By Rick Gould, CPA, JD
Having weathered the rigors of graduate and law school, as well as teaching a graduate course in Entrepreneuring, I’ve noticed something is absent from the classroom environment. There is a critical piece missing from the overall education puzzle.
Many of today’s troubles on Wall Street stem from the lack of emphasis on sound business practices and ethics. Special focus on these critical areas is needed to develop a specific mindset. Education in the areas of developing strong ethics and pay-for-performance systems are the cornerstone for addressing this problem.
Incentivization programs are an important ingredient to the capitalistic system. But when executives become rich as their companies chalk up huge losses, then the stockholders are paying a hefty price and long-term share value and reputation are eroded. And this turns out to be a lose-lose for all stakeholders involved.
What is missing in most of today’s post-graduate MBA programs, Law School and Doctoral programs is analysis of executive compensation systems. This should be a required course early on in all programs, certainly at business schools and the required ethics course at law schools.
The concept of bonuses based on actual performance must be ingrained as the new cultural mindset going forward. Organizational structure, the role of the Board of Directors and how board members get compensated should all be scrutinized. Base pay, bonuses, stock options, expense allowances and perks should all have transparency and accountability.
Revamping corporate governance and compensation systems to be deeply rooted in ethics, to be specifically tied to actual performance, and to be transparent will go a long way toward preventing the degree of financial meltdown we have witnessed this past year.
What critical piece of the puzzle do you think is missing? How do you foster sound business practices and ethics in your firm?
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Monday, September 21, 2009
Listen to your Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
By Rick Goud, CPA, J.D.
The CEO may be the visionary leader of a PR firm, but a firm also needs a strong financial leader to maximize its potential. Most PR agency CEO’s are not financially savvy. For that matter I am being quite kind in my assessment.
It is fine to not master the financial end of the PR business. However, especially in recessionary times, know your limitations and lean heavily on your CFO for careful guidance and tutelage. If you do not have a CFO, find one. Now more than ever, you need to listen to the tune that YOUR numbers are singing.
One of my partners, Ted Pincus (Financial Relations Board founder and CEO, sold to what is now IPG in 2000), at StevensGouldPincus is among very few PR CEO’s that I have met that fully understand balance sheets and P&L’s. If you do not possess this unique combination of talents, then there are steps you can take.
What has become popular in many smaller agencies is to hire a part-time CFO. The part-time CFO may work 2-3 days per week, but will not come cheap. For example, if a full-time CFO commands an annual salary of $200,000, then a part-time CFO may command $100,000. The upside is you are getting the talent, experience and education of a $200,000 CFO. The value-added may be well worth the investment.
There are many highly experienced individuals that would welcome a part-time position, including well qualified, business-savvy mothers with young kids. The part-time position could result in a happy, motivated and very productive person, as well as a PR firm that improves profitability.
The CFO’s office should be right next door to the CEO. The CEO needs to meet with the CFO regularly, confide in her/him and most importantly have full confidence and trust in that person. Close proximity and communication are key.
We have recently witnessed billions of dollars lost forever as a result of corporate scandals marked by mismanagement, fraud and greed. Accountability and fiscal responsibility are now much higher up on the chart of boardroom priorities. Consumers demand it, and your clients likely demand it too.
The CEO, especially in PR agencies, is usually the eternal optimist, the strategist, the rainmaker. The CFO is usually the realist, the detail person, the one who can see behind the numbers, project the financial future of the firm and proactively recommend what could be a hiccup in net revenue and profitability trends. The CFO can and should tell you exactly if layoffs will be needed, or if you should be cutting back on freelancers, or subletting space or cutting back on T&E expenses. The sum of the CEO and CFO positions ideally nets a whole that is greater than that of its parts.
The CEO may be the visionary leader of a PR firm, but a firm also needs a strong financial leader to maximize its potential. Most PR agency CEO’s are not financially savvy. For that matter I am being quite kind in my assessment.
