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Sequoia Urges Founders To Brace For Tough Times In Coronavirus Fallout

Sequoia On Planning For The Business Amid Coronavirus Outbreak

With 31 confirmed cases of coronavirus in India, the government has confirmed that the virus has reached community transmission levels. State governments have been asked to form rapid response teams at the district, block and village levels to cater to preventive measures and take action on the ground. In terms of the business impact, several tech giants and startups have asked employees to work from home, while large-scale global events have been cancelled or postponed.

In such times, Sequoia Capital, with a portfolio of over 420 companies in India, has now floated a letter to its founders addressing the challenges in the ecosystem due to the coronavirus outbreak and what can be done to manage businesses better.

While entrepreneurs across the world are busy taking stock of employee health and are putting preventive measures in place, Sequoia is urging founders to look beyond the current situation and aim to ensure sound health of the business in the medium to long term as the fallout from the coronavirus impact is expected to last a few quarters. Besides disruptions in events, the coronavirus epidemic in China has also impacted manufacturing as well as the pharmaceutical markets.

DataLabs by Inc42 has noted that in 2019 Sequoia Capital cemented its place at the top of the venture capitalists with over 2x the deals from 2018. The venture capital firm participated in 53 deals in 2019 and funded 45 startups.

Sequoia Capital noted that coronavirus is “the black swan of 2020” and said that it will take considerable time — perhaps several quarters — before the epidemic has been contained.

“Some of you may experience softening demand; some of you may face supply challenges. While The Fed and other central banks can cut interest rates, monetary policy may prove a blunt tool in alleviating the economic ramifications of a global health crisis.”

Highlighting the concerns founders should question about their businesses, Sequoia said:

“Having weathered every business downturn for nearly fifty years, we’ve learned an important lesson — nobody ever regrets making fast and decisive adjustments to changing circumstances. In downturns, revenue and cash levels always fall faster than expenses. In some ways, business mirrors biology,” the VC firm noted.

The firm advised founders that false optimism can easily lead them astray and prevent them from making contingency plans or taking bold action. “Avoid this trap by being clinically realistic and acting decisively as circumstances change. Demonstrate the leadership your team needs during this stressful time,” it added.

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