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Business Owner Report Card Diane Kennedy, CPA The course Understanding Financial Statements teaches you how to read your standard financial statements: Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss and Statement of Cash Flows. This knowledge helps you determine how your business is doing. But how are you doing as the owner? This section is about the measurements that assess how well you are using the assets you have. A great book about this is, “The Ultimate Blueprint” by Keith Cunningham. To learn more about being a better business manager, pick it up. Effectiveness How effective are you at converting your assets into sales? The effectiveness ratio will give you that answer. But let’s start with another question. Who has the better business: The guy with $100 in assets or the guy with $100,000 in assets? Well, if you’re measuring how effective he is as a manager, the answer is “it depends.” If the sales are exactly the same between the $100 business and the $100,000 business, then the smaller asset value is better. © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 1 The effectiveness ratio is calculated by dividing the gross sales by the total assets. Gross sales / Total assets If the total asset amount is more, than your ratio will be lower. But let’s look at this without all the math. If you have a lot of assets, we want to see how good you are at turning that into cash. The first step of that is sales. If you are able to run a lean ship, without a lot tied up into assets, you have the ability to scale much faster. If it takes $100,000 to make $100,000, you’ll have to save up or borrow to get another location started. However, if it takes $100, than you could start a new location every month. Assets include cash, inventory, machinery, equipment and furniture. If you dump a lot of money into inventory that just sits there, your assets are higher. That means your effectiveness ratio goes down. Makes sense. You have a lot of inefficiencies there. You could also build up useless assets by buying fancy office furniture. I’ve seen that happen before when companies start growing. The money goes into things that don’t help the business, just the owner’s ego. Stay efficient and check this ratio at least quarterly to make sure you are properly managing your assets. When we’re done with the other ratios, I’ll go through suggestions on what you can do to improve this ratio. © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 2 Efficiency How efficiently are you running your business? How much net profit do you have available to you, after the expenses are paid from those sales? This is where I take a departure from conventional accounting. As a Tax Strategist, I want you to take advantage of all of the tax breaks you can. If there is a legal benefit that you can take from a company for something you would normally buy with after tax dollars, I’m going to encourage you to have the business take the deduction. But it’s not really a necessary expense for the business. It’s a legal tax deduction, but not really vital for a lean business. That’s where I like to see three categories on a financial statement. These are: Direct – Cost of good sold (COGS) and other expenses directly related to fulfilling on the sale Indirect – Other costs that are associated with your business, but not directly related to the sale. For example, this would be your office rent, computer, desk and the like. These expenses are also called “General & Administrative” and “G & A”. Benefit – These are expenses that are benefits for you. It would include your salary, health insurance, car and other benefits that your business pays for. © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 3 Your Profit & Loss would then look like: Sales COGS Gross Profit $ xxx,xxx ( xx,xxx) $ xx,xxx G&A Owner Benefits ( xx,xxx) ( xx,xxx) Net Income/Loss $ x,xxx For purposes of this calculation, use the Net Income and add back the Owner Benefits. This gives you the true Net Income for the company, without the Owner Benefits. As a Tax Strategist, I want you to take all the deductions you can. But for purposes of determining the true income of your business, the Owner Benefits just distort. The efficiency ratio is: Income / Sales = Efficiency Ratio You can break that down even further: Gross Profit / Sales = Gross Margin As your business grows, you won’t be able to keep all of the numbers in your head. Use these ratios to make sure everything is staying in line, systems are working as they should and you have people you can trust in place. © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 4 Productivity None of this means anything if you don’t have cash. The final ratio uses Operating Cash Flow as a component. This comes from the Statement of Cash Flows, discussed in the Understanding Financial Statements course. Operating Cash Flow / Profit = Productivity How can you make more money in your business? Most people will answer that they need more sales, but when you consider the average small business has 90% cost, the answer is actually different. If you simply reduce your expenses by 11%, you will double your profits. This is a strategy that you can do in 2 months or less, whereas a plan to double your sales could take 6 months or more. Watch your bottomline. If you really want to increase sales, there are five strategies: Increase number of customers/clients Increase the frequency of sales to your customers/clients Increase the price Increase the transaction size Upsell © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 5 To decrease your expenses, examine carefully these problem areas: Cost of goods sold (direct costs) Marketing General & Administration Taxes Business & Personal Non-essentials To increase your cash flow: #1: Reduce the receivable days Set expectation with your clients Enforce the agreement Be proactive early Reward early pay with less expensive perks Take credit cards and Pay Pal #2: Reduce the inventory days Order just in time Take all available discounts Sell obsolete quickly #3: Increase the payable days Negotiate longer periods to pay Take longer to pay (avoiding penalties) Pay bills once per week Next Steps © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 6 Why go to all this trouble? You have a choice with your business. You can treat it like a job. If you don’t do it, it doesn’t get done. You can make a good living, but you’re the one who has to do the work. It’s a tiring way of life. Or you can be a successful business owner. That means you manage the business, working on the business, not in the business. As you grow your business, you need to be able to keep an eye on what is working and what is not. One more thing to consider: The best way to learn about the future is to examine the past. That’s the point of comparing financial statements by period using ratios instead of dollars. None of this works without accurate and timely financial statements. If you don’t currently have a system to produce a monthly financial statement, put that in place soon. Your business will thank you. © Copyright 2015 Virtual Marketing & Sales 7