It is fine to not master the financial end of the PR business. However, especially in recessionary times, know your limitations and lean heavily on your CFO for careful guidance and tutelage. If you do not have a CFO, find one. Now more than ever, you need to listen to the tune that YOUR numbers are singing.
One of my partners, Ted Pincus (Financial Relations Board founder and CEO, sold to what is now IPG in 2000), at StevensGouldPincus is among very few PR CEO’s that I have met that fully understand balance sheets and P&L’s. If you do not possess this unique combination of talents, then there are steps you can take.
What has become popular in many smaller agencies is to hire a part-time CFO. The part-time CFO may work 2-3 days per week, but will not come cheap. For example, if a full-time CFO commands an annual salary of $200,000, then a part-time CFO may command $100,000. The upside is you are getting the talent, experience and education of a $200,000 CFO. The value-added may be well worth the investment.
There are many highly experienced individuals that would welcome a part-time position, including well qualified, business-savvy mothers with young kids. The part-time position could result in a happy, motivated and very productive person, as well as a PR firm that improves profitability.
The CFO’s office should be right next door to the CEO. The CEO needs to meet with the CFO regularly, confide in her/him and most importantly have full confidence and trust in that person. Close proximity and communication are key.
We have recently witnessed billions of dollars lost forever as a result of corporate scandals marked by mismanagement, fraud and greed. Accountability and fiscal responsibility are now much higher up on the chart of boardroom priorities. Consumers demand it, and your clients likely demand it too.
The CEO, especially in PR agencies, is usually the eternal optimist, the strategist, the rainmaker. The CFO is usually the realist, the detail person, the one who can see behind the numbers, project the financial future of the firm and proactively recommend what could be a hiccup in net revenue and profitability trends. The CFO can and should tell you exactly if layoffs will be needed, or if you should be cutting back on freelancers, or subletting space or cutting back on T&E expenses. The sum of the CEO and CFO positions ideally nets a whole that is greater than that of its parts.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Maintain Brand Equity During a Downturn
By Rick Gould, CPA, J.D.
For PR firms, what is more important than your brand? It must be treated and protected as if it were a unique, complex piece of intellectual property.
Brand equity is an important factor in PR firm valuations; a valuable asset that can be monetized. The strength and experience of your management and staff, along with the quality of your clients, are a few things that improve brand equity.
To build your brand, you do not need to commit to big budgets, especially in recessionary times. What builds the brand is the quality of your work, the perceived value- added to your client base and the approach to service producing measurable results. This requires an attitude and mindset consisting of more than dollars. It requires integrity in your approach and trust in your client relationships. And more than ever it requires a positive reputation.
Richard Edelman, in his midyear Global Trust Barometer, noted that trust in business and government is rebounding. It was way down a year ago.
Trust is what creates loyalty and improved brand recognition. When a firm creates a brand as a “trusted adviser”, that brand may stick for years. A brand of trust, integrity and confidence is a key strategic asset.
What is evolving in business is a major shift away from traditional advertising in trade magazines/ directories and toward areas relating to the web. In a recession, firms typically make the mistake of cutting back on brand building activities. Don’t fall into that trap.
Brand building should be an ongoing effort. Forward-thinking executives avoid cutting their branding budgets. All available channels to build your brand, including constantly improving your website and search engine optimization efforts, should be pursued.
Develop an over-arching theme for your firm and promote it in your writings, capabilities kits and speeches. Do what Richard Edelman has done so well over the years, as he ascended to be the largest independent PR firm in the world. He built his brand upon trust and exemplary value- added performance.
Find something unique to build your brand upon. Make it important, relevant and lasting. Do so and your brand equity can be more greatly monetized through an M&A transaction at a time of your choosing.
For PR firms, what is more important than your brand? It must be treated and protected as if it were a unique, complex piece of intellectual property.
