Cashflow
vs. Profitability
The first step toward an improved business environment is
stepping out of denial with a deep sigh of relief as you
begin to use new found energy to fix the problems instead
of mask them. We all have ways of talking about specific
situations that make them a bit more palatable.
One example we see frequently goes like this: "We been
having some cashflow difficulty." By definition, cashflow
difficulties are rare. If your cashflow difficulties are
recurring, what you really are struggling with is profitability,
not cashflow. That's a very important distinction.
Very profitable firms can have an occasional bout with cashflow
disease. For instance, a client might withhold payment on
a large bill; a major project might have to be scrapped;
or a key person might leave the firm.
On the other hand, firms that consistently struggle with
cashflow cannot, by definition, be profitable in any real
sense. But we talk about "cashflow difficulties"
because that phrasing makes it seem like we are being tossed
by the vagaries of the marketplace, as if somehow this is
a problem that is out of our control.
And there seems to be little connection between volume of
work and cashflow struggles. Some of the clients we help
are terribly busy but still not profitable. Those are often
the firms that have misunderstood marketing (marketing is
about control, not growth).
Why is this important? Back to the original point. Unless
you admit that the core problem is profitability, you'll
make unwise decisions about cashflow. That might mean incurring
fixed obligations when you can't afford themjust to get
out of the immediate crunch (credit line abuse; leases for
depreciating assets; etc.--see the white paper at www.recourses.com).
Here's
a suggestion. Don't manage your business based on cash in
the bank. It's important to have it (at least two month's
worth of overhead), but it's an indicator far to close to
the events at hand to provide any meaningful information
on the health of your business. Think of measuring cash
as measuring how hungry you are at any given moment. One
cheeseburger will fix it, at least temporarily.
And
don't even pay too much attention to your income statement,
either. It's a much better indicator of your health (if
it's on an accrual basis), but it still gives you information
about recent, short periods of data. And it doesn't fully
account for what you do with the money once you get it.
Think
of measuring profitability as getting on the scale to check
your weight. If you had asupersized drink with that cheeseburger,
you are going to weigh two pounds extra, whether it was
water or 250 calories of drippy sweet cola.
The slowest moving...and most accurate...method of measuring
your health is to look at your balance sheet. Like nothing
else, this accounts for nearly all of the decisions you've
made. More specifically, compare your equity (assets minus
liabilities) every quarter and chart it for comparison purposes.
Look at the direction of movement, not the speed of movement.
Think of this as measuring your body fat or taking a treadmill
test. One cheeseburger won't affect it, but a bunch of them
will.
So
you've read this far and buy the argument. You are busy,
your clients love what you do for them, but you're ready
to join Cashflowers Anonymous and admit that the problem
is deeper.
Don't you dare reach for that "raise our hourly rate"
button! If you want to position yourself higher in the marketplace,
raise your rates. But that's another subject.
If you want to make more money, though, quit subsidizing
clients and start charging what it really takes to get the
job done. Until you fix that, you'll be forever plagued
with a problem that should be rare.
This article was written by ReCourses. For more information
check out www.recourses.com