Thnks Blog

Ways to Overcome Business Challenges Caused by Coronavirus

Written by Brad Veach | Mar 11, 2020 12:18:45 PM

If taking a “technological hiatus” was on your list of 2020 resolutions, then allow us to give you a one-word recap of the current subject that’s been clogging up everyone’s newsfeeds: Coronavirus

So what exactly is coronavirus? Also known as COVID-19, coronavirus is a respiratory disease that was originally detected in China, and has since spread internationally. 

With headlines including the terms, “outbreak,” “risk,” and “pandemic,” it’s no secret that COVID-19 is causing global concern. And whether you’ve realized it or not, it’s also going to burden your business, if it hasn’t already. 

Major Ways Coronavirus Will Challenge Your Business (and How to Overcome Them)

Whether you’ve quarantined yourself in your apartment or have decided to dub coronavirus as a non-concern, the most important part of your company’s development is being threatened right now: Your ability to build and foster professional relationships.

In your effort to nurture these connections, here are solutions that will help you ensure that the illness doesn’t impede your organization’s growth:  

Challenge #1: Increased Digital Correspondence 

A lack of ability to meet in-person, both externally with prospects and clients and internally amongst coworkers, means more digital correspondence. 

As if our inboxes already weren’t clogged enough, given that the illness has now made it more difficult for people to travel, meet up for meals, or even work from the office, we can expect to see a larger influx of emails popping up. 

Without coronavirus in consideration, email open rates are already low, varying from 15.22% to 28.46%. Additionally, 21% of email recipients report an email as spam even if they know that it isn’t. 

Sure, employees have Slack, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, and Google Hangouts as additional methods of communication while WFH, but how do you initiate and maintain relationships with key stakeholders with this unexpected increase in email comms? 

Practice Personalization to Stand Out in Their Inboxes

The easiest way to engage someone via email as the pandemic continues to peak? Try altering your email outreach by incorporating personalized messaging in your email comms

Although this may sound time-consuming, the results are rewarding. To start practicing personalization in your email outreach, here are three tactics that you can include in your playbook: 

1.) Include recipients’ names in your subject lines

Even though they’re one of the shortest aspects of your email, when it comes to personalization, subject lines shouldn’t be discounted. Since 35% of email recipients open an email based on the subject line alone, customizing your subject lines can help you elicit responses. 

Whether you’re trying to reach out to prospects whom you’ve never contacted before or are attempting to stay in touch with your clients as the crisis unfolds, try adding their name in the subject line in order to catch their attention. In fact, the simple addition of including a recipient’s first name in the subject line of an email can boost your open rates by 29.3%.

2.) Customize your email snippets

An additional way to include personalization in your email communications strategy? Try creating customized email snippets when reaching out to desired or current partners. 

Since an email snippet is the first line of text that your recipient will see after the subject line, this is a secondary section of your email that can be used to elicit responses from your contacts. 

Not only can custom snippets double your reply rate, but they also provide the prime opportunity for you to mention something that speaks directly to the individuals whom you’re trying to reach. 

When crafting email snippets, here are a few best practices to keep in mind: 

  • Keep them between 40-50 characters long
  • Continue where the subject line left off
  • Incorporate a call to action
  • Test to see how they will be viewed from different email clients and devices
3.) Create segmented lists

As businesses scramble to adjust their strategies and reach key contacts, many will instinctually prioritize efficiency and cost-effectiveness by using mass emailing tactics in order to get their messages across. 

Although this may seem like an effective game plan, keep in mind that 57% of email recipients consider a message to be spam if it’s not relevant to their needs, even when they know the sender well. 

In this instance, it’s better to play the long game and segment your lists to ensure that your business’ audiences are receiving appropriate messages that are aligned with their pain points. 

Challenge #2: Inability to Conduct In-Person Meetings

So you finally secured a few in-person meetings with top prospects. Or, a key client claimed that they were willing to have you and your team into the office to discuss your company’s latest product or offering. 

The coronavirus scare hit, and now you’re worried that you’ll lose the opportunity to gain some facetime with important contacts. 

With companies increasingly encouraging their employees to avoid the office until the illness becomes contained, how can you make sure that you hold these meetings despite the inability to meet in-person? 

Share Expressions of Gratitude to Salvage Meeting Postponements

Sometimes there are certain business discussions that are better conducted in-person versus using video conferencing platforms. 

Understandably, you may be disappointed that meetings with your prospects or current customers are being postponed. But that doesn’t mean that they will never happen once the proper cure for the coronavirus is distributed and conversations concerning the illness subside. 