Brand equity is an important factor in PR firm valuations; a valuable asset that can be monetized. The strength and experience of your management and staff, along with the quality of your clients, are a few things that improve brand equity.
To build your brand, you do not need to commit to big budgets, especially in recessionary times. What builds the brand is the quality of your work, the perceived value- added to your client base and the approach to service producing measurable results. This requires an attitude and mindset consisting of more than dollars. It requires integrity in your approach and trust in your client relationships. And more than ever it requires a positive reputation.
Richard Edelman, in his midyear Global Trust Barometer, noted that trust in business and government is rebounding. It was way down a year ago.
Trust is what creates loyalty and improved brand recognition. When a firm creates a brand as a “trusted adviser”, that brand may stick for years. A brand of trust, integrity and confidence is a key strategic asset.
What is evolving in business is a major shift away from traditional advertising in trade magazines/ directories and toward areas relating to the web. In a recession, firms typically make the mistake of cutting back on brand building activities. Don’t fall into that trap.
Brand building should be an ongoing effort. Forward-thinking executives avoid cutting their branding budgets. All available channels to build your brand, including constantly improving your website and search engine optimization efforts, should be pursued.
Develop an over-arching theme for your firm and promote it in your writings, capabilities kits and speeches. Do what Richard Edelman has done so well over the years, as he ascended to be the largest independent PR firm in the world. He built his brand upon trust and exemplary value- added performance.
Find something unique to build your brand upon. Make it important, relevant and lasting. Do so and your brand equity can be more greatly monetized through an M&A transaction at a time of your choosing.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Beyond The Salary - Perks that Count
By Rick Gould, CPA, J.D.
In recent months I have been performing an extraordinary number of Valuations of PR agencies, reasons being intended sale of the firm, buy-ins of partners, buy-outs of partners or simply to get a reading on the worth of the firm.
One of the areas I closely analyze are employee perks. I have compiled a list of perks from firms I have reviewed.
Feel free to use it as a checklist in comparing your firm’s compensation package, beyond the salary.
You may even consider, as an option to your staff, offering some of these perks as an alternative to a raise. If the perk costs you the same amount and you get a write-off and it is tax-free to the employee it is a home run.
The P- List:
In recent months I have been performing an extraordinary number of Valuations of PR agencies, reasons being intended sale of the firm, buy-ins of partners, buy-outs of partners or simply to get a reading on the worth of the firm.
One of the areas I closely analyze are employee perks. I have compiled a list of perks from firms I have reviewed.
Feel free to use it as a checklist in comparing your firm’s compensation package, beyond the salary.
You may even consider, as an option to your staff, offering some of these perks as an alternative to a raise. If the perk costs you the same amount and you get a write-off and it is tax-free to the employee it is a home run.
The P- List:
- Health Insurance
- Dental Insurance
- Vision Insurance
- Therapy for work related disorders
- Life Insurance
- Long-term Disability Insurance
- Short-term Disability Insurance
- Health Club Membership
- 401K Plan
- Direct Deposit
- Flexible Spending Account
- Credit Union Membership
- Travel Allowance
- Theme Park Discounts
- Store Memberships
- Legal Assistance
- Tax Assistance
- Financial Planning Assistance
- Personal Leave (Sick, Bereavement, ill relatives care etc.)
- Maternity Leave
- Paternity Leave
- Additional Vacation days
- Extended Holiday weekends
- Reduced work week
- Education and Courses
Please email me if you have any perks that are not on the P-list rgould@stevensgouldpincus.com I will than re-blog the list at a future date.
Please do not include corporate cars, motorcycles, limos, car services, corporate apartments, corporate yachts, corporate jets, baby sitters, nannies, daycare and dog walkers. The P-list should be perks offered to your professional staff. “Executive” perks and abuses will be covered in a future blog.
My advice - If you do provide perks to your staff include a list of the perks and the value to the staffer at year-end either with their W-2, bonus check or annual review. It can only help the mindset of the staff in assessing their worth and perceived value to the agency by its management.
