Turns

January 5, 2009 —

In a previous episode, I mentioned I had a seat at the last down turn.

I won’t act like this gives me any special authority to make predictions or give advice or even suggest this time is like the last. But I will say I’m very much on the side of optimism when it comes to this industry. The issues we’re currently seeing have no relationship to the demand for web services. We’re in a growth industry. I should also say, though, that things are going well for us right now, and it’s easy to be optimistic when you aren’t having to make difficult decisions.

By way of history, Electric Pulp is a web-only shop, currently employing 12 people full-time. We’re physically located in Sioux Falls, SD, but many of our clients are only vaguely aware of this fact.

At the start of the last recession (Q2 of 2001,) we were still a young company figuring out how to take advantage of demand, so we’d have been all but unaware we were moving into a recession even if the news had been reporting it. It wasn’t until later in the year that things got crazy. The September 11 attacks were scary as hell on a lot of levels. And if anyone says the last time around was nothing like this one, they weren’t running a small business with little residual income at the time. Things stopped. (Apologies if the glancing reference to the attacks comes across wrong.)

2002 brought a bunch of internal distractions for us, so it’s hard to say how much effect outside factors were having on us. We had a significant employee shakeup (another glancing reference) followed by legal and banking distractions as we restructured our corporation. I remember it being an extremely difficult year, but I don’t recall ever blaming the economy.

Our conditions were probably more consistent with other web shops later in 2002 and into 2003.

We felt web allocations being cut as operating budgets shrank. We saw leads slow and project cycles lengthen. We were bidding against 2 or 3 other shops every time we wrote a proposal. I’ll spare the period details. Just imagine yourself bidding against elance and Happy Cog every time you get a lead. And then assume each prospect is going to expect unpaid discovery work, detailed presentations, and give bonus points if you’re willing to provide spec work (unlike us.)

Maybe that overview is too grim. We still found work — it just took a lot more effort to land. And too much of that effort had to come from certain owners who’d have much rather stayed focused on production. I remember neckties being involved.

As a side note, we proved during this time that buying work (cutting rates) does nothing to glamour clients or speed up decisions. We tried often enough to consider the study scientific. It doesn’t work.

Once we landed the work, though, we were fine. We could control production and had no problem putting in extra hours. We made sure the work we were doing was good.

Collecting for that work slowed us down again. We operate on an accrual basis — which is to say we report off of receivables — so there were plenty of times we’d report a good month and still run into cash issues. Meaning we’d be out and having to rely on a growing line of credit. It also meant we weren’t always able to pay ourselves. (By “ourselves,” I mean the owners, the rest of the team was always paid on time.)

Funny story, by the way. Apparently, a bank can make each director personally guarantee a line of credit for the entire amount. Okay, that wasn’t funny. I still remember the dollar figure attached to failing at the time.

One of the things we were able to do to help speed up receivables was to rewrite our contracts. We changed the standard payment terms to 50% up front, 40% at technical completion, and 10% at *launch.* This was a change from 50% up front and 50% at completion. As simple as it sounds, it helped a lot. “Completion” had a funny way of drawing out regardless of our own efforts.

We also stopped giving priority to the wrong clients. We were seeing the same slow paying clients in our aging reports over and over. Each new project would go the same way. Turning away a few of these bad relationships made a big difference.

These were probably the most notable changes we made, but every aspect of what we do became more sophisticated during this time. It had too. And considering the extent of the changes, I’m not sure we’d have even found the time or motivation to make them without the pinch.

The single most important point I can make, though, is that the bad was all temporary. In 2004, we doubled our revenue from the year prior.

So, like I say, we made it out just fine. These things bounce.

These things bounce

December 13, 2008 —

This is the second U.S. recession since we’ve been in business. Electric Pulp had been a full time gig for 3 years when the last recession began in March of 2001.

We had some bad months. I’m not sure we can credit the stress to any single event or economic snap shot, though. We had adjustments to make. Either way, we made it out just fine, and 2004 more than made up for anything we might have missed out on.

That’s probably more personal history than you care to know, but it backs up a basic point. The web doesn’t contract. Uncertainty is short-lived, especially when it occurs inside a growth industry.

As a sidenote, I wrote a longer version of this post last week after seeing recession-proofing advice hit my feed reader from five sources in two days. I was so distracted by a particular post, though, that I wasn’t really making the point that these things bounce. Keep that in mind the next time you read a post on the topic. The negative forecasts would reverse if they’d widen their scope slightly.

The good life

September 6, 2008 —

Maybe you spotted Dalton Conley’s Op-Ed piece in the The NYTimes earlier this week. (Hint: Kottke posted an excerpt on Wednesday.) The article suggests that working harder to earn more is becoming an endless loop — earning more then compels you to work more — and Americans who make more are actually more stressed than their lower-income counterparts.

…it is now the rich who are the most stressed out and the most likely to be working the most. Perhaps for the first time since we’ve kept track of such things, higher-income folks work more hours than lower-wage earners do.

Conley cites several (non-technological) factors contributing to the phenomenon including an increasing income opportunity for each hour worked as well as the growing disparity between the middle and the top. In other words, the higher you climb the economic ladder, the greater the gap between each new rung. Keeping up with the Jones’ gets increasingly difficult.

All that aside, it’s just really easy to work. Anyone practicing inside a high-demand industry is familiar with lost opportunity cost. Idle time begins to feel wasteful when you can literally work anywhere, any time. Especially when you like what you do.

Layer on top of that the nagging realization that you can’t really control demand, and you have a window into the work ethic of pretty much anyone I know working in the internets.

So much for getting ahead. The good life™ has a new brand new groove.