Economics

Consumer Burnout Has Been Here All Along: Why it Matters to B2B Companies

Economics, Marketing

The global systems of commerce are in a constant state of metamorphosis. They undergo gradual changes that can be so drawn out over time, it is tough to notice changes have occurred. Similar to living with someone for many years, sometimes in takes an old photograph to realize how much they’ve changed. Today, though, we’re observing a more hurried trajectory of change that is resulting in a speedy re-ordering of the rules of commerce. 

In this case, we’re not talking about the most obvious signs of economic changes, such as the current contraction of consumer demand that is always first experienced by retailers like Target Corporation. Target’s CEO announced this month they were saddled with excess inventory which was ordered when demand was hot, forcing the company to discount a substantial sum of high-ticket price inventory to adjust to today’s more cautious consumer spending patterns.¹ This essay shines a light on a less apparent sign of the significant re-ordering upon us. It is a form of more pronounced socioeconomic stratification, where the boundaries between classes are less permeable to upward mobility and more porous to downward movement. Ultimately, this issue will resolve in more significant, systematic change than temporary price inflation—it revalues the haves and have-nots, and restructures the domestic and global roles available to Americans as economic actors.

This issue will resolve in more significant, systematic change than temporary price inflation—it revalues the haves and have-nots.

Businesses tend to ignore these types of macro-level socioeconomic insights because they require a long-term strategic response that is hard to defend in analyst calls—where the stock market defines winners and losers. But in today’s globalized, highly politicized and uncertain business environment, corporate leadership needs to stand for something bigger than short-term gains in the market casino, where the house always wins.

The confirmation bias that fueled corporate optimism.

From a global perspective, resources in the developed West seem plentiful enough to provide a decent standard of living for all. We have it good. The developed West is made up of a relatively comfortable populace with pockets of poverty and despair; whereas underdeveloped nations present the exact opposite, pockets of wealth amid a largely impoverished populace. This seems right in the context of comparing nations to one another, but the people themselves could care less about being better off than the people in another nation—their standards for equity are local. These localities, defined by financial wherewithal, determine where we make friends, where we raise families, where we work, and where we spend our money. Through this framing, it’s easier to see how closely related one’s social environment is to one’s role in the economy. 

The pandemic took a large toll on Americans in the lowest income tier, with almost half experiencing job or wage loss after the coronavirus outbreak began. 45% of middle-income adults and 33% of upper-income adults also faced the same circumstances—albeit, with relatively less bleak consequences.² Job loss for someone who is one paycheck away from losing childcare results in a brutal set of circumstances that can set entire households back months or years just to barely achieve financial stability, forget upward economic mobility, it’s often far out of reach. 

We entered 2022 with a general sense of optimism. Government-driven financial support helped many households avert dire circumstances with rent relief, eviction moratoriums, loan forbearance programs, and boosted unemployment insurance checks. Many middle and upper-income households actually made it through the pandemic recovery quite well, getting mortgage and student loan relief, saving money working from home, and benefitting from one of the best years in stock market history. But we can’t forget that in December 2020, 14% of American adults (nearly 30 million) reported having too little to eat in the past seven days, a rate that dropped only to 9% (nearly 20 million) in October 2021.³ Indeed, the poorest households benefited from government stimulus payouts, but their situation is so fragile, they also exhausted these funds faster.⁴ 

We can’t forget that in December 2020, 14% of American adults reported having too little to eat.

From a business perspective, many firms planned their way through the economic recovery by acting on only half of the story—the veneer of national prosperity reflected in middle and upper-income financials. An irresponsible confirmation bias that ignored the 64% of Americans who are living paycheck to paycheck.

An economy high on synthetic stimulants simulated prosperity.