Whether delaying these meetings is on their end or yours, a smart way to ensure that you continue building these relationships and leave the door open for a hard reschedule date is by sharing expressions of gratitude

One simple way to communicate these expressions with your prospects or clients? Try thanking them for their patience as you await finalizing meeting dates. Not only will they appreciate your thank you notes, but your gestures will demonstrate how much you value their partnerships. Plus, you’ll inherently increase their positive sentiments towards you and your business

The virus has created a stressful scenario that has affected individuals’ personal and professional lives, and the meetings you had blocked off on your calendar are most likely not a top priority for your key contacts. Since gratitude is a stress reliever, sending these expressions to your connections can help ease their panic while allowing you to stay top of mind in the midst of this unsure situation. 

Challenge #3: Event and Conference Cancellations

As Q1 draws towards a close, we’ve already seen some pretty big conferences and events get cancelled due to coronavirus. Some heavy hitters include SXSW, Facebook Global Marketing Summit, Adobe Summit, Facebook F8, Shopify Unite, and Google I/O. 

Sure, these conference cancellations have created immense financial losses for the companies that were hosting them. 

But in addition to cancelling flights and booked hotel rooms, there are also some costs suffered for companies whose primary goal for attending was to generate new business opportunities. 

If your company was holding a conference or traveling to appear at one that’s been called off, is it possible to make up for some of the lost revenue? 

Overcome the Cancellation by Appreciating Those on the Guest List

Just because the event has been cancelled, doesn’t mean that the relationships that could have been formed or strengthened from it are completely lost. 

If your company was hosting its own event and it’s been called off, consider sending expressions of appreciation to those who had RSVPed. Not only will this prime them to look favorably upon your business, but it will also create feelings of reciprocity that will make them more likely to attend future events that your company plans to put on. 

Similarly, if your business was preparing to attend a conference that’s no longer going to occur, this shouldn’t mean that these leads have to be lost: Provided that the attendee lists are accessible, your sales team should share expressions of appreciation with these contacts in order to form new relationships.

If they were already conducting outreach prior to the cancellation, they can still retain connectivity with these individuals by appreciating them for their willingness to meet with them at the event before it was called off. 

If they hadn’t previously made contact, they can consider sharing how they were looking forward to potentially conversing with them, and would appreciate having the opportunity to connect with them virtually while the coronavirus scare is still prevalent.

Challenge #6: Changes to Typical Business Interactions 

Perhaps the biggest game changer caused by coronavirus? The end of the age-old professional handshake. 

Yep, you read that right. Globally, people are altering their daily habits both in their personal and professional lives in order to reduce the risk of contracting coronavirus, and to prevent it from spreading. 

Thus, the handshake, a gesture that was once incredibly significant, is now being called into question. Due to fear of catching coronavirus, The Guardian suggests that our handshake habits are changing, and mentions that health officials recommend finding alternatives.

Secure a deal? Shake on it. Make a bet? Shake on it. Introduce yourself to someone either personally or professionally? Handshake. 

Since this tradition is now being turned on its head, how should you adjust in order to continue strengthening the connections that you’re forming?

Keep the Handshake, but Make it Virtual

Digital mechanisms already maintain a dominant force in our lives. As far as the handshake is concerned, there is a technical tool that you can use in order to keep the relationship-building gesture in play. 

In the same way that shaking an individual’s hand enforces the progression of partnerships, saying Thnks similarly solidifies relationship growth

Since a Thnks is an expression of gratitude that an individual can share with another in order to demonstrate their appreciation for both the recipient and the relationship overall, sharing a Thnks will allow you to maintain the same sentiments behind a handshake with the added bonus of personalizing the gesture for each individual whom you interact with. 

While we’re not able to shake hands currently, and since this practice may be eradicated in the near future, consider saying Thnks by sharing a “Thnks A Latte” after a business conversation with a potential partner, or a “Berry Nice To Meet You” treat after being introduced to a new connection. 

How Saying Thnks Can Cure Coronavirus Complications

Sure, saying Thnks can’t provide the proper prescription to cure all coronavirus symptoms, but it can certainly help you salvage your organization’s relationships and business growth as the crisis continues to unfold. 

And, at the very least, practicing gratitude and sharing grateful gestures can help alleviate some of the pandemic panic. 

Saying Thnks can help you and your business advance, rectify, and retain your professional relationships. Within seconds, users can send prospects, clients, and connections gestures of appreciation by searching for an expression, personalizing a note, and sharing it via SMS or email. To learn more about adding gratitude to your business strategy, sign up for a demo!