It's Not as Hard as it Sounds
Are you on the road to success with your business? Are you
sure??? One of the best tools to find out where you're going is
a cash flow; have you done one yet? If not, you should. Keep
reading; it's not that complicated!
A cash flow may sound intimidating but it doesn't have to be. It
is a way to see out how much money you'll be spending and how
much money you'll be receiving, and when. You'll see when your
expenses will exceed your income and vice versa; it is a plan!
A simple cash flow is just a chart with rows and columns. Label
the columns "January", "February", etc. Down the side show each
item of income and expense. Then place the amount of that income
or expense in the column for the month that the money will
actually be received or spent. The idea is to see how much cash
is flowing in and out for each month. (Remember to show expenses
as negative numbers and income as positive numbers.)
For example, you plan to set up your office in January, get a
mailing list, order inventory, design brochures in February, and
do a mailing in March. Make separate lines for each expense:
computer, furniture, fax, etc. If you finance anything, show the
payment(s) for each month they are paid. Now marketing expenses:
printing, envelopes, postage, etc. You may order inventory in
January, charge it in February, and pay it in March; put the
payment in the March column. Get the idea? If the mailing is
going out in March, you may expect some sales in April. Estimate
them and put the income into the April column. Total each column
to see what the net cash flow is for that month.
For example, January, February, and March will have expenses and
no income (negative cash flow). April will have expenses and
income; if income is more than expenses, congratulations! You
have positive cash flow!
Some tips.
1) Use a spreadsheet computer program if possible; easy to
modify and no math errors!
2) Keep it simple; round to the nearest dollar and use a
minimum. I show anything that costs $20 or more.
3) Be conservative; over-estimate expenses and under-estimate
income.
4) This is a living document and should be updated every day as
your estimates become real numbers.
How does this help you?
1) It forces you to thoroughly research costs and schedules.
2) It's a plan! You may see, for example, that you will have to
spend $2,000 in January, February, and March before you start
getting sales in April. Can you bear it? If not, now is the time
to find out. Maybe it will work with a change in schedule.
By keeping an accurate cash flow you can see what's coming and
prepare for it accordingly.
If you have a spreadsheet program on your computer, I invite you
to download a free sample cash flow from my web site. RIGHT
click on the following link, then click either "Save Target
As..." or "Save Link As..."
http://www.TheStayAtHomeCEO.com/Downloads/bbb-cashflow-example.xl
s If you have trouble downloading, just drop me a note and I'll
email it to you! (Mailto: CashFlow@DaveBalch.com) (It is in
Microsoft Excel format, but most major spreadsheet programs
should be able to convert it.) That will help you get started...
good luck!