Financial Management

Cashflow and Budget in Small Business Workshop

David Balwin:

So what you are going to do here is that you are projecting out for the next 12 months when you think your cash will come in. Budgets also tend to be static so once you have set your budget up you don’t normally don’t change it for the year. What you then try and do is try to explain variations between what has actually occurred and what was budgeted for – you don’t simply change the budget to reflect what the actual is. So you should be able to explain why there is a variance between budget and actual. And that explanation, the better that explanation is the better you will be able to manage the process.

This one here, as I said you can project out where you are going to go for the next 12 months, and then you can work out which month you are going to be short of cash and which months you think you will have surplus cash. That becomes really important – and with cashflow you do adjust it month to month. So, month one which will normally be July, at the end of July, you go back and you actually but in the actual for July. Update your cashflow for July, because then you might then come back and say “Well July was suppose to be super month but it has been a terrible month I’d better start looking at the cashflow for the other months and start adjusting them to reflect what is really going to happen.” And so it means you keep updating all the time to reflect where it’s at. And over a two or three year period, your cashflow should get more and more sophisticated and more and more relevant to what actually really happens. The first time you do it you can be all over the place – sometimes it’s hard to predict what’s going to happen over a twelve month period of time.

Now Dan, if you had a really really cold winter, you might find it’s down twenty percent more than what you anticipated but if you have an incredibly mild winter, you might be up fifteen to twenty percent on what you anticipated and that’s not necessarily easy to measure year to year as we all know what the weather is like time to time.

Ok, what’s a budget look like. As I said a budget is basically reflects your profit and loss. So it doesn’t have those, like if you purchase a car or take out a loan those don’t appear here at all. Purely looking at your sales, your cost of goods sold, and what your expenses are and then coming to a profit at the end of the month. And then you just carry forward your profit to the end of the year until we see where your profit is. You can vary these to reflect what’s relevant to your business.

Who here sells more than one product? Fair few OK. Up there, it just has open stock and in this case you may or may not have stock depending on what type of product you sell, but the relevance is how much detail should your budget go to? I would suggest most small businesses don’t go deep enough. If you showed fifty thousand dollars profit at the end of the year, are you going to be happy. In the main – Yes – You’d think that was a pretty fair result. Question being is – you wouldn’t because fifty thousand is not going to get you much of a house – but you might want a million dollars activity. But what I’m getting at though is if you’ve got six products you want to know how each one of those is going. Because if you have three products that are doing super well and generating that profit but if the other three are actually making a loss, they’re actually holding you back and you are actually better off getting rid of those three and probably make an eighty to ninety thousand dollar profit. But if all you’re recording is at the top level – just “sales” in general – it doesn’t give you enough detail. Now if you take a software package like MYOB or Quickbooks (actually I’m not quite sure about Quickbooks) but I certainly know MYOB does, they have categories – they have things called “categories” and “jobs”. So you can allocate a job to a particular sale. So that job might be “Yellow Lollies” and you might have another job called “Blue Lollies” – or Kathy, you may have things like “office stationery” then you might have “furniture and fittings” or “furniture” and something else, so you actually look at each one of those as a job so you can generate a little profit and loss and a little budget on each one of those and see how each of your main product lines is actually performing against budget. And then you can bring that together in terms of total budget. But really, if you do have a number of products, you do really need to go down to that level. It’s not good enough to simply – and Dan, it’s the same with you mate, if you’re selling six different physical education programs – fitness things, then you want to know how each one is performing. Is it giving you the return you expected it would – and if it’s not then you either have to go back and revamp it or look at dropping it and getting rid of it. But if you’re simply saying “oh, I’ve got three thousand for the month – that’s a good month because I got that in”, you really could be saying “well really it’s actually a terrible month – if I actually got rid of the rubbish you could actually be making five thousand”.

Craig:

So somebody like me where it is all my time, that would be my hourly rate.

David:

Yes – but when you say “it’s all my time”, tell me some more.

Craig:

I’ve obviously got other expenses that are included like wages and things like that, but if you broke it down to each individual one, like I could actually bring that down to hourly rates after – what do you think? I don’t actually have a product, but if you say “service is a product”.

Scott:

If, are you doing a lot of this service that is quicker, easier more profitable or are you bogged down in hard stuff which takes you longer which you’re not charging – so you know what I mean? You are still charging the same hourly rate for that as opposed to that?

Craig:

No they’re all different hourly rates.

DeWet:

Have you got your’s boken down into carpet cleaning, lawn mowing …

David:

Each one of those is a product in its own right and you need to cost that in terms of revenue, expenses and revenue individually. You are obviously going to have overheads that are spread across, just for example, the electricity in this room, you can’t really say that belongs to sales or it belongs to marketing, you have to say, ok that’s an overhead we have to spread across everyone, you might do that by floor space – so if you have X floor space at a certain percentage, this one here’s floor space – you just have work out how you allocate overhead cost. Insurance – I mean, once you have taken out insurance for the year, it really doesn’t matter if your sales are a million dollars a year or ten million, you’re still a thousand dollars a year insurance, so you just split that accordingly. Does that make sense? So whatever you do – if you’ve got carpet cleaning if you have mowing, each one of those you need to determine what revenues should come in from each of those because if you, for example, mowing – if you do three hours mowing and that generates X dollars, but you could actually spend that time doing carpet cleaning generating X + Y – which one should you be doing?

