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A Healthy Business looks like this….

When I examine the financials statements of a business, privately held or public-traded (read: it doesn’t matter if you’re small or big), I look for the follow attributes…..

  1. Consistently increasing revenue – Sales don’t have to be up every year, but the long term trend should indicate consistent upward growth.
  2. Healthy gross margin – This is a tricky one because it’s so unique to the industry. So let’s agree that as a starting point, GM needs to be better than the industry benchmarks. Anemic gross margin could be a sign of significant competitive pressure, or lack of competitive advantage. These situations lead to cut-rate pricing or significant discounting, which is not part of a healthy business.
  3. S, G & A or overhead expenses that are 30-60% of gross margin. Remember that this is before interest, depreciation, and other expenses. There’s quite a range here, because some businesses are more capital intensive than others. Some businesses require constant reinvestment in equipment, facilities, tooling, etc. While other businesses, such as accounting offices, require little capital investment.
  4. A return on equity that is consistently moving upward. This tells me that the business is disciplined. In other words, they have the discipline to keep tamping down overhead expenses, and the foresight to actively reinvest in their business cycle.
  5. Little spending on R&D; and not to be confused with innovation, which is critical to the business growth cycle. The organization must maintain healthy financial results, stave off competition, and grow market share without constantly reinventing themselves, or without relying on the next break through.
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5 Keys to Pricing

What is the best price for your products or services? It isn’t based on how many customers you have, how many salespeople you employ, the standards in your industry — or even what you’ve charged in the past.

Instead the best price is the amount customers will pay that effectively earns your company the maximum profit. In my experience, I’ve found that it’s significantly higher than what you’re charging now.

To help determine the best price for your product, here are five keys to remember:

1.  The ultimate judge of whether your price delivers a superior value is the customer. Are your customers willing to pay more than you’re charging? One tell tale sign is if they’ve been complaining about your high prices. Not one customer, but lots of them. If not, you’re probably not charging the maximum allowable rate (MAR).

2. Managers often make fatal pricing decisions when they misread their competition. Every company and every product has competition, and sometimes it’s not an exact replacement of your product but rather the best alternative. Think driving instead of flying, or watching free fireworks at the city park with a basket of wine and food, instead of booking a table at your restaurant.

3. If you sell through “middle men” to get to the end-users of your products or services, those intermediaries affect your prices because you have to make their margins large enough to motivate them. You must also consider the expenses that intermediaries add, and then make sure they add value to the relationship between you and your customers.

4. How compatible are your products with each other? With your marketing objectives? With sales goals? Pricing is not a stand-alone decision. It must work in concert with everything else you’re trying to achieve.

5. Although the cost of the product is irrelevant to the customer, you shouldn’t ignore the direct and indirect costs. Too many businesses stop with an examination of their gross margin, and don’t parse out the margins on a product by product basis. Adjusting sales price based on the individual product cost, attributes, competition, etc. is a powerful way to increase your bottom line.

Pricing is one of the most dynamic tasks in any business. Be restless, be ruthless if need be, but don’t price it and ignore it.

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Cash flow verses Profit

If you can’t manage the flow of cash in your business, your business is out of control. Control the cash flow and you’ll control your business. I hear new clients talk about not having enough money to make payroll, that’s a cash flow management problem. That’s different from profit. Many businesses have shut down, even though they had a profit on paper, because they had poor cash flow.

It doesn’t matter how big your company is, or how fast your profit (or sales) are growing. If the money isn’t there when you need it, you’re history. So the first step is to understand that profit, as represented on your Profit & Loss statement is a static number. Think of it as a sort of history lesson. By examining your P&L, you will only understand where you’ve been. Cash flow on the other hand, is dynamic, ever changing and always on the move. If profit is like reading the newspaper, cash flow is like watching a movie.

Your P&L tells you how much money you’re spending and receiving and where you’re doing that. Cash flow tells you the same thing, and also when you’re spending and receiving it, or can expect to spend and receive it. That’s the key difference. Forecasting when this flow in and out of your business happens, or will happen, is what a cash flow statement does. A successful business is great at forecasting and also at efficiently managing the flow in and out.

Here’s an example of inefficient, or poor flow management: your customer owes you money on net 15 terms. On day 25, the money hasn’t arrived, on day 30 you send out a statement, on day 45 half the money comes in, on day 60 you send out another statement, and so on.