Monday, June 22, 2009
PR “Model Firms” Dispel Benchmarking Doubts
By R ick Gould, CPA, J.D.
Recession contrary “Model Firm”? What is a recession contrary Model Firm?
A recession contrary PR firm dispels the notion that a firm can justify poor performance if we are in an economic slowdown. Uncertain times, financially challenged periods or whatever the label assigned, the fact remains that recession contrary PR firms use benchmarking (not rationalizing) to weather the storm.
I have closely tracked a select group of firms since the years following September 11, 2001 and the unpredictable Tech explosion/implosion. These firms, while evolving through the same conditions and changing business world as their competitors, developed the ability to maintain 25-30% profitability. They continuously pour investment dollars back into their firm by hiring quality staff, expanding space in desirable working conditions, giving generous staff benefits and bringing in the best technology and outside consultants.
The one common thread among these recessions contrary Model Firms is that they consistently manage by the numbers. They manage by benchmarking.
Recession contrary Model Firms keep their labor cost under 50% of Net Revenues. They keep their Operating Expenses at around 25% with their major item, rent, between 6 – 8%. Managing using key benchmarks assures them the requisite profitability needed to grow and increase the value of their PR firm.
For additional insights from the 2009 Best Practices Benchmarking Report please see the StevensGouldPincus Blog at: http://stevensgouldpincusblog.blogspot.com/
Recession contrary “Model Firm”? What is a recession contrary Model Firm?
A recession contrary PR firm dispels the notion that a firm can justify poor performance if we are in an economic slowdown. Uncertain times, financially challenged periods or whatever the label assigned, the fact remains that recession contrary PR firms use benchmarking (not rationalizing) to weather the storm.
I have closely tracked a select group of firms since the years following September 11, 2001 and the unpredictable Tech explosion/implosion. These firms, while evolving through the same conditions and changing business world as their competitors, developed the ability to maintain 25-30% profitability. They continuously pour investment dollars back into their firm by hiring quality staff, expanding space in desirable working conditions, giving generous staff benefits and bringing in the best technology and outside consultants.
The one common thread among these recessions contrary Model Firms is that they consistently manage by the numbers. They manage by benchmarking.
Recession contrary Model Firms keep their labor cost under 50% of Net Revenues. They keep their Operating Expenses at around 25% with their major item, rent, between 6 – 8%. Managing using key benchmarks assures them the requisite profitability needed to grow and increase the value of their PR firm.
For additional insights from the 2009 Best Practices Benchmarking Report please see the StevensGouldPincus Blog at: http://stevensgouldpincusblog.blogspot.com/
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Diversifying Your Specialties Can Add to Your Bottom Line
By Rick Gould, CPA, J.D.
PR firms, regardless of their specialty, usually learn and master the fundamentals of successful PR campaigns. They develop skill sets not only as publicists but also as counselors and advisors.
Those that specialized in disciplines as technology, travel and financial/IR did extremely well in prosperous times… but their profitability plummeted during the tech meltdown and the financial bust we are experiencing now.
I suggest a change of direction in these unusual times. To insulate your firm from future hard times and recessionary cycles, hire a top notch PR specialist in a specialty different from your current offerings.
Diversify your client service offerings. Build the new specialty and invest in it. Be entrepreneurial. Take a risk, oversee it, and provide guidance… but allow others to run it and develop it. This will provide a cushion when revenues may be slipping in your primary specialties.
Let’s use law firms as an example. Those specializing in M&A transactions during boom years moved into restructuring and turnaround specialties when deals were infrequent. Bankruptcy law firms that were looking for work when the economy was good are now searching for attorneys with a bankruptcy background. And firms that created class-action specialties as corporate C-suite and Madoff-type frauds were uncovered are now thriving. The time to create these specialties is when it is a deliberate, measured choice… not when done in panic or survival mode.
