Jonathan Kennedy
Many businesses are seeking to achieve cost savings in response to increasingly challenging market and operating conditions. While you may have assessed your circumstances and decided to address your cost base, identifying and embarking on concrete actions can feel like a daunting prospect.
We recommend four key steps to address your cost challenge effectively and sustainably.
It will firstly be key to understand the drivers of cost pressure and the nature of the outcomes you want to achieve. Developing a set of key principles will help drive alignment on scope and priorities early on. This stage will conclude with identifying and longlisting opportunities including a combination of cost avoidance, cost reduction and cost optimisation.
Key considerations for this stage include:
This step begins with an initial assessment of your longlisted opportunities. You’ll initially want to understand the scale of savings that can be achieved, and what effort and investment may be required to achieve them. At this stage, an informed top-down assessment of both benefit and effort can be a quick and effective mechanism for initial prioritisation and filtering of the long-list.
You will then assess the operational implications and risks. This may help you to prioritise further, as well as helping you to start to think about what you’ll require to have in place to realise the savings.
Begin thinking about measurement and metrics at this stage. Determine how you will assess whether, and to what extent, the initiatives have delivered on your target outcomes. It is important to include milestone assessments along the journey to gauge whether you need to adapt your plan, or add more opportunities to the hopper.
Key considerations for this stage include:
Focus on building ownership and accountability for generating the cost outcome that you are targeting. Balance the imperative to get runs on the board early, while securing the support and resource required to drive longer-lead time elements.
Key considerations for this stage include:
The rubber meets the road when you come to execute your action plans. It’s valuable to put some light-touch governance in place to track benefits and impacts, and to acknowledge wins.
Many cost optimisation initiatives can be delivered through BAU, but some will require more of a programmatic approach. It is important to maintain a degree of joined-up governance and tracking across both to retain the focus on the overall cost outcome you have targeted and to avoid disruptive zero-sum behaviours and backsliding.
While we’ve highlighted four key steps, we recommend a circular and iterative approach. An ‘always on’ process of identification and dynamic prioritisation will help you respond to ongoing and potential cost pressure in a considered, effective and sustainable manner.
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