Craig:

Carpet Cleaning

David:

Correct. And that is why you have to get that split to see which one is viable and which one’s not or how you do the combination to give you the best result. That makes sense?

So at the end of here we’re going to come to a profit and loss each month and we’ve just said if that’s the case, if you make a loss, you work out why – you go back to individual things.

Balanix Solutions – Accountant, Business Advisor, Bookkeeping.

Situated in Strathpine on Brisbane North, we partner with our clients to assist them in their accounting, business management and bookkeeping needs. Our clients vary in industries from professional services (such as law, vet and dentist) to the trades (mechanic, bricklaying, plasterer etc), hospitality and retail. Are clients are located in the Pine Rivers area (including Brendale, Lawnton, Albany Creek and Eatons Hill) through to Kallangur, Petrie, North Lakes and Caboolture, as well as Brisbane South, the Gold Coast and various other parts of Queensland.

Call us today … we can help (07 3264 4783)

Big Gains in Your Loss – Don’t let it happen

David Balwin FCPA Accountant Business Advisor

David Balwin
FCPA | Accountant
Business Advisor

Just recently I had the experience of having to go to my bank and have my credit card changed due to a number of small suspect transactions showing up on a regular basis. First it started with one or two $2 to $3 dollar transactions a week or so apart, then a couple of days apart and then the amount increased to around $10 per transaction.

A little bit of detective work confirmed my initial fears. I simply copied the wording from my credit card statement for a suspect payment and search on the internet. And yes surprise, surprise one of the transactions showed up a common suspect transaction. With this ammunition I headed off to my bank to have things checked out in more detail.

In reviewing my account some of these transactions went back close to 12 months.

Gone are the old days of gangs taking high risks and robbing banks for $’000s which the authorities took seriously. Today, the criminals are not seen and very hard to identify and steal small amounts from thousands of people. Why this is so appealing to them is that they can operate off-shore with little chance of detection let alone conviction and reap millions on an ongoing basis. Funnily enough they often don’t see themselves as criminals as they don’t believe the individual they are “stealing” from lose out as the bank refunds them the money.

They seem to conveniently forget if the bank has to take out insurance that cost is eventually borne by the customers of the bank or the shareholders of the insurance company. In reality there is no such thing as a victimless crime.

This type of crime is unlikely to go away as banks have heavily committed to the internet as a way of reducing costs by having customers do the work that tellers use to do. Also banks may be reluctant to be open about the cost of this type of crime as it would highlight potentially just how big the issue is and as a consequence lower customer confidence in the internet.

The lesson for small business is to ensure that you regularly check your accounts for unusual transactions and report them to your bank.

Remember the old saying “look after the pence (cents) and the pounds (dollars) look after themselves”.

Balanix Solutions – Accountant, Business Advisor, Bookkeeping.

Situated in Strathpine on Brisbane North, we partner with our clients to assist them in their accounting, business management and bookkeeping needs. Our clients vary in industries from professional services (such as law, vet and dentist) to the trades (mechanic, bricklaying, plasterer etc), hospitality and retail. Are clients are located in the Pine Rivers area (including Brendale, Lawnton, Albany Creek and Eatons Hill) through to Kallangur, Petrie, North Lakes and Caboolture, as well as Brisbane South, the Gold Coast and various other parts of Queensland.

It’s About the Investment-Not the Tax

"David Balwin

David Balwin
CPA | Accountant | Business Advisor

I am forever hearing small business complaining about the tax they pay and asking how to reduce their liability.  I find this very interesting as if these business owners spent as much time focusing on increasing revenue then the tax issue would not be such a focus.

I agree  …  No one likes to pay tax … but at the end of the day Government needs taxes to fund services to the community like police, education, health, roads etc.

The point a lot of small business owners forget is that the main focus of any business decision should be based on the return that the investment is going to provide.  If the investment does not stack up then any potential tax advantages are not worth considering.

I suggest that the first criteria when considering making an investment is – does the opportunity provide a suitable return for the risk you are taking e.g. if you were to invest $100,000 purchasing a business what return would you want to make on your investment.  A simple starting point in considering the return on investment is to look at what would one of the big four banks offer you to invest the money with them – (somewhere between 3% and 5% depending on the period the money was invested for etc).

So, if the bank was offering say 4% with minimal risk, then what is the risk/return you should be seeking from a business that does not have a credit rating, may have little management skills and lack policies.  Maybe a 20 to 30 percent return would not be unreasonable, for if you were not to achieve this type of return would you simply invest your hard earned money in one of the banks or government bonds where risk is low.

