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Article
Effective Strategies for Earnings Season Preparation
Effective strategies for preparing for earnings season, emphasizing the importance of a comprehensive timeline, accountability, stress reduction techniques, leveraging technology, and the pivotal role of investor relations consultants.
Article
Strategic Timing for Earnings Reports: Expert Guidance for Optimal Results
Gain expert strategies from investor relations consultants on optimizing the timing and visibility of earnings reports to ensure maximum impact and attention from analysts and investors.
Article
Preparing for Earnings Season: Essential Steps from an Investor Relations Consultant
Essential steps for earnings season preparation, emphasizing competitor analysis, understanding industry trends, and crafting strategic communication with the help of investor relations consulting firms.
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Effective Investor Relations Strategies for Earnings Season
Effective strategies for investor relations consultants during earnings season emphasize the importance of their involvement in CFO and FP&A meetings to shape accurate narratives and guidance for investors.
Article
Optimizing Investor Relations: The Power of Targeting Tools
Using investor targeting tools helps companies with market caps below $5 billion diversify their investor base, strategically schedule meetings, and achieve greater stock stability.
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Crafting Compelling Investor Stories: The Power of Analogies
Using analogies in investor relations simplifies complex concepts, enhances communication, and builds stronger connections with potential investors.
Case Study
$2bn Software Company Entering a Model Transition
Management doesn’t always provide concise, direct answers to questions which can leave investors feeling unsatisfied. We then helped them script their earnings calls, Q&A, and investor presentations (including an investor day) to tell the story while also releasing a series of new KPIs that investors used to gauge the company’s progress through the transition.
Case Study
$5bn Hardware Company Lacking Investor Credibility
The client (under NDA) was looking for someone to help them fix their sagging stock price, which was lagging behind their peers despite several quarters of beating consensus estimates.
Case Study
$5bn Software Company with a Lagging Multiple
Management had a history of over-promising and under-delivering, which we needed to correct. Also, the business model transition created a layer of opacity that only increased disclosure, and new KPIs could solve.
Case Study
$14bn Software Company in Model Transition
After many years of disappointing results, investors lost interest in this company. Additionally, the company’s financial disclosures made it impossible to see all the changes going on “under the surface.”
Article
The Importance of Humility on Corporate Earnings Calls
Even during periods of lackluster financial performance, a stock’s multiple suffers less if investors have confidence in the business’s leadership – this is because shareholders “keep the faith” in teams they trust and conversely, run for the exits if they hold any doubts.
Article
Analysts are Busy - Help Them Help You
The sell-side analysts that cover your stock are far busier than you might think. Failing to recognize this and blaming them for not properly understanding your story leads to valuation challenges and frustration by everyone involved.
Article
Provide Verifiable, Quantifiable Commentary in Your Earnings Guidance
For investors to feel comfortable owning your stock, they need to be able to go out into the field and perform primary research. Doing so will allow them to decide if they think your growth projections make sense.
Article
Is Your IR Firm Advising You to Acknowledge the Competition?
While there are often many reasons why a stock is suffering, one of the easier fixes I see in my IR strategy practice is a change in the way my clients discuss their competition.
Article
The Market Minute: 2 Important Steps to Take After Going Public
Being a public company includes a lot more regulatory headaches. And winning over investors doesn’t end after the IPO.
Article
Stocks Have Emotions. It’s Not Just What They Teach in Business School
Read on only if you're willing to throw out what they teach you in business school. Namely, that stock prices are simply the market's representation of the discounted present value of a future stream of cash flows.