How to Better Manage Your Cash Flow
These four steps will help you keep track of the money coming in and out of your growing company.
December 11, 2003
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/moneymanagement/managingcashflow/article66008.html
Cash is king when it comes to the financial management of a
growing company. The lag between the time you have to pay your
suppliers and employees and the time you collect from your
customers is the problem, and the solution is cash flow management.
At its simplest, cash flow management means delaying outlays of
cash as long as possible while encouraging anyone who owes you
money to pay it as rapidly as possible.
Measuring Cash
Flow
Prepare cash flow projections for next year, next quarter and, if
you're on shaky ground, next week. An accurate cash flow
projection can alert you to trouble well before it strikes.
Understand that cash flow plans are not glimpses into the
future. They're educated guesses that balance a number of
factors, including your customers' payment histories, your own
thoroughness at identifying upcoming expenditures, and your
vendors' patience. Watch out for assuming without justification
that receivables will continue coming in at the same rate they have
recently, that payables can be extended as far as they have in the
past, that you have included expenses such as capital improvements,
loan interest and principal payments, and that you have accounted
for seasonal sales fluctuations.
Start your cash flow projection by adding cash on hand at the
beginning of the period with other cash to be received from various
sources. In the process, you will wind up gathering information
from salespeople, service representatives, collections, credit
workers and your finance department. In all cases, you'll be
asking the same question: How much cash in the form of customer
payments, interest earnings, service fees, partial collections of
bad debts, and other sources are we going to get in, and when?
The second part of making accurate cash flow projections is
detailed knowledge of amounts and dates of upcoming cash outlays.
That means not only knowing when each penny will be spent, but on
what. Have a line item on your projection for every significant
outlay, including rent, inventory (when purchased for cash),
salaries and wages, sales and other taxes withheld or payable,
benefits paid, equipment purchased for cash, professional fees,
utilities, office supplies, debt payments, advertising, vehicle and
equipment maintenance and fuel, and cash dividends.
"As difficult as it is for a business owner to prepare
projections, it's one of the most important things one can
do," says accountant Steve Mayer. "Projections rank next
to business plans and mission statements among things a business
must do to plan for the future."
Improving
Receivables
If you got paid for sales the instant you made them, you would
never have a cash flow problem. Unfortunately, that doesn't
happen, but you can still improve your cash flow by managing your
receivables. The basic idea is to improve the speed with which you
turn materials and supplies into products, inventory into
receivables, and receivables into cash. Here are specific
techniques for doing this:
- Offer discounts to customers who pay their bills rapidly.
- Ask customers to make deposit payments at the time orders are
taken.
- Require credit checks on all new noncash customers.
- Get rid of old, outdated inventory for whatever you can
get.
- Issue invoices promptly and follow up immediately if payments
are slow in coming.
- Track accounts receivable to identify and avoid slow-paying
customers. Instituting a policy of cash on delivery (c.o.d.) is an
alternative to refusing to do business with slow-paying
customers.
Managing
Payables
Top-line sales growth can conceal a lot of problems-sometimes too
well. When you are managing a growing company, you have to watch
expenses carefully. Don't be lulled into complacency by simply
expanding sales. Any time and any place you see expenses growing
faster than sales, examine costs carefully to find places to cut or
control them. Here are some more tips for using cash wisely:
- Take full advantage of creditor payment terms. If a payment is
due in 30 days, don't pay it in 15 days.
- Use electronic funds transfer to make payments on the last day
they are due. You will remain current with suppliers while
retaining use of your funds as long as possible.
- Communicate with your suppliers so they know your financial
situation. If you ever need to delay a payment, you'll need
their trust and understanding.
- Carefully consider vendors' offers of discounts for earlier
payments. These can amount to expensive loans to your suppliers, or
they may provide you with a change to reduce overall costs. The
devil is in the details.
- Don't always focus on the lowest price when choosing
suppliers. Sometimes more flexible payment terms can improve your
cash flow more than a bargain-basement price.
Surviving
Shortfalls
Sooner or later, you will foresee or find yourself in a situation
where you lack the cash to pay your bills. This doesn't mean
you're a failure as a businessperson-you're a normal
entrepreneur who can't perfectly predict the future. And there
are normal, everyday business practices that can help you manage
the shortfall.
The key to managing cash shortfalls is to become aware of the
problem as early and as accurately as possible. Banks are wary of
borrowers who have to have money today. They'd much prefer
lending to you before you need it, preferably months before. When
the reason you are caught short is that you failed to plan, a
banker is not going to be very interested in helping you out.
If you assume from the beginning that you will someday be short
on cash, you can arrange for a line of credit at your bank. This
allows you to borrow money up to a preset limit any time you need
it. Since it's far easier to borrow when you don't need it,
arranging a credit line before you are short is vital.
If bankers won't help, turn next to your suppliers. These
people are more interested in keeping you going than a banker, and
they probably know more about your business. You can often get
extended terms from suppliers that amount to a hefty, low-cost loan
just by asking. That's especially true if you've been a
good customer in the past and kept them informed about your
financial situation.
Consider using factors. These are financial service businesses
that can pay you today for receivables you may not otherwise be
able to collect on for weeks or months. You'll receive as much
as 15 percent less than you would otherwise, since factors demand a
discount, but you'll eliminate the hassle of collecting and be
able to fund current operations without borrowing.
Ask your best customers to accelerate payments. Explain the
situation and, if necessary, offer a discount of a percentage point
or two off the bill. You should also go after your worst
customers-those whose invoices are more than 90 days past due.
Offer them a steeper discount if they pay today.
You may be able to raise cash by selling and leasing back assets
such as machinery, equipment, computers, phone systems and even
office furniture. Leasing companies may be willing to perform the
transactions. It's not cheap, however, and you could lose your
assets if you miss lease payments.
Choose the bills you'll pay carefully. Don't just pay
the smallest ones and let the rest slide. Make payroll first-unpaid
employees will soon be ex-employees. Pay crucial suppliers next.
Ask the rest if you can skip a payment or make a partial
payment.
Excerpted from Growing
Your Business
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