These unusual times may require a change in direction. Diversifying makes the challenge more transparent and keeps the firm focused on long-term viability.
PR firms, regardless of their specialty, usually learn and master the fundamentals of successful PR campaigns. They develop skill sets not only as publicists but also as counselors and advisors.
Those that specialized in disciplines as technology, travel and financial/IR did extremely well in prosperous times… but their profitability plummeted during the tech meltdown and the financial bust we are experiencing now.
I suggest a change of direction in these unusual times. To insulate your firm from future hard times and recessionary cycles, hire a top notch PR specialist in a specialty different from your current offerings.
Diversify your client service offerings. Build the new specialty and invest in it. Be entrepreneurial. Take a risk, oversee it, and provide guidance… but allow others to run it and develop it. This will provide a cushion when revenues may be slipping in your primary specialties.
Let’s use law firms as an example. Those specializing in M&A transactions during boom years moved into restructuring and turnaround specialties when deals were infrequent. Bankruptcy law firms that were looking for work when the economy was good are now searching for attorneys with a bankruptcy background. And firms that created class-action specialties as corporate C-suite and Madoff-type frauds were uncovered are now thriving. The time to create these specialties is when it is a deliberate, measured choice… not when done in panic or survival mode.
These unusual times may require a change in direction. Diversifying makes the challenge more transparent and keeps the firm focused on long-term viability.
Monday, April 27, 2009
2009 Benchmarking Survey
By Rick Gould, CPA, J.D.
I urge all PR Firms to participate in the 2009 StevensGouldPincus PR Firm Benchmarking Survey. Last year we had 105 firms participate.
The report will provide both comparative historical stats for 2008, trends and a tool for you to budget & plan for 2009. You will be on top of and in control of where you can improve your operations.
Managing by Benchmarking is the most expedient and effective way to assure your profitability goals.
The industry profitability Benchmark was 22.0% two years ago, 19.7% last year. I believe it will be lower for 2008… but how much lower?
The survey is for U.S. and Canadian firms and includes the leading and most profitable independent firms. We also summarize key stats by our “Model Firms,” firms that we have been tracking over the years and have shown a consistent pattern of strong profitability in both boom and recessionary times. These stats alone will justify your efforts in completing the survey.
Remember - all submissions are in confidence, no names are ever mentioned and all stats are averaged by size, region and specialty.
If you need a survey sent to you please email Yadi Gomez, ygomez@stevensgouldpincus.com
Our deadline is Friday, May 1, but if you need an extension please email me at rgould@stevensgouldpincus.com or call me at 212-896-1909.
Thank You!
P.S. Firms use this survey as a vital resource for planning. We highly appreciate the time you put in and be sure that your participation further assures its validity.
I urge all PR Firms to participate in the 2009 StevensGouldPincus PR Firm Benchmarking Survey. Last year we had 105 firms participate.
The report will provide both comparative historical stats for 2008, trends and a tool for you to budget & plan for 2009. You will be on top of and in control of where you can improve your operations.
Managing by Benchmarking is the most expedient and effective way to assure your profitability goals.
The industry profitability Benchmark was 22.0% two years ago, 19.7% last year. I believe it will be lower for 2008… but how much lower?
The survey is for U.S. and Canadian firms and includes the leading and most profitable independent firms. We also summarize key stats by our “Model Firms,” firms that we have been tracking over the years and have shown a consistent pattern of strong profitability in both boom and recessionary times. These stats alone will justify your efforts in completing the survey.
Remember - all submissions are in confidence, no names are ever mentioned and all stats are averaged by size, region and specialty.
If you need a survey sent to you please email Yadi Gomez, ygomez@stevensgouldpincus.com
Our deadline is Friday, May 1, but if you need an extension please email me at rgould@stevensgouldpincus.com or call me at 212-896-1909.
Thank You!
P.S. Firms use this survey as a vital resource for planning. We highly appreciate the time you put in and be sure that your participation further assures its validity.
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