Managing for profit requires that you pay attention to your pricing strategy, gross margin and overhead expenses. Managing for great cash flow is an attention to the details of timing. Knowing where and when your money is flowing it crucial to beginning to understand how to control the flow.

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Ashgrove Accounting clients see better financial results

After a hectic couple weeks of travel, while working with clients to close out their 2011 accounting records, and begin financial strategies for 2012, I was struck with one big takeaway theme. From all of these meetings I’ve attended, there has been a common decision (or resignation) by almost every client to raise prices and improve gross margins.

There may be several reasons, but I have a hunch that it will boil down to two. When the fourth quarter results are all in, I’ll know for sure and will keep you posted. The first reason is that my clients have been on a steady path to improve product offerings in an effort to increase gross margin; otherwise known as innovation. The four basis steps they follow are:

1. Innovate – to identify better ice cream, faster delivery times, more effective backup systems
2. Smoother the client and prospective client base with service
3. Inch up prices
4. Repeat

This is a simple process, but will usually involve some gut-wrenching decisions and risk taking. On client had to kill a type of health care program designed for teenagers. It was a logical extension of his successful program for adults. After investing countless hours preparing and marketing, it never panned out and he walked away from the significant investment, to spend his time more productively on newer ideas.

The second reason our clients are willing to raise prices and improve gross margin is more subjective. I believe that after weathering three years of a recession, most of the competition that was habitually discounting prices to stay alive, is now gone. A recession has a way of shaking out weak players. What’s left are generally solid businesses that have more latitude to raise prices.

What’s been your take on the last fiscal quarter? Are you more or less optimistic that you were a year ago?

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QuickBooks request from IRS

IRS agents are starting to request accounting backup files from small business accounting software such as QuickBooks and Peachtree. The obvious concern is how much information the IRS is requesting and how it is using that information.

Since 2010, the IRS has been training revenue agents to be proficient in using QuickBooks, Peachtree and other similar accounting software packages. These agents are encouraged to request electronic files from small business taxpayers and their accountants.

There have been court challenges to these kinds of requests and exactly what kind of audit that would require an electronic backup file is still being sorted out. For instance, questioning a handful of business expenses probably would not warrant a request for your QuickBooks files, but larger-scope audits may trigger this kind of request.

There is a concern that corrections and adjustments within the accounting records, no matter how legitimate, may lead the IRS agent to question the integrity of the books in question. Sloppy bookkeeping that must later be corrected by an accountant could draw this sort of red flag.

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Accounting procedure to improve collections

On Friday I met with an accounting client who manages a medical clinic. Among other things, we’ve been working on improving the rate of collections from their customers. A previous manager had really let the billings, and overall attention to A/R, get out of control.

I’ve always said that if you have clients that owe you money at the end of any given month, one of the simplest things you can do to improve the speed and success of collecting your money is to send out a statement. This particular client was doing that, but since it had never been done before, many of their customers were ignoring the notices.

She started putting these orange stickers on every monthly statement that was over 60 days, and the money has been flowing in ever since. Since we also take care of the accounting, I can attest to the improved cash flow. It’s been a remarkable change in the past couple of months.

If you want to improve your cash flow, you should consider using a variation of this orange sticker, or perhaps the red stamp below. It’s easy, it get’s the attention of your customers, and it works.

If you’ve tried anything similar, I’d love to hear about it.

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Accounting for your most important business asset

If I asked you what the most important, most productive, most vital asset was in your business, what would it be? I suppose a landscaper might say his pickup truck, an accountant would suggest their computer; a call-center might say their employees.

I would suggest that with any business, the most important (and most overlooked) asset is the business itself.

Technically a business isn’t an asset, because any CPA will tell you that in accounting terms, it’s the equity on a balance sheet. I get that, but my point is that most of the business owners I work with are thinking about the day-to-day operations, cash-flow, profitability, etc. They rarely talk about how to improve the value of their business. It doesn’t happen automatically. It does require a strategy and conscious effort.

Some day you’ll want to stop working, close the doors and move on. It would be a shame to simple cease operations and go home, without cashing in on the value of your business. But in order to do this, you’ve got to build something of value. There is always a ready market of investors that are interested in buying a business, as long as it has sufficient cash flow to pay back their investment.

The beauty of improving the value of your business is that by doing so, you’ll also be improving the profitability and cash flow. It’s kind of like getting a house ready to sell, by making some modest improvements before you put it on the market, you’ll increase the value and appearance of the house and ultimately the selling price.

Consider what you think your business is worth and contact me if you need help improving the value.

