|  |                                                                                                    |  |                                                                                                    |  |                                   | Tom Peters Times--December                                  2008 |                                   |  |                                   | Advice                                  for Tough Times 
 This special                                  edition of the Tom Peters Times                                  contains contributions from around the Tom Peters Company team. We                                  are collectively frustrated at the general air                                  of negativity in the business news, so we                                  decided to compile an extra TPTimes                                  edition with personal stories, advice, and                                  selected media clips to help sustain you through                                  these testing times.
 
 Visitors to the                                  blog on tompeters.com know that Tom                                  frequently recommends tactics for this most                                  disruptive of eras. We have synthesized some of                                  Tom's most compelling messages into six pieces                                  of "Advice for Tough Times." Using                                  this list as a template and an idea from Tom as                                  introduction to each section, TPC-ers have added                                  their contributions under the following                                  headings:
 
 
 Excellence                                  
 Opportunism
 
 Visibility
 
 Transparency
 
 Demeanor
 
 Paradox
 We                                  hope that our observations, insights, and                                  stories will inform and inspire your own action                                  agendas. Think of this as a smorgasbord of                                  ideas! Enjoy! We've posted the text on our website, also, to                                  give all our readers the chance to revisit this                                  newsletter if you choose.
 
 Madeleine                                  McGrath
 Managing Partner, UK
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   |                                   | Excellence 
 Get on with                                  doing the business you have and see it through                                  brilliantly. Stick to the basics. Keep it                                  simple! The devil is always in the                                  details.
 
 When it comes to                                  focusing on the basics, cash flow and customers                                  both come near the top of most peoples' agendas.                                  Recent entries on tpwireservice.com, offer some                                  great advice on these subjects.
 
 In "Hug Your Customers," we are                                  reminded about good habits that can turn                                  customers into a cadre of unofficial marketing                                  evangelists and keep our business in the                                  forefront of their radar screens.
 
 "Economy Requires 'Back to Basics'                                  Cashflow" presents reminders and tools to                                  help us stay focused on the lifeblood of our                                  businesses--CASH!
 
 And a recent                                  BusinessWeek feature warns that the                                  current financial crisis requires a different                                  approach to the fundamentals of our businesses                                  in "Why Traditional Recession Tactics                                  Are Doomed to Fail This Time." On the basics                                  theme, one of their key observations is that                                  "strategists must rediscover the lost art of                                  authentic value creation."
 
 Lessons                                  for us all?
 
 
 Are you doing all you can to ensure                                  that the resources you have at your disposal are                                  deployed on the products and services in your                                  portfolio that create the most value for the                                  customer? 
 Are you making it absolutely                                  clear to everyone who works with/for you that                                  the fulfillment of the customer work you                                  do have must embody the highest level                                  of excellence that you can collectively                                  achieve?
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   |                                   | Opportunism 
 Opportunism--there                                  may be a lot of room for it--will pay off                                  through speed off the mark and excellence in                                  execution.
 
 Richard King, Managing                                  Partner, UK, observes that, like London buses,                                  recession and business opportunities often come                                  along at the same time! Virgin Chairman Richard                                  Branson is currently talking to a group of                                  interested parties about a possible bid for                                  London's second largest airport, Gatwick. The UK                                  Competition Commission has ruled that Gatwick's                                  current owners, BAA, may have to sell the                                  airport because of their market domination. BAA                                  also owns London's Heathrow and Stansted                                  airports. In these difficult times, Gatwick may                                  turn out to be worth a lot less than its £2.5bn                                  market valuation. So, it's "opportunity knocks"                                  in recessionary times for Sir Richard, who never                                  needs asking twice, and a big challenge for                                  Virgin to put together the consortium needed to                                  pull off what would be a major coup, for Virgin                                  and for all victims [Richard's word] of the                                  current London airports' customer service!
 
 Madeleine McGrath has                                  unearthed an opportunistic proposal from the New                                  Zealand Institute (NZI) to their Government that                                  may have ramifications for business leaders.                                  Previous recessions have seen unsettled expat                                  New Zealanders move back to the Australasia                                  region, but too many have chosen to settle in                                  Australia rather than coming all the way back to                                  their homeland, says the NZI. The intention this                                  time is to compete aggressively to encourage                                  talented Kiwis to return home and deploy                                  their skills in support of their own nation's                                  economy. (See the NZI's October 2008 paper, "Economy on the Edge.") How                                  many employers see their current employees as an                                  asset rather than an expense when times are                                  tough, let alone their former employees? Yet                                  businesses often lose their best people to the                                  competition, and this downturn may be the chance                                  to get some of them back!
 
 Lessons                                  for us all?
 