The economic recovery found the nation with an abundance of job opportunities—fueled by a synthetically stimulated economy where people were buying stuff at such a voracious rate, companies had to staff up with speed to handle increased demand. And even then, it wasn’t enough—we used all the damn semiconductor chips. Widespread supply chain shortages impacted every nation. Consumer demand was so hot we put a record sum of freight on ocean carriers causing bottlenecks just to get products to port.⁶ 

In 2020, the United States personal savings rate hit an all-time record high of 33.8%. To provide an idea of just how monumental this is, the previous high was 17.3%, set in 1975. Today, that rate is much lower, and it’s a leading indicator we cannot ignore. In April 2022 the personal savings rate was a meager 4.4%, the lowest it’s been since 2008, in the heart of the Great Recession.⁷ 

A flaming addiction to consumerism, record demand, unexpected new flows of disposable income, over 40% more money in circulation⁸, record household savings rates, low unemployment. We not only have more money to spend, but we also have more options for spending that money than ever before. 

It has all led us to a state of comfortable complacency. 

Businesses need to adapt immediately to fight for long-term stability

When you hear the wealthy switch their tone from speculatively-excited to cautiously-concerned, you know something’s afoot. You see, we’ve overheated the economy, and we’re also burning ourselves out. The federal government is having a bear of a time figuring out how we’re going to come out of this situation with the least damages inflicted—it has to look after almost 330 million people. 

Businesses also need to adapt, but most of them will not take proactive measures, instead opting to delay reaction until they start to feel the consequences. This means retailers and other consumer-facing (B2C) businesses that deal with the most basic consumer needs, like housing and transportation, are already starting to face these new circumstances. Which means that soon, the thousands of business-to-business (B2B) companies that count on revenue from those businesses, such as software and financial technology firms, will start to feel the brunt of the problem. 

Rather than starting with the immediate business problem, we began this essay by covering the socioeconomic situation of the American people to shine a light on the human condition. If we want to improve the way our businesses respond to market shifts, we need to understand what’s going on with the very people that make all of our companies viable—the consumers. When you work in the B2B sector, these people are often out of the picture because they’re seen as someone else’s problem, namely, your customer’s problem. However, when economic patterns change with great heft and speed, we have to conduct a truly rigorous root cause analysis that brings us all the way to the end consumer.

This consumer-level study prepares us to better absorb market-wide shocks without resorting to drastic measures like massive layoffs and office closures. It’s not that successful companies don’t conduct market research and planning—but most B2B companies don’t have have repeatable systems in place to research, understand, and act on consumer insights.

Most B2B companies don’t have have systems in place to research, understand, and act on consumer insights.

B2B companies need to bolster and adjust go-to-market teams

In this case, our upcoming business challenges are rooted all the way down to the consumer level. The confluence of destabilizing forces will impact the financial condition of the average American, prompting a slide in consumer demand over the next year. This will eventually impact B2B product and service providers. So how should we react? 

First, we must adapt our expectations and reset revenue targets to give go-to-market teams a fighting chance at closing the year on a high-note. Adapted targets send the responsible message to the market, they show analysts and shareholders that there’s an adept team keen to reduce uncertainty and maintain stability.

Second, Sales teams need meaningful corporate support. Many B2B salespeople have been nurturing substantive pipelines, keen to make up for revenue lost throughout the pandemic. These sales people need executive backup in the form of realistic goals and cross-team collaboration to bring deals across the finish line. 

Finally, Marketing should not be pushed into over-indexing on lead generation—a common knee-jerk reaction to uncertainty. Instead, when market demand is expected to decrease and competition is expected to heighten, Marketing needs to double-down on balanced investments that span the full funnel:

  1. Strong brand equity and perception resetting programs to drive awareness and brand preference, in preparation for a tougher competitive environment. You can also think of this as critical air-cover for Sales teams.
  2. Mid-funnel nurture programs centered on offering prospects a rich value exchange that incentivizes them to give us their time and attention, while accelerating high-propensity leads.
  3. Advance overall customer success with an obsessive focus on ensuring our customers are getting the most value for their dollar and enjoying a memorable, delightful experience with the brand. Deliberate Marketing touchpoints throughout the customer experience journey deepen trust, increase retention, and improve lifetime value.

There’s no need to panic, cool heads always prevail. These economic cycles happen almost like clockwork (take a look at time series charts and you’ll see a recession was somewhat overdue). No company will be able to change the course of an economic downturn or spur an economic boom, but B2B company leaders can boost the effectiveness of long-term planning by studying the end consumer—rather, the people behind the consumption. What’s going on in their milieu, how are their socioeconomic conditions and perceptions of value changing? As B2B companies, how will these changes impact our customers who deal directly with consumers? The consumer will always have the final say.


