Berkonomics

Take advantage of the good times to build stakeholder loyalty.

Loyalty is a hard-earned commodity

There are several times when stakeholder loyalty is tested to the limit.  For employees, a late or missed payroll is the ultimate test of corporate loyalty, divorced even from an employee’s ability to make do without a paycheck.

For investors, a subsequent down round at a lower valuation than the last, or an exit opportunity at a loss are all opportunities for the affected stakeholder to show a side that can sometimes shock an entrepreneur or CEO.

The chasm between management and employees

Managers almost always believe that stakeholders understand the pressures of the business and the circumstance of the present.  The truth is that many employees merely make a simple pact: timely pay for time in service.  If there is no closer connection to the corporation, when times are tough for any reason, it is these employees that make it tough for management to gain understanding and consent for actions that must be made such as missing payrolls, making layoffs, or abandoning pre-announced plans.  And it is that disconnected employee, usually one or more of the better performers, that starts looking for a job when times look bad for a company.

Investor loyalty is most tenuous of all

[Email readers, continue here…]   Sometimes a secondary fund-raising effort leads to a lower valuation than the last.  Although the investment documents from the previous round call for each investor group to vote as a class for or against new rounds of funding, in a contentious environment even a company in desperate need of new funding may find itself warring with its investors.  I have seen investors allow a company to die, rather than suffer the massive dilution of an offer by a new investor.

And I have seen good offers from buyers of a company blocked by investors whose vote is needed to enable any such transaction, usually because these later investors would have a less-than-stellar exit with the sale, even if the founders would make out extremely well.  That one hurts early investors and founders more than perhaps any other action by investors.

Simple building blocks for difficult times

The message here is simple.  By keeping stakeholders close with constant information as to the progress and even stressful setbacks, and by never withholding bad news, stakeholders will be in a much better position to understand necessary actions by senior management and accede to decisions made in the best interest of the company, even at the expense of self.  This kind of loyalty is never created during the bad times when everyone is thinking only of protecting self.  Take advantage of the good times to build such loyalty.

  • Michael O'Daniel

    The biggest causes of employee disconnect, IMO, are (a) huge imbalances between employee and CEO compensation, (b) being treated disrespectfully by management, whether C-level or immediate superiors, and (c) not being sought out for input, listened to, or having valid suggestions acknowledged and better yet acted upon. I recommend an audit on all 3 fronts before trying to instill loyalty because if you aren’t credible on these 3 fronts, employees will not take you seriously. I cannot speak to maintaining investor loyalty because I have had no direct experience in investor relations. I have had experience in capital formation that resulted in investor cram-downs and than never plays well.

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