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Visual Aids

What's the best way to present your projected income and expenses? Our Financial Management Expert shows you how.
June 5, 2000
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/28856

Q: How do I project my income and expenses? Can I present them in a graphic form?

A: First you take a crystal ball.no, just kidding! Projecting income and expenses is part science, and part fortune telling. The more data you have from past years, the easier it is to make projections. But much of projecting, or budgeting, is a guess.

Do you have a computerized accounting program? If not, get one! I recommend MYOB or Quick Books Pro. Use the budgeting function-look in the "Chart of Accounts" menu-to record your numbers and generate the reports.

When you create a budget:

Be sure to make notes to yourself as you develop your projections. In the future, when you're comparing actual data to your budgeted figures, and you may wonder why you budgeted what you did. The notes will jog your memory.

I love graphs! I'm a bit dyslexic, and I have a hard time looking at columns of tiny numbers. Graphs help make the numbers and the financial relationships much easier to read. When it comes to sales, up is good, down is bad. With a graph, you can make the expenses red and sales blue, and present the data side by side. Cool, huh?


Learn More
  • Creating a financial plan lets you control your business's cash flow...instead of it controlling you. Check out "Building A Financial Budget."


Author Ellen Rohr nearly starved in her family's small contracting business-until she learned how to manage money. "Do what you love, certainly," she says, "but the money won't just take care of itself." Ellen's pricey college education didn't prepare her for real-world business. "Financial business basics aren't that difficult.but where do you learn them? Unfortunately, business literacy isn't taught in school. I teach the basics and take the mystery out of making money." Ellen's mission as an author, columnist and seminar leader is to help people make a living doing what they love.


The opinions expressed in this column are those of the author, not of Entrepreneur.com. All answers are intended to be general in nature, without regard to specific geographical areas or circumstances, and should only be relied upon after consulting an appropriate expert, such as an attorney or accountant.