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3 Smart, Strategic Ways To Weather This Volatile Economy

Here’s something you might not know about me: Entrepreneurship runs in my family. 

My dad has run a manufacturing business for decades, and growing up, I saw firsthand what happens when external forces impact your business.

I’ve been lucky enough to sit at the kitchen table with him while he explained business scenarios. He walked me through how he framed challenges and the plans he had to address them.  

Truly, my dad is my hero. I’m so blessed to have had him as a mentor, thought partner, and best friend to teach me how to navigate the world, personally and professionally. 

On the golf course with my dad.

So back to that dinner table conversation: Trade wars, tariffs, supply chain shocks—they’re not just headlines; they’re real-world gut punches and businesses have dealt with them for decades. The Chicken Tariff War of the 1960s; the 1987 Trade War with Japan; Canada-U.S. Lumber Wars; the 1993 Banana Wars; the 2002 Steel Tariff - we’ve been here before.

I remember a few years back when tariffs on Chinese imports hit. 

The raw materials my dad’s business and businesses all over the country relied on nearly doubled in price. Overnight, business owners were faced with tough calls on staffing, pricing, and product lines.

So when I talk with founders navigating today’s economic climate—where volatility feels like the default setting—I get it. It was dinner table conversation at our house growing up!

But there are ways to navigate it, and some of them are surprisingly evergreen.

1. Stay scrappy, even after you fundraise

Getting a few million dollars in your startup's bank account can feel like a green light to build big, fast. But in volatile economies, discipline is your best asset. Overhiring or locking in expensive full-time roles can sink you when market conditions change.

Instead, keep your team lean and only hire for roles critical to your core operations. Use fractional or contract talent for everything else—marketing, finance, legal, even engineering. 

At Neutech, we’ve seen startups stay nimble and efficient by leveraging fractional CTOs, bookkeepers, and developers. One founder we worked with shaved 30% off their burn rate by replacing a full-time dev hire with a Neutech engineer on a scoped monthly engagement.

Actionable Step: Review your org chart and overhead. 

Ask yourself: If revenue dropped 30% next month, who and what would you absolutely need to keep the lights on? Build from there. 

If you’d like to dive into this concept in a deeper way, I’d suggest the book Profit First by Mike Michalowicz as a fantastic read.

I share two more steps you can take in your business to weather this economy here, but the main take away is this: Tech thrives when it’s grounded.

Yes, the economy is volatile. But this isn’t the first time tech has weathered turbulence. After the dot-com bust, the strongest companies were the ones that stayed lean, validated their markets, and doubled down on delivering real customer value.

The 2008 recession gave rise to Airbnb, WhatsApp, and Uber—all companies that solved urgent, real-world problems with smart, nimble teams.

This moment is no different. Founders who stay grounded, make deliberate choices, and build with discipline will come out ahead.

If you need help tightening up your build strategy, reducing overhead, or planning your next raise, we do this every day with founders just like you. Let’s talk.