Your budget is just one part of your financial picture. It starts with your financial history: a summary of what you've made in the past, what you have to show for your efforts, the strengths of your products and services, and a snapshot of how you've spent the money you made. Your history summarizes your past performance.
Your projections point the way to what you want/expect to make in the future. They are often referred to as sales projections, what you hope/expect to sell. And, if you've done your homework, you will factor in both business and market conditions, the national/local economy, your competitor's activities and strengths, and personal, new baby, sick parents, relocation, issues, challenges, and concerns.
Most of us base our budget on our history, and our sales on our projections. When you switch them, you head for trouble. By basing your budget on sales projections, you can overshoot your income and spend or commit money you don't yet have. By basing your projections just on your history, you can miss emerging opportunities, and undershoot, or miss lurking challenges and overshoot.
Protect your mental health: budget on history, what you have made, and your sales on projections, what this next year will most likely bring.
Look at Categories before Numbers....
Carefully assemble a list of all the types of income and spending you have. Some people use the categories on their Schedule C, others rely on the chart of accounts their accountants give them. Whatever the list of categories you use, be sure you make notes about what's included in each. Don't be surprised if the same kind of expense, i.e. travel shows up in a couple of different areas.
For example, lots of consultants and speakers find travel appropriate in both cost of goods and professional development. And, in reimbursed expenses too.
Be sure you know how to account for your expenses, especially if you have expenses directly related to work projects.
Direct costs, costs of goods, are those costs and expenses directly related to producing your income. It can be travel to a site, materials fees, money you pay subcontractors, equipment costs, or rentals. If you need it to do the job, you have a cost of sales or direct cost.
Direct costs will fluctuate according to how much of what you sell. By subtracting them from your income, you'll get your gross profit. Other costs are overhead, or indirect. Any expense you need whether you sell a service or not is overhead. Overhead includes rent, insurance, marketing, and utilities. Usually overhead is pretty stable, from month to month.
Both numbers, direct costs and overhead are needed to calculate your Net Profit. Calculate your Net Profit by subtracting your overhead from your Gross Profit. It's what is left after you've really accounted for all your expenses. Reorder the categories for your budget in two groups: direct costs first, then overhead.
Time to plug your numbers into your budget....
Print out a running yearly summary from your software accounting package by choosing category summaries. Then use these numbers to decide on a good number for each budget category. If you find either income or expenses categories in your software accounts that aren't in your budget be sure to either add a new category or include it in an existing category.
If you're like most people, this can be a sobering exercise. It forces you to see what you've actually been doing. And, decide if this is the way you want to continue allocating your money.
There are usually two categories that aren't included in most budgets. You might want to consider an item for repair and/or replacement of larger equipment and tools. And, be sure to include a category for investing money so you can move up to the next level.
Have you ever been so in love that the rest of the world seemed to be at a standstill? When the object of your affection is right in front of you or as far as a step across the street, nothing else matters. The sunlight glistens in such a way on your beloved that the sparkle from the reflection drenches your face and dazzles your vision, making you oblivious to everything around you.
Looking out my window, I see the love of my life, sitting there just a few yards away, serenely waiting for me. I'll never forget the documentary film maker from London who, after an hour long interview with me, met you and was obviously enamored. He literally was speechless as he stared at you. When he tried to say something witty, I interrupted with, "Beautiful, isn't she?" I think he was genuinely embarrassed and not sure how to reply. Previously he had been so eloquent in his questions about my work as a celebrity personal assistant. Now he was dumbfounded. Love does that to people. Well, in his case it wasn't love, it was down right lust.
Suddenly, I'm in a trance, dreaming about the all the times we've spent together, and all the heads we've turned over the years.
Remember that leisurely drive up the Southern California coast, Josh Groban's song Alla Luce del Sole blasting from the stereo? We stopped to watch the waves softly kiss the shore in Santa Barbara. The breeze was wafting through my hair, feeling like a gentle caress. A light rain began to fall, covering us both with tiny beads of water. Instead of running for cover, we remain, transfixed, as droplets continue to fall, unaware of our surroundings, drinking in the moment.
What is it about love that can do this to a person? Songs have been sung, poems have been written, art has been created, and empires have fallen over the love of one. I don't profess to be a conqueror, composer, painter, or poet, but I do know that I'm a lover. Today my beloved is waiting for me.
Love is an eleven letter word: convertible. This sensuous Lexus SC430 silver convertible with satellite radio, custom alloy wheels, and -- sigh, seat warmers, is, truth be told, owned by my boss. But due to a series of events too complicated to explain here, this car has become my daily transportation for the last nine months. It's just one of the benefits of being a celebrity personal assistant. People often assume celebrity personal assistants get to enjoy many perks because they work for famous people. Yes, there's a plus side, but I want you to know that I don't think of driving the boss's car as a mere perk. It's so much more than that. It's a thrill. It's bliss. It's ecstasy. It's rapture. For want of a better word, it's kismet.
Well, I need to go now. I have a date with my own (okay, it's really my owner's) true love.
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