Thursday, 4 March 2010

Different Types of Conversations

Two months into the year, and our economy continues to be in a very interesting yet slightly perplexing place. Traditional indicators of the health of our market-place do not provide a consistent picture.

Of course prospects for the public sector and the overall size of the national debt cast an ongoing shadow over the UK market at the beginning of the year. We all recognise that something needs to be done, and yet we have a curious interlude until the General Election until anything major actually happens. Britain’s biggest businesses claim that 56.6% of gross profits went back to the Government in the form of different types of taxation last year. That is an extraordinarily high figure. We tend to think of the government as having an equity stake in our banking sector alone, but the practical reality is that their ‘dividend’ flow comes from each part of the 'private' sector.

The challenge of public debt aside, there is a brighter news. Recruitment in the UK is on the rise. I met a provider of assessment software the other day who described a very promising uptake in demand from January. The prevailing mood at the Best Companies Awards Ceremony (where we were delighted to come 5th) was one of cautious optimism. This definitely stronger than last year, although less because of any broader confidence in the economy than a feeling that we are collectively wiser about how to tackle this uncertainty than eighteen months ago.

This sense of 'confidence from experience' we felt in the SME market last week is also mirrored in our corporate clients. They are increasingly leaning to practical action not just despite, but also because of economic circumstance. Certainly the strategy houses are very busy indeed with a blend of growth strategy and due diligence work. The strongest businesses are plotting for significant market share growth in the next eighteen months. We notice them being far clearer around their strategy whether we experience double dip or slow growth scenario. They have built plans which will operable under either set of economic conditions.

This environment creates a really interesting shift in our client conversations. Three years ago we might have been asked about (for example) a pre-diagnosed leadership development programme for a 150-strong Directorate. Often it needed a lot of probing to identify how this related to the future strategic intent for the business. Today our conversations start earlier and far broader in scope. Questions like ‘’if this is our strategic straw man for the next 5 years, how will this impact our people strategy? How do we cascade the imperative for change and the behaviours we require? How will that impact on our employees, our customer service levels and the way our customers talk about us? How will we know if it is working?’ This is where we love to start a conversation.

Economic uncertainty remains in the UK, but it seems to be driving far less strategic uncertainty than twelve months ago. Our clients are clearer about a future vision and purpose. Or challenge is to respond to that.

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