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Dispelling

Sep 14, 2008


For successful companies, timely and accurate financial statements are the cornerstone of sound financial management. While the information is historical it provides information critical to the management of any business. The meaning of the numbers comes alive through meaningful comparisons and analysis. Yet there are many business owners and operators that miss the opportunity to manage their business because of their belief in certain myths. Here are a few truths behind the misconceptions.

Myth #1: Financial statements are just history; I mange my business forward. The banks and tax man can use the financials but they aren't much use to me.

Any business owner who thinks like this doesn't understand the constant loop between financials and the budgeting process. Budgets need to be dynamic, adjusting to changes in goals or results. Planning means understanding how your business will reach these goals.

Your historical financial statements must be the bedrock on which your budget/plan is built. While you can prepare your budget independently from the prior year's financials, it's important to bridge the information back, define differences and consistencies and plan accordingly.

It's also important to understand that budgets are worthless without results to compare them to. Comparing actual result to budgets will tell you where you over-performed or under-performed, where you have opportunities or unexpected superior results. Analyzing this information will help you incorporate the appropriate standard procedures into your business and show you where you need to make repairs.

If you don't take the time to compare budget plans to monthly financials, you are letting opportunity pass you by.

Myth #2: I don't really understand my financials, but they seem to keep the bank happy, so I'm okay with them.

Believe it or not, this statement is too common. Obviously, the banking relationship is a critical one, maybe one on which the life of the business is underpinned. But, why hand financial statements to the banks without understanding how the bank is going to use them? You need to be able to look at your financial statements like a banker.

This is a tall order, so let your B2B CFO® help you. Ask "How will the bank view these financials? What are the points that are critical to the bank? What parts of these statements worry the bank (i.e., losses, excessive leveraging, poor current ratio, inappropriate asset investment)?"

Better yet, address these questions monthly or quarterly so that you can make necessary changes before it's too late. For example, your financial statements may indicate that you should reclassify officer loans, pay some payables, and run the cash balance up or refinance some debt. Having this information monthly or quarterly can enhance your banking relationship.

Myth #3: My financials indicate I made (or lost) money, but I don't believe it.

Not many people say this out loud, but we wish they would, so we can help them better understand their situation. It is not responsible to allow disconnect between your perception of your business performance and the reality because there is wonderful knowledge in understanding the difference.

First, your financials are based upon certain assumptions or accounting policies, which may be minor in some businesses and huge in others. These may include depreciation calculations, amortization, bad debt recognition, revenue recognition and tax provision computations, etc. You need to understand those policies and be okay with them. We cannot productively discuss your financials without basic agreement on the appropriateness of these policies, or at least framing our conversation in the realities of how these policies are applied.

Second, it's important to understand that profits don't always feel like profits. Profitable businesses can and often do have negative cash flow. A vendor screaming for payments or wondering if you can make next week's payroll doesn't feel like profit. Similarly, cash flow issues can mask losses. Many businesses are awash in cash even as they fail. Receivables are collected and become cash; inventory is reduced and becomes cash all while the business is literally cannibalizing itself. So, you also need to learn to understand your cash flow statement, not just your profit, and build appropriate plans.

In any case, it's important for you to ask questions about your financial statements and how they impact your business. And, if you don't understand the answer, ask again, persist again until you sort out where your perception of the financials collides. This knowledge gives you a true realization of issues so that you can fix them before you have consumed years of hard-earned equity.

More from Rick…

About the Author

Rick has more than 35 years of experience in financial and accounting management. Since joining the partnership in 2006, he has provided successful solutions for his clients in a variety of businesses: PR & Marketing, Warehouse Distribution, Internet Sales, Website Developer, specialty Dental Practice, Law Firm, IT and others. Rick brings his unique background to assist entrepreneurial, growth and mid-market companies achieve financial growth and profitability. His experiences as a CFO, controller, CPA, management consultant, entrepreneur and business owner bring a comprehensive perspective to help resolve the challenges faced by his clients. Rick has obtained vast and valuable knowledge of the construction and development industries where he had spent the majority of his career. The complexity of these industries allows him to easily integrate his knowledge to other businesses.

View Rick’s Personal Website

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