. How can these changes affect your business?
- Economic: The COVID-19 pandemic has already impacted our economy, resulting in low-interest rates, threats to economic growth, and low levels of disposable income. When economic fluctuations occur, how does your business react?
- Sociocultural: Do changes in the population growth rate, demographic, income distribution, or lifestyle behaviors affect your business or the products your business manufactures?
- Technological: This assessment focuses on how technology may affect your business. For instance, manufacturers may consider how automation could improve their efficiencies or how adding a different technology can support the value they bring to customers.
- Legal: How do specific laws affect your business? For instance, if you are exporting to a new country, what laws will you need to follow? If you are entering a new product line, what regulations should you consider?
- Environmental: A business’s impact on the environment can affect practices including corporate social responsibility. How do your company’s actions affect the environment? In addition, could other ecological forces, such as weather or climate, affect your business?
Customers are a key external force: we cannot control them, but they are critical to our success. We take action to mitigate against risks, such as developing relationships with key decision-makers, but those actions may not always help us retain or grow that customers’ business, like when that decision-maker changes.
In addition, the pandemic may have changed your customers; perhaps, you manufacture a new product after entering the personal protective equipment (PPE) market, or you have lost customers who were not able to weather the economic strain of the pandemic. As you evaluate your customers, ask yourself:
Like your customers, your competitors are also a key external force on your business. You cannot control your competitor’s actions, but they can have a significant effect on you. You likely are already monitoring your competition. What actions can you take to ensure you remain competitive or to increase your competitiveness with these businesses? For instance:
A popular tool for analyzing the external environment is called “PESTLE” (or PESTEL), an acronym of six key forces in an external environment: Political, Economic, Sociocultural,Technological, Legal, and Environmental.
Consider each area:For support evaluating the impact of COVID-19 and other external forces on your business, contact a member of HBK Manufacturing Solutions, a team of professionals dedicated to supporting manufacturing clients and their unique needs. Team members can be reached by calling 330-758-8613 or emailing manufacturing@hbkcpa.com.
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