The Financial 14 Checklist

     Financial management is about your performance, the results you produce, and the numbers you use to quantify your activities.  As the financial manager of your company—whether you are the CEO, the CFO, the VP-Finance or Treasurer—you are going to interact with all other areas of the business:  operations, personnel, marketing, production, and administration.

     You will play a key role in setting goals and measuring progress towards achieving those goals.  If the company fails to meet its corporate objectives, you will be called upon to help understand what went wrong and to suggest solutions to fix the problem.

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Soapy Water and Accounting Controls

Imagine for a moment that your car is really dirty, so you’ve decided to wash your car, and you’re going to do it by hand. You gather everything you need–soap, bucket, sponge, chamois cloth–and head out to the hose. You squirt some soap into the bucket, turn on the hose and start to fill up the bucket with water. When the bucket is full, you turn off the water, take the bucket over to the car and start to wash away the dirt.

You start by cleaning off the trunk and, when you have washed all the dirt away, you go to dip your sponge in the bucket of water, only to find that the bucket is empty! It was full just a minute ago–what happened?

Well, unknown to you, the bucket has a hole in it. The hole is not easy for you to see, but it’s large enough to cause all the water to drain out in a short period of time. What do you do now? Your car is still dirty and you don’t have any soapy water to clean it with.

If you had taken the time to inspect the bucket before you started, you would have noticed the hole, and you could have fixed it or bought a new bucket before you started so you wouldn’t be left without any soapy water when you wanted to wash your car.

Let’s take this lesson and see how it applies to your business. Perhaps you want to buy a new piece of equipment, or buy some extra inventory to take advantage of supplier discounts. You’ve had some pretty good sales lately, and by your reckoning, there should be a healthy balance in your cash account. So you make all the purchase arrangements and, on the day payment is due, you go to the make out a check for the payment. You open your checkbook and–wait a minute–where did all the money go?

There should be a lot of money in the account. After all, you’ve been steadily filling up the account with cash from sales, just like you filled up the bucket with soapy water. But, just as the water disappeared from the bucket of soapy water, when you went to use the cash, it was all gone. What happened? Looks like you had a hole in your cash account. You couldn’t see it, but it was large enough to cause the cash to drain out when you weren’t looking.

What do you do now? You still need the equipment or inventory, but you don’t have any cash to pay for it.

If you had taken the time to inspect the cash balance on a regular basis, and if you had proper accounting controls in place, you would have noticed the hole, and you could have fixed it before all of your cash was gone, and you wouldn’t be left without cash when you needed to buy more assets for your business.

The point is that there are a lot of ways to lose money. When we consider overall financial management, we typically think of a loss as something that occurs when our costs exceed our revenues. But you can also lose money–and a lot of it–if you don’t have proper accounting controls in place, and if you don’t do an inspection every now and then to make sure the controls are working.

So, if you haven’t done so lately, call your accountant and ask them to come over and take a look at your internal systems, procedures and controls. Make sure you don’t have any leaks and, if you do, plug them up right away. That way, the next time you go to pay for an asset, you can be certain that your account has exactly the amount of cash that you thought it did.

And who knows? If you get a really good deal on that purchase, you can use the savings to take your automobile to a car wash so you don’t have to clean it by hand.

Finance Made Easy – Website Review

     To so many people, finance seems to be a very complicated subject. In reality, the basic concepts are not that hard to grasp, and once you understand the basics, financial products and topics are much easier to understand.

     The problem is that most financial types don’t speak plain English.. They tend to rely on jargon and buzzwords that only those who deal with finance on a daily basis are familiar with and understand. Fortunately, Michael Fischer has set up a website that has many short and easy to understand videos that explain an impressive array of financial topics. Best of all, Michael explains the subject in plain English. Watch the video below, which explains the concept of financial leverage, and see if you don’t agree.

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10 Tips for Creating Strategic Advantage

  1. Identify the key people or talent groups you need for your strategy to work.
  2. Adopt the practice of questioning and challenging the analyses and findings of groups that have worked in an area for a long time.
  3. Think like your competitors. If you were to compete against you, what would you do?
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Take New Jobs for a Test Drive

     Here’s an interesting idea I just read in a recent issue of Tips From the Top, the newsletter published by The Advisory Board, a small business management consulting firm.  The tip was suggested by Randy Smith, of FORUM Systems Group in San Antonio, Texas:

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Now is Not the Time to Be Under-Capitalized

     This post was written by my good friend, George Walden II, a principal in the Houston office of Corporate Finance Associates. George has extensive experience as a middle-market investment banker, having successfully completed more than thirty transactions worth over $150 million.

     George is an excellent source of realistic yet practical advice on corporate finance. So read on to learn what George has to say about capitalization in these difficult economic times.

     During the last period of economic boom many companies expanded through debt financing. The logic was if one machine is making money then adding three machines will make three times the money. As long as the economy was strong and margins remained high this was viewed as good thinking. After all, even if the economy dropped, the value of the equipment, even leveraged, would be equity that could be used to raise capital in a downturn.

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Need More Time? 15 Time Management Tips

Do you wish there were more hours in the day?  Just can’t find the time to get things done?  Or does it always seem that you only manage to get done the little things but can’t find time to get done what is really important?

Don’t be too hard on yourself — time management is hard for everyone.  But there’s hope.  I found an excellent website that contains a tremendous amount of free information on how to master the art of time management.  The site is very well laid out and easy to navigate.  In fact, I found myself going from one article to another and was surprised to find out how long I had been on the site reading article after article.

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Why Small Businesses Fail – 4 of 4

This is the final post in a four part series of posts that summarize an article that first appeared in the March 1982 Small Business Report.  This is what was discussed in the previous posts:

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Why Small Businesses Fail – 3 of 4

This is part three of a four part series of posts that summarize an article that first appeared in the March 1982 Small Business Report.  In the first article (click here to read Article 1) I focused on financial pitfalls and excessive optimism as two of the many causes for small business failure.  In the second post (click here to read the second article) I discussed the inability to change and rapid growth as two more reasons that small businesses fail.

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Why Small Businesses Fail – 2 of 4

This is part two of a four part series of posts that summarize an article that first appeared in the March 1982 Small Business Report.  I believe this publication is not being published anymore, but if you should know of this magazine and either its online or actual contact information, please let me know so I can give proper attribution. 

The first post in this series focused on financial pitfalls and excessive optimisim as two of the causes for small business failure.  In this post we will talk about inability to change and rapid growth.

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