 
 Are you thinking laterally enough                                  about opportunities and needs that are being                                  manifested in your marketplace? 
 Are you                                  thinking laterally enough about your talent                                  pool, and using the recession as an opportunity                                  to attract the very best?
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   |                                   | Visibility 
 March toward the                                  sound of the guns. MBWA (Managing By Wandering                                  Around). People have to see who they are working                                  for and who they are dealing with.
 
 Tom Peters says "Treble Your MBWA": "One                                  of my favorite quotes, from Carolyn Lamb ...                                  goes like this: 'A year from now you may                                  wish you had started today.' Yes, today                                  many of us wish we had 'wildly' 'over' invested                                  in those employee-vendor-client-community                                  relationships when the market was heading North                                  and there was a little slack in the system.                                  Well, perhaps we didn't, but ... it really is                                  never too late. ... Work the damn phones. Keep                                  working the damn phones. Show up. Keep showing                                  up. Call clients and suppliers, ask them how                                  things are going, and how you can help. This is                                  not about sales (directly), but about 'showing                                  up'-taking time from your busy affairs to offer                                  assistance of any sort. (E.g., offer up your                                  network ... Etc.) This is even more important                                  with our employees. 'Over'inform--the rumors are                                  invariably worse than reality. 'Over'do your                                  MBWA ..." (Read the complete blog entry.)
 
 Richard King has this story for us all:                                  "Like most business leaders these days, the CEO                                  of a specialist manufacturing group I know well                                  has planning and implementing cost reductions                                  right up there at the top of his jobs list! Last                                  week I heard that one of his Directors had                                  missed a committed savings milestone. This                                  delinquency had come to light in the week before                                  the Director concerned had booked a family                                  holiday. Rather than reacting immediately and                                  risk spoiling the whole family's break, the CEO                                  lived with his frustration until after the                                  holiday. When the Director returned, he was                                  invited to an offsite one-to-one session with                                  the CEO--on his first morning back. I'm sure                                  there was some pretty straight talking done, in                                  private, between the two of them! How do I know                                  this story? The Director told it to me because                                  he knew I was looking for stories of leaders                                  facing up to the unpleasant realities of this                                  recession. He especially wanted to express his                                  appreciation for the considerate way his CEO had                                  treated him.
 
 Lessons for us                                  all?
 
 
 Are you tracking numbers of                                  customer, prospect, and networking contacts in                                  your regular reporting and recognizing those                                  people who are working hardest on relationships?                                  
 Have you adopted/recommended "face to                                  face" as the management medium of choice for                                  delivering tough news to employees, colleagues,                                  and partners?
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   |                                   | Transparency 
 Be absolutely                                  straight with people, especially those at the                                  front line. People who play the blame game in                                  any way, shape, or form are out of                                  here!
 
 "Our people are our most                                  important asset," or so says many an annual                                  report. Val Willis, a U.S.-based                                  Facilitator, spotted a great example of a                                  business facing up to the challenges of these                                  tough times, but staying true to its people                                  principles. In San Antonio, Texas, the downturn                                  forced Toyota to close their plant for three                                  months. The dilemma they faced was how to handle                                  this in regard to their 4,500-person workforce.                                  According to Financial Week,                                  Toyota is redeploying their workers on community                                  work, retraining, and education classes in lieu                                  of layoffs. "This was the first chance we've                                  really had to live out our values," said                                  Latondra Newton, general manager of Toyota's                                  Team Member Development Center. "We're not just                                  keeping people on the payroll because we're                                  nice. At the end of all this, our hope is that                                  we'll end up with a more skilled North American                                  workforce."
 
 In a second example, Ruth Smith, a UK Facilitator,                                  explains how a retail client had set about                                  responding to their constantly changing market                                  conditions by instigating weekly                                  management/front line sales reviews to pick up                                  and respond to trends in customers' purchasing                                  habits quickly. At the meetings, they make                                  instant decisions on changes to promotions and                                  product offerings in order to capitalize on                                  customer demand. This week-by-week approach had                                  led to criticism by staff of so-called "knee                                  jerk and reactive" managers, and changes were                                  often resisted by front liners until they were                                  brought in on the review meetings. Once managers                                  took the time to engage everyone in the process,                                  rapid adjustment and constant change have become                                  normal business.
 
 On tpwireservice.com,                                  we find this Daniel Goleman article entitled "Tea and Empathy" from                                  strategy+business. Goleman identifies                                  what he calls the crisis of accountability that                                  organizations are facing, and contends that                                  transparency, social and emotional learning, and                                  leadership must take a much higher profile on                                  the leader's agenda.
 
 Lessons for us                                  all?
 
 
 Are there any ways in which you can                                  use layoff situations to build and strengthen                                  your workforce and your culture? 
 Are you                                  doing everything you can to keep all employees                                  informed of your emergency plans and strategies?
 