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The Uncertainty of Price and Cash Flow

At least six variables, from within an organization and from external forces, will create uncertainty in mind of a small business owner, as a selling price is established on a service or product. The most difficult to grasp is that of perishable opportunities.

When you think of perishable products, you’re probably thinking of the literal translation, such as bread, meat and fruit. It becomes less clear when it’s not the product that perishes, but the opportunity. Think about a weekly magazine issue. The actual magazine doesn’t perish, but the opportunity to sell it at full retail price, after one week, does. Fashion is another example. What sold at full price this past Christmas will probably be hard to move on a discount rack in 6-9 months.

If you want to remove uncertainty and maximize your business revenue, you need to get very good at forecasting when a product (or service) needs to be discounted because of declining value (read: consumer interest).
The opportunity to maximize revenue can be found on the top and bottom end of any service or product. If warmed over, out of date product is clogging your store shelves, whether its fashion, books, or nursery stock, it’s occupying space that could otherwise be selling something more interesting and more in demand. On the back end, moving yesterdays hot item at a marginal discount, before it dies, get’s tattered, and otherwise looses even more value lets you clear out inventory without resorting to a maximum discount.

In professional service firms, instead of a store shelf or warehouse getting clogged up, its time that becomes so finite. A good CPA can command a better hourly rate during the peak of tax season, than she can in the dead of summer. Likewise with an IT company selling a fantastic new backup system, completion will eventually catch up, but in the mean time, the bleeding edge of technology is worth full price.

It’s your job to understand what the value cycle of each product is, and how to maximize it.

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Revenue Management will improve profit

Think of revenue management as a simple way to increase profits and cash flow, without implementing an across the board price increase, and without taking on additional overhead expenses. What you are doing is optimizing your selling prices in relation to your product or service ability. Here’s a quick example to illustrate my point.

Suppose you own a barbershop. When creating a budget, you sat down with your accountant and figured out that $15.00 was an appropriate price to charge, based on your overhead expense and profit goals. The busiest day for customers at your shop is Saturday, and the slowest day is Wednesday. You’re so busy on Saturdays that you often turn away customers. It’s quite likely that many of your Saturday customers or potential customers can only get their hair cut on a Saturday because they’re too busy the rest of the week.

Revenue management principles will suggest that you raise your prices on Saturday, and offer a discount on Wednesdays. Because your available time is finite, you will be making more money on Saturday with higher paying customers, and also making more money on Wednesday because you will have moved customers with a more flexible schedule to your slowest day, thus having a full schedule all week.

The key is figuring out the math (prices) in relation to the supply and demand of your customers. In this example:

Before Revenue Mgmt

customers

price

total sales

Wednesday

5

$    15.00

$    75.00

Saturday

11

$    15.00

$  165.00

$  240.00

After Revenue Mgmt

customers

price

total sales

Wednesday

11

$    12.00

20% discount

$  132.00

Saturday

11

$    18.00

20% increase

$  198.00

$  330.00

37.5% increase in profit

 

In a very complex way, airlines apply revenue management principles with their Saber computer system. Every seat on every flight has a constantly changing sales price, depending on minute by minute changes in demand and supply.

The biggest challenge for a small business owner is to stop thinking about your selling price based on cost. The focus should be on price in relation to supply/demand. Your selling strategy should center on parsing out many micro-markets. Give up on trying to appeal to mass-markets with a “one size fits all” approach.

Finally, realize that each product or service you offer has a value cycle. What might be the hottest pair of shoes or coolest computer app in today’s market will need to be discounted in the future. You will need to continually reevaluate your revenue opportunities.

Have you applied revenue management to your small business? Please comment, I’d love to know about it.

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Ashgrove Payroll Sign up

Right now is an excellent time to switch payroll service providers. We’ve found that new clients begin working with Ashgrove payroll for a few reasons:

 

  1. They are tired of getting notices from the state or feds
  2. They want to save money – we generally cut the payroll service fee bill by 30-50% from other providers such as Paychex, ADP, Prime Pay, etc.
  3. They want to be able to pick up the phone and get an answer right away.
  4. Automatic download into QuickBooks, Peachtree and other major accounting software packages for free.

 

Besides having piece of mind with the payroll function in your small business, we add value to this by offering excellent time keeping systems, analysis of labor costs, and advice on pay rates based on job functions and responsibility.

Contact us today to learn how you can have peace of mind in 2012 with your payroll. You’ll never have to worry about it again.

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