Monday 5 October 2009

What are the Basics of Managing Small Business Finances?

I’ve been reflecting on the articles I’ve sent out in the Creative Finance & Management newsletter. Some of them have a bigger company feel to them, and if you own a smaller company you may be feeling like I am not saying anything relevant to you.

I am also conscious that although I am trying to say things that are relevant to businesses with turnover between £1m and £25m, in reality the difference between businesses at £1m and £25m are huge. And the difference between businesses with one or two employees to those with over £1m turnover is also fairly large too.

We tend to talk about small business as if it were one category. But small business is actually more diverse than large business! (It makes me wonder how we can talk about an “SME sector” when we lump the one-man bands in with the £100m complex group.)

I have also met quite a few people running sub-£1m turnover businesses who wish there was some service like Charis FD’s to help them with their finances. Watch this space! It is on my radar and I hope to come up with something in the next few months.

But in the meantime I have been trying to think about what I could say to help small businesses of all sizes. What are the basics? The fundamentals? What are the financial management principles that will keep you on the right course from the tiny beginnings to the multi-million pound success story?

If you have read the full length article that I sent you recently – “The Essentials of Financial Management in Small Businesses” – then the points below will not be new to you. If you haven’t read that, I would commend it to you. You can download it by clicking on this link:

http://www.charisfd.com/page11/page11.html

In summary the basic principles that apply to everyone are:

1. You have to make a profit

2. Cash really is King

3. Have a plan and know what’s coming

4. Stick to the plan

5. Review your progress very regularly

6. Never spend more than you have to

First, you have to be making a profit. If you don’t make a profit in the long term you would have been better off if you stopped doing business. Ok, in the early days you may start off with losses while you are winning customers. But if you don’t make a profit quickly enough you will run out of money. Investors and lenders don’t like putting more money into businesses that are not profitable.

So don’t ever lose sight of that. Don’t ever say to yourself, “oh well, I’m still in the loss-making phase.” Instead, ask yourself, “how can I get us profitable more quickly?”

Second, if you run out of cash your business is finished. Cash is like the fuel in the car. Once it has dried up, the car is going nowhere. If you are trading at a loss, at least you are still trading! If you have no cash, you are not trading at all.

So get your customers paying on time, don’t hold too much stock, don’t pay suppliers too early (and make sure your credit limits are adequate by being a good payer), and make sure your business is properly funded by doing cashflow forecasts.

Third, planning is essential, whether you like it or not. You have to know where you want the business to go and what you want it to achieve, and then ask yourself how it is going to achieve it. And do that with detailed questions until you know exactly what you need to do.

Many businesses fail because they didn’t have a plan.

Fourth, stick to the plan. Obvious point, but worth making. A plan is pointless if you are not going to follow it. Make sure it is detailed enough to follow, but flexible enough to allow changing course if it’s not working as well as you thought.

Fifth, measure your success against the plan. That’s a positive and a negative. You must measure your success against the plan. But you should not waste time measuring things that don’t tell you how well you are performing against that plan. Your plan should include every important element in moving the business towards your visionary objective.

There are some things you always need to look at: Your income statement each month, your balance sheet, your debtors list and your cashflow forecast.

Other metrics you need to define and decide on for yourself, because they should relate to your unique business and your unique plan. Just ask yourself how you will know whether the business is succeeding for each key element of your plan.

Finally, following on from the point about making a profit, don’t spend more than you can afford. Easy to say. Not so easy to do.

It’s all about challenging every piece of expenditure that is proposed, whether it is in the business plan or not. Is it really necessary? Could it be deferred? Broadly speaking, if the spending does not either help to keep you in business or contribute to increasing your profit in the future, then it is not going to help your business. So don’t do it. Sometimes this is a subjective judgment, and you will not really know whether you got it right or wrong. But simply committing yourself to that frugal mindset will mean that you are probably going to get it right mostly, and you will have a more profitable and more successful business because of it.

Work within these principles and you will be more likely to succeed than 70% of small businesses out there, in my estimation. I hope you succeed!

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