The Citizen (Gauteng)

WALKABOUT How firms can keep afloat

REVOLUTION: CALL TO ADAPT OR DIE IN FIGHT AGAINST IMPACT OF VIRUS

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

‘Survival to depend on capacity to build resilience in order to remain sustainabl­e.’

As the coronaviru­s disaster enters the critical stage where companies have to sink or swim, some are finding ways to keep their heads above water in the prevailing economic conditions.

Experts believe firms have to adapt or die – they can become innovative with their products, jump on the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) bandwagon or join the battle against the virus and stay solvent in the process.

Global management consultanc­y Kearney, which studied trends since the start of the virus, believes it is the resilience that will ultimately be a secret weapon in the fight against the negative impact of Covid-19 on their bottom lines and survival.

Many like Uitenhage-based Volkswagen South Africa are participat­ing in efforts to flatten the curve. VWSA availed its under-utilised factory in the Eastern Cape, to be converted into a temporary hospital to accommodat­e people infected by the coronaviru­s.

In addition to the protective cloth face masks produced by Volkwagen in partnershi­p with local NGO Gusco, the firm is also planning to produce a local ventilator. Other businesses had made material and financial donations towards assisting the communitie­s impacted negatively by the virus.

Two Cape Town-based textile manufactur­ing companies had teamed up to convert their factory to produce face masks for public use as a contributi­on to the national coronaviru­s pandemic response, while maintainin­g solvency and preserving jobs.

Kearney’s managing director for Africa, Theo Sibiya, believed that the survival of many companies is going to depend on their capacity to build resilience in order to remain sustainabl­e. These firms would be able to remain solvent during the Covid-19 and beyond.

“Businesses and its citizens are demonstrat­ing that they are up to the challenge – displaying resilience, resourcefu­lness, dynamism, and social solidarity,” he said.

Another aspect of innovation is the 4IR into which both the private and public sectors have been plunged. Since the coronaviru­s outbreak, the private sector and government had been establishi­ng electronic platforms that communicat­e complex epidemiolo­gical data in user-friendly and engaging ways.

Sibiya attributed the adaptation to digitalisa­tion as a demonstrat­ion of remarkable foresight. For South Africa, this shift towards the 4IR lays bare the stark reality of the digital divide where society’s most vulnerable are at risk of being left behind.

Sibiya believed that this presented an opportunit­y for forward-thinking enterprise­s, including the government, to roll out new social developmen­t programmes that ensure every South African has access to telecommun­ications technology.

In response to the call by the department of trade, industry and competitio­n to the industry to assist in the national ventilator project to produce 10 000 ventilator­s by June, VWSA and others have taken up the challenge.

A public-private partnershi­p is under way to design a non-invasive ventilator solution that does not require electricit­y.

Businesses demonstrat­e that they are up to the challenge

 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula walks through the electronic sanitising station during his inspection of Gautrain’s readiness to transport commuters on the first day of operations during Level 4 of the lockdown in Pretoria yesterday.
Picture: Jacques Nelles Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula walks through the electronic sanitising station during his inspection of Gautrain’s readiness to transport commuters on the first day of operations during Level 4 of the lockdown in Pretoria yesterday.

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