Archive for the ‘Understanding Your Financials’ Category

KBZNZ Business Genies: Lean Outside of Manufacturing; Small Business Can Benefit Too

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

If you’re a consistent listener of my radio show KBZNZ Business Genies,you’ll see that there is a common theme to my guests: how do I do a better job of running my business and how can it be more profitable? Since I am a certified Lean practitioner myself, one area of Business Genies’ focus is Lean implementation.  I continue that exploration with my guest Ankit Patel, president of The Lean Way Consulting. Ankit has implemented Lean in the industries of manufacturing, refurbishment and small businesses with companies ranging from “Ma and Pa” stores all the way to a fortune 500 company.

Two recent blog posts by my guest (http://TheLeanWayConsulting.blogspot.com) make excellent points. One post quotes The Lean Benchmark Report (2006) by the Aberdeen Group: “42% [of survey respondents] say ‘Top Management Commitment is #1 Challenge [to a Lean implementation].  Another asked, “How do you influence an organization to start Lean in some shape or form outside of manufacturing?” First, top management commitment is the only way Lean will succeed, which brings us to the second: responses to Ankit’s question about Lean in a non-manufacturing environment. Responses to his posed question seemed to focus on ROI and not “selling” Lean to management as Lean, but as “solving their own problems and controlling their own destiny.”  The two are directly related. I would add, however, – solving their own problems, controlling their own destiny and controlling COSTS, which can be accomplished by management having the data that comes from consistently measuring business performance.

The problem arises when management doesn’t have the time or the tools, or in many cases with small businesses, the resources to engage a CFO, to measure and analyze their company’s business performance. Fortunately there are affordable business performance software packages, like CFO Genie, that are written for the non-financial professional that enable CEOs to understand their financials and give them the information they need to make operational changes.

Look for software that:

  • Within a few hours, from start to finish, indicates specific areas where the company is losing money and where corrections need to be made.
  • Encourages scheduling a demo prior to purchasing.
  • Provides a built-in tutorial.
  • Produces easy to read and understandable components among which are: current and optimized income statements; labor efficiency; break-even analysis; bankruptcy potential (Z-Score); ROI by line item; all major indicators and business potential.
  • Is simplistic enough to use habitually so that it becomes a tool for continuous improvement.
  • Does not need a financial professional to interpret the data.

Listen to KBZNZ Business Genies’ guest Ankit Patel on Friday, February 5 at 12 noon and midnight (PST); 3 p.m. (EST).

Max Gregorich, www.ceo1stop.com

My Mantra Used to be Sell…Sell…Sell. Why I Was Wrong

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

I’ve owned my share of small and mid-sized businesses throughout my career and if there is one thing I know for sure…..it’s what keeps a business owner up at night. Cash…how much is coming in and how much is going out.

I can honestly say that every company I founded and operated was successful. I will admit that at first they succeeded in spite of myself.  And, like many business owners my mantra was sell…sell…sell.

What I know today, however, is the most important thing a business owner can do is consistently measure their company’s performance – it’s called financial analysis. Don’t let your eyes glaze over at the mention of financial analysis, it’s easier than you think. You can read more in an article I authored for the January, 2010 Nevada Business Journal at http://www.nbj.com/issue/0110/9/2167 or check out CFO Genie at www.ceo1stop.com

Here are some article highlights:

  • Many small and mid-sized business owners believe that their accountant, or accounting software tells them everything they need to know about their financials. Not true. Accounting tells how much profit was made. What a business owner really needs to know is how much profit they should have made.
  • Even if numbers aren’t a strength, a business owner will still need to understand what they mean in order to operate a business. Without this analysis an owner might very well proceed never knowing where, or even that, the company is leaking tremendous amounts of cash. Consider the following: on average, small to mid-sized companies often fail to capture between 10 to 30% of their revenues as profit. The math is simple; say a company does $1,000,000 in sales with a profit of 10 percent or $100,000.  Add 15% of the sales to the profit and you have $250,000. Without making one additional sale, the company has increased its profit line 250 percent by knowing where to look for the cash leakage and then taking corrective action.
  • The perception is that financial analysis is a “foreign” language that can only be deciphered by a trained financial expert. In fact, financial analysis can be translated into easy-to-understand “English.”  When this is done, any business owner can immediately identify areas in which their company is experiencing minor to serious financial distress which causes hard earned revenues to escape before reaching the bottom line profits. Demystifying the language of financial statements and not depending on others to interpret numbers is the key to taking control.

Fortunately there are affordable business performance software packages that are written for the non-financial professional.

Check out CFO Genie.

Max Gregorich, CEO1Stop