Same applies if you are looking to invest in, for example, property.  For example, if you were considering purchasing a commercial unit in Strathpine on Brisbane’s north for say $250,000 you would need to consider the return on investment, tenancy trends, out-goings etc and see how it all stacks up well before considering tax benefits.

Having said this, once you have determined whether the investment is sound from an economic return perspective, then look at how tax can be minimised within the boundaries of the legislation.

The bottom line to any business decision should therefore always focus on expected returns for risk first and only then look at the tax consequences before making a final decision.

www.balanixsolutions.com.au

4 Things to do NOW for your Business

"David Balwin

David Balwin
CPA | Accountant | Business Advisor

With 30 June fast approaching, now is the time for Business Owners to prepare for the next financial year.  Here are the four main activities you need to be doing right now to position your business for another successful year.

1.      Tax Planning

Make an appointment TODAY with your Accountant for Tax Planning.  Tax Planning looks at a financial situation or plan from a tax perspective with the aim to align financial goals with tax efficiency planning. Basically, tax planning looks to discover how to accomplish all of the other elements of a financial plan in the most tax-efficient manner possible.  However, a word of caution – while tax planning is an important element in any financial plan, it is important not to let the “tax” tail wag the financial “dog.” As most financial actions have some tax implications, decisions on financial actions need to be made having regard for all matters and should not be avoided solely on the basis of tax.

Undertaking tax planning now can look at any actions to be undertaken before 30 June as well as actions for the next financial year.  As planning can be a bit involved depending on individual circumstances, give your Accountant a bit of time to do the best job and don’t leave it to the last minute.

2.      Setting Next Year’s Goals and Targets

Now is the time to start reviewing your business plan.  If it is sitting in a draw (or on the computer) and hasn’t seen light of day for awhile, get it out, dust it off and have a look at what was planned for the business this financial year and what was achieved.  Did things happen as planned?  Were goals and targets met (or exceeded)?  Did projected costs occurred or did they blow-out or result in savings?

Looking at this information, it is now time to update the business plan for the next 12 months.  What goals and targets need to be set?  What timeframes need to be identified for actions to achieve goals?  What research and reviews need to be undertaken in relation to improvement of costs (eg, can you get a better deal on telephone accounts or stationery/office supplies)?

Planning is a vital exercise for all businesses.  It underpins decisions and behaviours as a road map to achieve what you have set out to achieve.

3.      Setting Next Year’s Budget and Cashflow Projections

CASH IS KING  – the mantra for all business owners.  If the business is not making money then it shouldn’t be in business.  But more than that, the business needs to make enough money at the right time to cover expenses.  Now is the time to use the information at hand to set the business’s budget for the next financial year and look at cashflow projections so you know how much money needs to be in the bank and when to pay the bills.

4.      Ensuring Pricing of Goods and Services is Right

This is also the perfect time to review the revenue side of the business.  Look at the pricing of your goods or services and see if any changes need to be made over the next financial year.  Are you competitive with your prices compared to your competitors?  Does CPI increases need to be factored in?  Are your prices positioning you in the market where you want to be?

No matter how hard a business tries, if it has increasing costs and is not able to increase price, then no amount of increased sales will lead to increase profitability – in fact, the business maybe simply increasing its loss.  For more information on this topic, refer my previous Blog – Increase Price –v- Increase Sales – what to think about.

Call the Balanix Team (3264 4783) today – we can help!

8 Bad Money Habits to Kick – Final 2

"David Balwin

David Balwin
CPA | Accountant | Business Advisor

Welcome to the final blog in which we look at 8 money habits business owners should make sure are NOT occurring in their business.

Funding Tax liabilities at the last moment.

All business owners are certain of two things  ….  Cashflow will  have ebbs and flows and there is always a tax liability in some shape or form.

Depending on the nature and size of the business various tax obligations and liabilities may apply.  There is company tax, goods and services tax (GST), payroll tax to name but a few.

Unfortunately, some business do not plan for these liabilities and find themselves stressed and unsure where to find the money when the taxman comes knocking.

Like all good business practices, plan the business’s tax obligations and set up a process of putting the money away on an ongoing basis so it is there when payment is due.  If need be, set up specific bank accounts for GST and long term liabilities so the money goes out of sight thereby reducing risk of spending by accident.

Saving what’s left after paying everyone else.

Debts have to be paid.  Businesses need to establish good credit profiles in order to maintain good suppliers and financial arrangements.  With cashflow in and required cashflow out not always dancing in harmony, business owners need to save along the way to ensure adequate funds when needed.  Set a percentage of income to be saved on a regular basis and don’t rely on scraps if and when there maybe some.  Also, manage the payment of bills ensuring they are paid on time but not necessarily the minute they come through the door.  Budgeting and forecasting is another tool to stay on top of cashflow and the financial health of the business.

Need help – Call me today – 07 3264 4783