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Other Added - Communications Considerations for IPO Companies
Benefits Tailored to the Changing Needs of Canadians -driven company.Increasingly, traditional benefits packages are disappearing from the Canadian business landscape. As the face of the Canadian workforce continually changes, companies are finding it necessary to address these shifts. The reality for many employers is that it is becoming more and more difficult to recruit workers if they are not able to offer an attractive benefits pac FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepar Business Ethics Etiquette - Is Corporate Social Responsibility An Oxymoron? Despite exploding regulatory costs and skeptical investors, the market for initial public offerings seems to be rebounding. A few young companies mulling their own IPOs asked me what communications issues to keep in mind. Here are six considerations:One of the biggest business myths is that business ethics is an oxymoron. There are some that would say that business is a big competition, a competition where business people are competing for a limited prize – success, money, power – and thrive achieve it by any means possible, including advancing your own personal interest at the expense of others.Do you agre ONE: Start over-communicating now. You can’t be a quiet company that doesn't put out press releases and then suddenly open the flood gates after you’re in quiet period. You'll get slammed for hyping your stock. Establish a routine far in advance of quiet period by issuing announcements about all personnel and operational milestones. This creates the business-as-usual precedent to continue feeding relevant business information into the marketplace during the IPO period. It also creates a historical foundation for potential investors and influencers. Some companies think you have to go dark during quiet period, when the opposite is true. This is when you show the world how you make money. TWO: Assume you are being taken literally. A private company can get away with sweeping, over-the-top mission statement hype to build an edgy, noticeable brand persona. But once you go public, those chest-thumpin’ promises of superior quality, die-for-you service, untouchable ethics and integrity become standards to which you'll be held accountable by shareholders, analysts, news media and class-action lawyers. THREE: Use stars carefully. IPO companies typically spotlight their star-player founders or CEOs. The problem is that these personalities often disappear sometime after the IPO, causing a crisis in confidence by investors who complain they don’t know the board, the management team or how the company will live without the celebrity they thought they bought into. FOUR: Don’t underestimate the internal angst of going (gag) corporate. Being a public company will be a culture shock to managers and employees as the board’s focus shifts from boom-boom profits to enhancing long-term shareholder value. The change can be disruptive and demoralizing, especially at a strongly culture-driven company. FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepare To Understand The Disease - Learn To Be The Patient period by issuing announcements about all personnel and operational milestones. This creates the business-as-usual precedent to continue feeding relevant business information into the marketplace during the IPO period. It also creates a historical foundation for potential investors and influencers.There is an old saying in Spain: “To be a bullfighter, you must first learn to be like a bull.” You want to be a good fisherman, think like the fish. Then you will understand where the fishes normally like to hide so that you can cast your line or net at the right spot. In the medical context, the best way to learn about the disease is to learn to be the patien Some companies think you have to go dark during quiet period, when the opposite is true. This is when you show the world how you make money. TWO: Assume you are being taken literally. A private company can get away with sweeping, over-the-top mission statement hype to build an edgy, noticeable brand persona. But once you go public, those chest-thumpin’ promises of superior quality, die-for-you service, untouchable ethics and integrity become standards to which you'll be held accountable by shareholders, analysts, news media and class-action lawyers. THREE: Use stars carefully. IPO companies typically spotlight their star-player founders or CEOs. The problem is that these personalities often disappear sometime after the IPO, causing a crisis in confidence by investors who complain they don’t know the board, the management team or how the company will live without the celebrity they thought they bought into. FOUR: Don’t underestimate the internal angst of going (gag) corporate. Being a public company will be a culture shock to managers and employees as the board’s focus shifts from boom-boom profits to enhancing long-term shareholder value. The change can be disruptive and demoralizing, especially at a strongly culture-driven company. FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepar Lean Manufacturing: Preparing Employees for The Organizational Change n get away with sweeping, over-the-top mission statement hype to build an edgy, noticeable brand persona. But once you go public, those chest-thumpin’ promises of superior quality, die-for-you service, untouchable ethics and integrity become standards to which you'll be held accountable by shareholders, analysts, news media and class-action lawyers.Any multi-department organization such as companies find it hard to adjust to any organizational change or any program that involves any form of behavioral intervention. This behavior of skepticism, distrust and resistance to adapt to new methods is collective and finds its roots in individual units and, ultimately, to individual employees. Changes in established wor THREE: Use stars carefully. IPO companies typically spotlight their star-player founders or CEOs. The problem is that these personalities often disappear sometime after the IPO, causing a crisis in confidence by investors who complain they don’t know the board, the management team or how the company will live without the celebrity they thought they bought into. FOUR: Don’t underestimate the internal angst of going (gag) corporate. Being a public company will be a culture shock to managers and employees as the board’s focus shifts from boom-boom profits to enhancing long-term shareholder value. The change can be disruptive and demoralizing, especially at a strongly culture-driven company. FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepar No Leak Marketing: Plug the Holes in Your Business Bucket ime after the IPO, causing a crisis in confidence by investors who complain they don’t know the board, the management team or how the company will live without the celebrity they thought they bought into.Do you have customers that you are currently working with who are NOT your Dream Customers? Do they demand extra time? Do they treat you with disrespect? Are they unprofitable?These customers are holes in your Business Bucket. They drain your time and your energy. They prevent you from having the time you need to market and provide service to your DREAM customer FOUR: Don’t underestimate the internal angst of going (gag) corporate. Being a public company will be a culture shock to managers and employees as the board’s focus shifts from boom-boom profits to enhancing long-term shareholder value. The change can be disruptive and demoralizing, especially at a strongly culture-driven company. FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepar Five Steps to Your Preferred Future -driven company.Imagine if every morning when you awoke, there was a card table with a mound of jigsaw puzzle pieces on it. And your job every day was to put those pieces together to create a finished puzzle. And tomorrow morning when you awoke, there would be another new mound of pieces to add to today’s.Only, you have no idea what the final picture is supposed to look like, b FIVE: Manage inevitable distractions. The receptionist’s zombie-like fixation on Bloomberg.com will remind you that IPOs are a costly operational distraction. People will be preoccupied with strike price, exit strategies and all the family-and-friends they never knew they had. Whatever you committed to internal communications needs to double now. Maybe triple. Keep employees informed and directed enough to stay focused on the job at hand. SIX: Hope for the best. Prepare for the worst. Make sure you’re ready for any potentially negative contingencies that might influence the IPO – including underwriter problems, sudden operational crises, over-hyped market expectations, lost business or sudden loss of a key executive. And definitely keep an eye on your corporate or employee blogs.
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