Smart Business Orange County
Financial statements
By Mike Rudd
If you review your financial statement, does your revenue look okay but have a bottom line
that does not hold up to your expectations? When faced with this problem, many businesses
immediately try to increase sales. That sounds great, but in reality "selling your way
out" only creates short-term cash flow and can mask the real problems within the business.
Mike Rudd, director of client services for IPA, spoke with
Smart Business about how to control business costs.
Why do business owners look to increase sales when the company is under performing?
The vast majority of business owners are from the entrepreneur mindset. They built their businesses
with vision, hard work and an innate ability to sell themselves, their ideas and the product or
services of the business. Increased sales create a positive cash flow that allows the business to
survive and, in some cases, actually produce a profit.
What are some issues that cause eroding profitability in spite of increasing sales?
When a company is in start-up mode, it is generally under
capitalized. Every dollar is treated like
a precious commodity. The entrepreneur knows where every penny goes. In that environment, $100 can
literally be the difference between success and failure.
As the business grows, the demands on ownership’s time is geometrically increased, and the ability
to micro manage the operations is supplanted by reliance on gut feeling. Questionable feedback from
employees provides a false sense of security. Throwing money at a problem becomes the norm instead
of controlling the critical variables that drive the company’s profitability and operations.
As companies mature, ownership relies on key employees to maintain operations at a profitable level.
However, systems and controls consist of tribal knowledge and the perception that working hard will
produce profit. There is nothing in place to actually measure performance, and rewards are based on
the benevolent bonus system. Invariably, this leads to a feeling of entitlement and increased costs
across the board.
Which is easier, reducing cost or increasing sales?
Sales figures can be somewhat deceiving. High sales dollars mean nothing if the sales volume does
not allow for the company costs to be recovered and the profit required to fund growth. Choosing
whether to increase sales or reduce costs as a strategy requires some basic understanding of how
costs and revenue impact the financial statement.
When looking at the impact of cost reduction on general and administrative overhead, each dollar of
cost reduction goes directly to the bottom line as profit. For every dollar of revenue, only a small
fraction goes toward the bottom line due to fact that variable cost must be covered.
What are the best business costs?
First, identify the critical variables in the business. Every business has specific key indicators
that give management the ability to monitor the company’s pulse and activities. This includes what
you need to know and when you need to know it.
Second, develop a chart that reflects actual operations. Typically, a chart of accounts is developed
by an accountant. Revenue categories should reflect the actual income streams of the company. Direct
variable expense should include all of the expenses involved in the production of the product or
service, such as labor, material, sales commissions, royalties, equipment rental or any other cost
that fluctuates with revenue.
Indirect overhead consists of costs that may be semi-fixed and semi-variable but must be allocated
to all of the production components, such as estimating wages, sales wages, fuel and oil, training
expense, small tools and supplies. General and administrative overhead are expenses that occur
regardless of revenue, like rent, utilities, depreciation, owner’s wages, utilities and interest
expense.
Third, measure the percentages, not the dollars. For example, labor during a particular month might
be $25,000, and 23 percent of that is revenue. The next month, the labor expenditure may be $19,000,
but the percentage of revenue is 24.5 (percent). In this case, the company actually does worse the
second month but spends fewer actual dollars. Percentages are the only way to identify and track the
company’s critical variables.
Fourth, implement excess-based profit incentives. If you do not provide
incentives, employees will
create their own by stealing time and materials. Keep them simple.
Incentives must be tied to factors the employees have control over, such as labor, overtime, waste,
small tools and supplies. The incentives should have positive and negative components to force employees
to focus on cost. As well, the incentive plan must reward the employee group as a whole. Performance
will improve as each employee’s performance affects the group as a whole.
MIKE RUDD is director of client services for IPA of Buffalo Grove, Ill.
IPA’s 1800 employees offer consulting services to businesses throughout the United States, including
Alaska and Hawaii, as well as Canada. Reach Rudd at (800) 531-7100, mike.rudd@ipa-iba.com. or
www.ipa-iba.com.