Perhaps the easiest thing you can do is quickly invoice customers or clients. Invoicing more quickly means not only that you get paid more quickly. But invoicing as soon as you've shipped a product or provided a service often means you collect more money.
For services, for example, you'll typically find it easier to bill more for a service if the customer or client still remembers all the details of your service. Wait a few weeks, however, and the customer may have forgotten about the extra work you did or the special service you provided.
Tip #2: Ask for Deposits
Especially if you're working with new customers or clients, you may want to consider getting an upfront deposit before beginning work, shipping product, or investing time.
Deposits deliver several cash flow benefits. They get you part of your payment up front obviously. Upfront deposits also tend to reduce your bad debts--if only because they force you to discuss pricing and costs in the beginning. Finally, deposits tend to scare away bad clients and customers--the kind of people who only hurt your cash flow in the long run anyway.
Tip #3: Fire Bad Customers, Vendors and Employees
The subject of bad customers and clients brings up another cash flow improvement tip.
Almost surely, you've got unprofitable customers, vendors and employees. By firing these people, you will improve your cash flow in the long run. You may even improve your cash flow in the short run.
Think about this.
Tip #4: Reconcile Your Bank Accounts and Implement Other Internal Controls
You want to know something weird? Small businesses are regularly victims of employee, customer and vendor theft. You can't really stop people from trying to steal from you. Fortunately you can take steps to zero in on the creeps earlier and to make their thieving more difficult.
One of the most important things you should do in this regard is reconcile your bank account. With good accounting software and online banking access, reconciliation takes about half an hour a month.
If you resell inventory, you may also want to reconcile regularly your accounting records for your most valuable inventory items with actual physical counts.
Tip #5: Make Sure Products & Services Are Really Profitable
One final point is worth making. Small businesses generate high returns on the investment their owners make. Probably about 40% on average. That means, when you stop to think about, that a small business that's working right should be generating plenty of cash flow. Enough to pay vendors, employees, banks and--yes--you.
Now of course even a healthy business sees its cash flows ebb and flow. But if you're chronically challenged by your business cash flows, you maybe don't have a cash flow problem. Rather, your cash flow issues may be symptomatic of inadequate profit on the products and services you sell.
In this situation, what you may need to do restructure your business formula so the operation makes more money. Once your business does become more profitable, you should find your cash flow troubles disappearing.
Small Business Cash Flow Management
More than ever before, small business owners must be quick to put plans for the New Year into works in order to save money and maintain cash flow during these tough times. What's more, obtaining loans from banks and other traditional financial sources can be a tedius and often frustrating process.
The good news is that today's business owners and managers do have some alternatives to traditional financing. There is one strategy known as invoice factoring.
Factoring is when a business sells its accounts receivable invoices at a discount, and it is different from a bank loan. Banks base their decisions on a company's credit worthiness, whereas factoring is based on the value of the receivables. Plus,factoring is not a loan - it is the purchase of a financial asset, or the receivable. Bank loans involve two parties, while factoring involves three parties.
Factoring should not be confused with invoice discounting, because factoring is the sale of receivables. Invoice discounting is borrowing where the receivable is used as collateral.
Three parties are involved in factoring including: the one who sells the receivable, the debtor, and the factor or factoring company. A receivable is basically a financial asset associated with the debtor's liability to pay money owed to the seller. It is usually money that is owed for professional services or products that have been sold. The seller sells one (spot or single invoice factoring) or more of its invoices (the receivables) at a discount to the third party. Then the factor obtains the cash, so in essence, the sale of the receivables essentially transfers ownership to the factor, who obtains all of the rights and risks.
It is impiortant for small businesses to learn how to manage their cash flow. Usually, more sales means increased cash flow, but when these sales are based on credit, when sales increase, only the accounts receivable increase. As small businesses inventories are depleted after the holidays, and receivables can't be collected until 30, 60 or 90 days later, cash reserves are low.
Here are some tips for managing cash flow:
- Billing, collections and payables systems must be efficient.
- Ne sure you watch your customer's credit limits.
- Try to settle with debtors.
- Share credit terms upfront with clients.
- Review and/or add a cash flow management system.
- Watch overdue accounts closely.
- Manage your own payables and wait as long as you can to pay without late fees.
- Also known as accounts receivable factoring, invoice factoring speeds up cash flow.
Both Stephen Nelson & Kristin Gabriel are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Stephen Nelson has sinced written about articles on various topics from Finances, Setting Up Company and Tax Deductions. Tax CPA Stephen L. Nelson publishes the do-it-yourself and. Stephen Nelson's top article generates over 90500 views. to your Favourites.
Kristin Gabriel has sinced written about articles on various topics from Cure Anxiety, Heart Diseases and Aging Problems. Kristin Gabriel is a marketing professional who works with The Interface Financial Group (IFG), North America's largest alternative funding source for small business. The company provides short-term financial resources including. Kristin Gabriel's top article generates over 90500 views. to your Favourites.
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