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Creative and visionary managers can help turn around struggling firms
Leaders of struggling enterprises have two options: they can either come up with entrepreneurially clever solutions, or they can strip the existing assets and run. Photo/FILE
Posted Friday, February 26 2010 at 00:00
In our highly competitive business environment today, we have seen many organisations that failed to change with the times and have since been relegated to the historical archives of failed corporations.
What were once companies whose leaders acquired a level of hubris born out of success, have since capitulated to irrelevance or death.
The interesting thing however, is that the governance boards of these companies made seemingly strategic decisions by hiring turn-around CEOs to try and salvage the companies from impending doom.
To the credit of some of these CEOs, these companies have turn-around and are not only profitable, but are giving investors relatively good returns for their money.
One such CEO who has a sterling record in all the companies he has had an opportunity to lead has managed to turn-around a sugar giant that almost went belly-up and is now responsible for a thriving micro-economy in the western part of the country.
However, there are other sob stories such as PanPaper mills which has become a shadow of its former gargantuan self and left a ghost town struggling to survive.
It is said that the further you look into the past, the further you can foresee the future.
Or, looked at from a different perspective, the more things change, the more they remain the same.
In the last couple of years, we have seen companies in industries such as telecommunications and banking making huge investments in infrastructure assets that they intend to leverage to make profits.
Their balance sheets look relatively healthy and most of their CEOs attribute the growth in profits to the investments made in mission critical infrastructure.
However, a closer look at the balance sheets of these companies and their corresponding profit and loss statements does not tally.
True to their word, their investment in infrastructure is impressive.
Notwithstanding, a closer look at their profit and loss statements indicates that their revenue growth is not necessarily as a result of leveraging these so called mission critical assets but as a result of other factors such as interest income gains, foreign exchange gains and asset stripping.
The latter involves selling assets of a business individually for a profit. In the event of liquidation, shareholders and creditors of companies that have undergone asset stripping binges are generally left with absolutely nothing to salvage their investments.
In this context, it is therefore important for those who are keen enough to take a closer look at the telecommunications industry.
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