Too many businesses wait until a crisis occurs before they start to focus on improving their financial management. Often, by that time, it can be too late. By setting aside an hour now to evaluate
strengths and weaknesses of your company's financial management activities and systems you can save a lot of time and aggravation. It can also help increase your profits, and at
end of
day that is what it is all about. The following are five strategies that will help you start to build a strong financial foundation and build value in your company.
1. Set up a financial control system
The first thing you need to start with is a control system so that there is consistency in your process and procedures. A control system is designed to prevent and detect errors in your daily activities. For example, is there is a standard way of processing your receivables, payables and inventory? If there are no standard guidelines to follow, there is probably no control system.
2. Have daily access to your account information
Make sure that you can access your account information every day; it is invaluable to managing your cash effectively. With most banks providing internet access at a reasonable cost, there is no reason not to have instant access to account information.
3. Manage your cash components
Concentrate on managing your three main cash components: accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory.
Let's take a look at each component:
Accounts Receivable
Make sure your credit and collection system is working efficiently. Any excess investment in accounts receivable increases
need to borrow more money to avoid a cash flow deficit. That means that if you are carrying excess receivables you are probably carrying excess debt and you have a direct cost of having to carry that extra debt in interest payments. Even if you finance
receivables through internal equity, there is still an indirect cost;
opportunity cost of using that equity elsewhere which could include expanding your inventory to increase sales, reducing debt or earning interest on cash balances.
Your accounts receivable collection period defines
relationship with
cash flow process. Every month you should be calculating your collection period and comparing with previous periods and relating those results to industry averages. Any material differences should be investigated.
Your credit policy can influence your cash flow and earnings. Longer credit terms can increase sales and earnings, but any decision to offer more liberal terms requires an estimate of
trade-off between
cost of
larger investment in accounts receivable and
bottom-line benefits of a higher sales volume. Remember that increasing your credit terms will bring in less credit worthy customers which can increase your bad debt expense. You can, however, use price increases to offset more liberal credit terms.
When you develop a receivable policy, consider
following:
.Check
financial health of customers before offering them credit. Consider obtaining cash on
first order. .Do not make your invoice terms too generous. .Charge interest to customers who pay late. .Give discounts for early payment. .If you are offering discounts,
terms should be attractive enough to encourage customers to take
discount. This can also serve as an early warning signal; if a customer doesn't take
discount, or all of a sudden stops taking
discount, then you may want to investigate further before extending credit as it could be a sign of financial trouble. .Do not wait longer than 30 days for a late payment before you take action; you need to minimize your company's exposure to bad credit. Put it into dollar terms, if you have a $1,000 bad debt write-off and a 10% profit margin, you need to generate an addition $10,000 in sales just to make it back.
Inventory
First, keep in mind that because of carrying costs such as warehousing and insurance it is more expensive to carry inventory than to carry accounts receivable. That is, reducing an investment in inventory provides you a larger bottom-line benefit than a comparable reduction in accounts receivable because you are also reducing
carrying costs.
As with your receivables, it is important to complete a monthly analysis of average inventory held in days. Compare to previous months and industry averages and investigate any material difference or change.