NOTES

  1. Sarah Nassauer, “Target CEO Says Unloading Excess Inventory Is a Necessary Pain,” WSJ, accessed June 12, 2022, https://www.wsj.com/articles/target-ceo-says-unloading-excess-inventory-is-a-necessary-pain-11654703424.
  2. “COVID-19 Pandemic Pinches Finances of America’s Lower- and Middle-Income Families,” Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project (blog), April 20, 2022, https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2022/04/20/covid-19-pandemic-pinches-finances-of-americas-lower-and-middle-income-families/.
  3. “Tracking the COVID-19 Economy’s Effects on Food, Housing, and Employment Hardships,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, accessed June 14, 2022, https://www.cbpp.org/research/poverty-and-inequality/tracking-the-covid-19-economys-effects-on-food-housing-and.
  4. “Pandemic-Era ‘Excess Savings’ Are Dwindling for Many – The New York Times,” accessed June 15, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/07/business/pandemic-savings.html.
  5. Jessica Dickler, “As Inflation Heats up, 64% of Americans Are Now Living Paycheck to Paycheck,” CNBC, March 8, 2022, https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/08/as-prices-rise-64-percent-of-americans-live-paycheck-to-paycheck.html.
  6. “Topic: Container Shipping,” Statista, accessed June 12, 2022, https://www.statista.com/topics/1367/container-shipping/.
  7. U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, “Personal Saving Rate,” FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, January 1, 1959), https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT.
  8. Washington Post. “Inflation Has Fed Critics Pointing to Spike in Money Supply.” Accessed June 21, 2022. https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2022/02/06/federal-reserve-inflation-money-supply/.

Pakistan Debt Crisis of 1998: Fueled by Nuclear Power and Political Instability

Economics, Public Policy

On May 28, 1998, Amidst a turbulent domestic political environment and against the international community’s advice, Pakistan responded to five nuclear arm tests conducted by India with nuclear arms tests of its own – this exacerbated Pakistan’s already precarious situation and pushed it over the edge into crisis mode. As suggested in the Middle East Economic Digest, “Pakistan has put national pride ahead of economic prudence by testing its nuclear devices.”

International Aid, Economic Sovereignty, and the Washington Consensus

Economics

At yesterday’s OPEN DC event Shaukat Aziz (former PM and FM of Pakistan) answered an audience question by talking about how IMF funding causes nations to give up economic sovereignty – this was a great point, and a very timely one given today’s economic ‘crisis.’  Aid from international financial institutions comes with rules, and currently, those rules are largely based on the ‘Washington Consensus‘ guidelines for economic growth.  Unfortunately, as economist Dani Rodrik presented in his recent book (‘One Economics, Many Recipes’), these western-built guidelines for growth may be obsolete, and at best, can use a few edits.

Some nations have received so much aid from international financial institutions that their debts have had to be pardoned…more than $40 billion in foreign debt was totally written off in 2005 for 18 nations (14 of them African).  When countries are spending most of their money on repaying debts – and forgoing critical domestic improvements – they’re terminally screwed.  It’s called foreign ‘aid’ – loans granted to spur growth by organizations like the World Bank and African Development Bank – but aid turns into a burden as it instantly becomes debt.  This is where the head scratching starts… Continue reading …

China and the United States: Trading Places (communism, capitalism, policy)

Economics, Public Policy

Globalization.  It’s still the reason for much animosity towards the world’s eight ‘major industrialized democracies,’ also known as the G-8.  And while the U.S. has historically been one of the most criticized nations it is increasingly finding itself on the receiving end, as a great place to make fast and easy money.

The rules are changing as the US begins to Nationalize failing businesses and China Privatizes state-owned organizations.

China’s Newest Import to the US: Landlords
US Citizens face a slew of regulations and restrictions when it comes to purchasing property in China – good real estate in China is expensive and the value of the US dollar is relatively low.  On the contrary, it is substantially easier for foreigners to purchase property in the United States.  In fact, New York City and Washington D.C. topped the list of the best cities for real estate investment published in 2008 by the Association of Foreign Investors in Real Estate (AFIRE).

Continue reading …