'I'm Worried Constantly'

SMALL-BUSINESS DIARY

Managing To Succeed

After more than a decade of growing his family's business, one entrepreneur copes with the collapsing economy.

 
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Like many business owners, I've never operated in a bad economy. Since trading in my reporter's notebook in 1996 after a 10-year career with BusinessWeek, I caught the lucky break of only operating during good economic times. Undoubtedly our family-run plastic packaging manufacturer benefited. Over the last 12 years, we've increased sales to more than $60 million, up from $18 million when I joined, which had been the company high-water mark since its founding by my father and three partners in 1963.

Looks like my luck has run out. Today, like almost every businessperson on the planet, I'm acquainting myself with a scary new reality: a collapsing economy. Deflation threatens to undermine our margins, thanks to the sudden collapse of petrochemical prices in the late fall. Plastic, a byproduct of natural gas, plunged, sticking us with overpriced inventory while customers demanded price cuts. Some of those same customers suddenly began to pay beyond terms. Just two years ago, our average customer paid us in 21 days. Today, that has stretched out to 30 days. One customer basically hasn't paid us in five months. And though we've been cozy with our bank for years, they recently tried to renegotiate our credit line. No wonder I'm drinking a glass of wine with dinner, a practice I cut out several years ago in a bid to trim my midsection.

Sometimes I wonder if I'm worrying unnecessarily. Our sales continue to increase, up 10 percent since our fiscal year began Sept. 1. The market for our product—packaging for the produce industry—has historically been recessionproof. "People have to eat, after all," my father likes to say. As if to confirm his wisdom, our backlog stands nearly 35 percent fatter this year compared to last, thanks in part to new products designed to keep produce fresher longer. Add to that the addiction many Americans have to the convenience of packaged salads, one of our strongest sectors, and I should be feeling pretty secure, even with the economic turbulence.

But it's hard to feel secure when even industry veterans say they've never seen anything like this recession. Take food consumption. It's falling for the first time in years, and the fresh-salad market isn't bucking the trend. Industry groups figure salad sales will either stagnate or decline this year, an unprecedented development in an industry used to double-digit growth. If my customers look like they're starting to suffer, I have to ask, how long until it hits us?

Obviously, the early-warning signs have already flashed. Forget how fast sales are growing. I'm increasingly worried about getting paid. Rather than merely glancing over the report that tracks how quickly customers are paying, as I would have prior to last summer, today I go through the report line by line, demanding explanations from our finance department for any invoice unpaid after 45 days. Our bookkeeper has responded by peppering delinquent accounts with calls—one customer recently threatened to fire us after paying an overdue invoice—but we can't take chances. In fact, late last year, we fired a customer who hadn't paid on time in months. When they finally did pay, we refused further orders. Not worth the risk.

Deflationary pressures have spooked me, as well. Talk about whiplash: last summer, the price of raw plastic hit an all-time high. Then prices collapsed. One major tracking service says plastic prices fell 30 percent in November alone. Hearing news like this, our customers, under pressure to cut prices themselves by the major grocery chains, began demanding we fork over the savings. Only we were saddled with a large inventory built as a hedge against hurricane-related supply disruptions. So any cost cuts actually just came out of our margins. Now, rivals who've fallen into financial trouble are compounding matters by cutting prices further.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Holly Garfield @ 01/30/2009 4:18:27 PM

    Your comments on the banks and business loans points out one rising problem with bank bailouts. Businesses and consumers are cutting back on credit. This is bound to be a long term change, as the businesses that survive will have that conservative approach built into the company philosophy, and so will the consumers. We can easliy end up with more supply of credit than demand. The potential for the need to let one former 'too big to fail' bank fail is getting greater as the recession deepens. If one bank doesn't fail then either the US debt or the banking system will be weakened, causing more damage than the failure. If so any bailout funds will be wasted. And with the current $1-2 trillion in additional federal funds needed to support the banks that can be a huge amount of taxpayer money.

    Take a look at the overall article, and apply it to the banking system. Is there enough business left in the credit markets to support all the major banks? If not then we may need to cut out at least one major banking player, and that means the government WILL have to pick who wins and who loses. Not nice, but may be necessary. Has anyone researched this? I haven't read any articles on the yet.

  • Posted By: McLovinB @ 01/29/2009 10:39:55 PM

    Well, I guess I agree, but problems of companies that small are more likely to be idiosyncratic. I guess that is my point.

  • Posted By: McLovinB @ 01/29/2009 10:35:24 PM

    Banks will not lend at low rates until they see leading indicators turn up and the yield curve flatten. Until then, they are just playing loan shark games.
    As I wrote above, government now needs to get those indicators up to get lenders to relax and lower rates. Do not count on fixed interest rate loans though. You won't be able to get them.

    Because inflation will take off.

 

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