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Profits, Growth and Cash Flow: Which is Most Important to Small Business Success?
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| Guest post by: Gene Siciliano |
Article Overview: Business growth and profitability. Most entrepreneurs would consider these to be the Holy Grail of business ownership. So it’s not too surprising that many participants in the financial workshops I lead are surprised when I tell them that instant profits and rapid business growth aren’t always a cause for celebration. “How can this be?” you might be wondering. The best way to explain it is to tell the story of the Wonder Widget Company. Haven’t heard of them? Well, this is a fictitious company I made up to help me explain business financial concepts in an easy-to-understand way.
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Free Download - Financial Mastery for the Career Teacher By Gene Siciliano |
Profits, Growth and Cash Flow: Which is Most Important to Small Business Success?
Business growth and
profitability. Most entrepreneurs would consider these to be the Holy Grail of
business ownership. So it’s not too surprising that many participants in the
financial workshops I lead are surprised when I tell them that instant profits
and rapid business growth aren’t always a cause for celebration.
“How can this
be?” you might be wondering. The best way to explain it is to tell the story of
the Wonder Widget Company. Haven’t heard of them? Well, this is a fictitious
company I made up to help me explain business financial concepts in an
easy-to-understand way.
A Hot New Launch
Wonder Widget
Co. launched last year with $100,000 in cash and the hottest new product in its
market, the amazing Wonder Widget. It was so hot that the owners had sales and
profits the very first month of operations. So they quickly leased and
outfitted a factory, production equipment and furnishings (all with minimal initial
cash outlay), bought materials, hired workers, and manufactured and shipped
widgets. Then they mailed invoices totaling $50,000 to customers in the first
month. Amazing!
They paid their
bills as they came due and collected from customers in the normal course of doing
business. Meanwhile, sales continued to grow, increasing by $50,000 every month
with no decline in margins and no serious competition, and profits climbed
without a pause.
But a strange
thing happened on the way to the bank: The owners were shocked to find that
they didn’t have enough cash to pay their bills. Soon, they couldn’t buy any
more raw materials to manufacture Wonder Widgets or make their payroll.
Instantly profitable Wonder Widget Co. was insolvent six months after they
opened the doors.
On the surface,
it’s hard to see how something like this could happen to a profitable and
growing business. But when you dig a little deeper, it becomes clear that
there’s a whole lot more to running a successful business than just profits and
growth—namely, cash flow.
The Cash Flow Cycle
Understanding
what happened to Wonder Widget Co. starts by understanding what’s known as the
cash flow cycle. This is the time lag that exists between when cash is paid out
by the business for things like equipment, raw materials and salaries and when
accounts receivable are collected. In manufacturing, the cycle usually consists
of converting cash into raw materials, finished goods, receivables, and then
back to cash again.
At the beginning
of the cash flow cycle, nearly every business starts out with—you guessed
it—cash. But from that point on, the central purpose of the business is to
convert that cash into other kinds of assets or to leverage or extend it with
liabilities, and ultimately to turn it back into cash again—but this time, more
cash than the business started with. This process continues indefinitely and
simultaneously throughout the life of a business.
When the company
started up, its first activities revolved around setup—renting facilities, getting phones and utilities installed,
etc. At the same time, it was purchasing assets
so it could start operations. These included office equipment, computers and
the like. Of course, the company also needed employees to answer phones, run the office, and produce and sell
Wonder Widgets. The owners financed some of these costs, but obtained credit via bank loans to cover most of
them.
With all this in
place, the company was ready to begin production,
or the manufacture of Wonder Widgets. Unfortunately, the process consumed even
more cash: wages, taxes, sales and marketing, more raw materials, and so on. In
fact, this is the period of greatest cash consumption for most companies, as
they are in full production mode but no cash is coming in yet.
Finally, Wonder
Widgets was ready to sell its
products and begin the process of recovering all the cash it has been spending
(or investing) in the business. However, while sales were brisk, they were made
on “net-30” day terms, which means the company won’t actually receive cash from
these sales for another 30 to 45 days, at least.
To add to the
challenge, growing sales means the company had to buy more raw materials than
they did the first time around. Since they were selling more each month than
the prior month, they needed to not only replace inventories consumed but also
buy additional goods to satisfy their growing sales demand. Purchases can actually
exceed sales in such a fast-growing environment.
Collections are the final step in the process. While
this might seem like a minor activity in comparison to production or sales,
it’s actually the most critical task in making every other step pay off.
Unfortunately, it’s the step that many businesses, including Wonder Widgets,
neglect—and that leads to their ultimate demise.
Don’t Give It Away
Are you starting
to see how Wonder Widgets failed despite having strong profits and sales right
out of the gate? Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari and Chuck E. Cheese
Restaurants, put it this way: A sale is a
gift to the customer until the money is in the bank. This final step is the
one that turns the entire effort—setup, purchasing assets, hiring employees,
obtaining credit, and producing and selling products—back into cash again.
At this point,
the answers to some important questions will begin to surface, like: Did the
company ultimately make a profit on its business activities? Did it plan
adequately for the working capital it would need to finance the cash flow cycle
in it’s entirety? As the Wonder Widget story makes clear, answering “yes” to
just the first question isn’t enough to ensure business survival. There are three
key takeaways from this story:
1. Fast growth is a double-edge sword. Fast-growing companies need more working
capital than those growing more slowly or not at all. When incoming cash flow
is delayed while fixed costs continue and paydays come every week, there’s a
limit to how long a company can operate comfortably, even if it’s profitable.
2. Cash flow needs must be forecasted
months in advance. This
is especially critical during the early months of a startup. And cash flow
results must be tracked separately from profits.
3. Business goes with the flow. The health of a business depends on the
health of its cash flow. As Wonder Widget Co. makes clear, more businesses fail
due to a lack of cash flow than a lack of profits.
Referred by: http://donsadlerwriter.com
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About the Author: Gene Siciliano RSS for Gene's articles - Visit Gene's website Gene Siciliano is the author of “Financial Mastery for the Career Teacher” (Corwin, 2010). Gene is an author, speaker and financial consultant who works with CEOs and managers to achieve greater financial success in a dramatically changing economy. Learn more at www.genesiciliano.com. For book ordering information, including bulk sales, please contact TJ Adams at tj.adams@corwin.com. Click here to visit Gene's website Accounts Receivable Collections How to Get LatePaying Customers To Pay On Time The Business Case for Open Book Management SWOT Analysis How to Avoid the Really Big Mistakes A New Years Resolution Five Small Business Mistakes to Avoid in 2010 Eight Key Budgeting Tips |
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