 How tuned in are you to the emotional                                  temperature of your                                  business?
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   |                                   | Demeanor 
 Banish "gloomy"                                  from your persona, even if it kills you! But                                  remember, "sunny" is pretty stupid, too. Who do                                  you think you're kidding?
 
 As we                                  watch the media pundits and commentators pick                                  holes in the world's politicians' brave attempts                                  to address the current economic mess, a new book                                  from one of Tom's Cool Friends, Raj Setty, is a                                  welcome ray of light. The book's title is Upbeat, and it                                  contains many gems of inspiration to encourage a                                  positive attitude during tough times. At the                                  outset, Raj sounds off at the insidious impact                                  that negative conversations have on your life.                                  If every conversation that you have begins with                                  a depressing catalogue of doom and gloom, not                                  only are you setting a depressing tone, you are                                  also wasting that time. In that context, banning                                  gloomy conversations about things over which you                                  have no control becomes an immensely sensible,                                  positive resolution. Think about it!
 
 UK                                  Executive Coach David Pilbeam helps to shed                                  more light on what leaders can do to engender a                                  positive attitude in their people and sustain an                                  upbeat atmosphere in the workplace. "People                                  always feel better and can perform better when                                  they are in situations where they can use their                                  strengths," says David. So he recommends that                                  leaders take the time to think, or discover,                                  what the strengths of their key team members                                  are, and to reframe work projects so that people                                  can use their natural strengths and the business                                  can benefit from them. Productivity,                                  performance, and personal confidence all go up.
 
 Lessons for us all?
 
 
 Are you doing your best to stay out                                  of negative and unproductive conversations? How                                  about stimulating the opposite? 
 Are                                  there any ways in which you can reframe what                                  your people are working on in order to make                                  better use of their strengths?
 
 Consider                                  appointing a "mood monitor" to give you direct                                  feedback when your demeanor is becoming too                                  gloomy (or vice versa!).
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   |                                   | Paradox 
 Have a positive                                  mental attitude AND be ready for the                                  worst.
 
 Mike Neiss, U.S. Facilitator,                                  reports that he recently attended a meeting at a                                  client company whose market had just tanked.                                  Rated the number one place to work in their                                  industry by Fortune, this business is                                  in Fast Company's top fifty innovative                                  companies in the world, and its latest product                                  line is winning rave reviews from publications                                  ranging from Wired to                                  BusinessWeek. The COO announced that it                                  was essential to make an immediate workforce                                  reduction, and because the company was already                                  quite lean, the reduction would really test the                                  mettle of the organization. They discussed how                                  to act in strict accordance with the core values                                  of the company and how they would ensure the                                  business reasons for the cuts were communicated                                  to everyone. They were concerned about the                                  impact on the essence of what had made them a                                  great company, and the heavy additional burden                                  that would be transferred onto those who                                  remained. The COO then revealed the information                                  they would be sharing with employees about the                                  company's future plans, including continued                                  funding of R&D projects, investments in                                  employee development, and improving the                                  infrastructure of the business. "This was                                  clearly not just PR spin," Mike reflected                                  afterwards, "but actual plans with real numbers                                  coming directly from the top officers of the                                  company." The confidence that they would emerge                                  from this recession a stronger company "with                                  their soul intact" was obvious. Mike left the                                  meeting impressed with their commitment to be                                  absolutely honest with their workforce and                                  inspired by their confidence about the future.                                  Not a word was said about creating or protecting                                  "shareholder value," but Mike is convinced that                                  market value will increase as a result of the                                  changes.
 
 Necessity and hard times often                                  go hand in hand with invention. With this in                                  mind, Helen Green, another of the UK                                  team, reports on a letter she saw in the London Times. The                                  writer, British Academic Brian Kettell, drew                                  attention to the explosion of innovation that                                  took place during, or shortly after, the Great                                  Depression of the 1930s ... "frozen food, jet                                  engine and Sellotape (1930), electron microscope                                  (1931), Polaroid and parking meter (1932), FM                                  and stereo recording (1933), cat's eyes                                  [retroreflective safety device] and Monopoly                                  (1934), canned beer, nylon and radar (1935),                                  voice recognition systems (1936), photocopying                                  (1937) and ballpoint pens and instant coffee                                  (1938)" ... the list goes on and on!
 
 For                                  more ideas about how to stimulate innovation,                                  don't forget an all-time favorite, Tom's "Pursuit of Luck," which gives                                  you lots of ideas about ways to break free from                                  your current thinking patterns.
 
 Lessons for us all?
 
 
 Have you been back through your list                                  of cutbacks to be sure that you are not draining                                  off your future lifeblood, personal or business?                                  
 Are there any uncomfortable changes you                                  have been avoiding (be honest!) that you really                                  should act on now?
 
 Have you considered                                  making a list of the things you will be most                                  proud of achieving in                                  2011?
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