Posts Tagged Business Finance

Crazy Times, Conservative Practises

We’ve been watching the economy closely since the start of the year, and the economy has looked more like a basketball game than a predictable trend. The brightest Ph.D.’s have resorted to educated guessing in their economic forecasts as the variables associated with this downturn are unpredictable and new to trendsetters.

Regardless of the messages we’re given by the media or forecasters, business owners need to prepare. While the stock market may have crashed weeks ago, the effects of that crash will not be known until early 2009 or later. Planning for “worst case scenarios” now will prepare you and your business for what may or may not happen in the future. Amongst the planning you’ll engage in, take stock in the connections and hidden opportunities that you may not have taken the time to investigate.

The Duct Tape Guru offers the following advice for harvesting new business in hard economic times: 

1) List the people you know now. What professional communities, networks, and social groups are you part of? Make a list of contacts. If they’re close, talk to them about your business goals. If they’re more distant contacts, send them an email or phone call to remind them of who you are and what you do. Ask around if anyone needs what you have to offer. Your core networks often harbor unexpected opportunities.

2) List the people you knew in the past.
Dredge up old clients, leads, colleagues, schoolmates, and other contacts you haven’t talked to in a while. Send them a brief hello and blurb about your business. If possible, offer them a service or product discount that they can either use themselves or pass on to other people they knows.

3) Seek the strangers you don’t know yet.
Do you blog, Twitter, podcast, or use any other form of media to broadcast the contents of your brain into the vast world of the Web? If so, this is a key time to promote you. Leave intelligent comments on blogs you admire with a link to your homepage. Create a new or unexpected form of media—a video, for example—to enliven dormant fans. Promote yourself in discussion forums. Update your Facebook and LinkedIn profiles. Drive organic, quality attention to yourself and your business.

4) Understand the things you need.
Are you connected in any way to products that people need, no matter what? For example, household cleaning supplies? Personal hygiene supplies? School and office supplies? These industries will stay steady through a bad economy. If you sell these supplies, think about beefing up your stock of bargain supplies or generics. If you own a website, think about how you could monetize the promotion of recession-proof supplies. If you provide a recession-proof service, think about how you can improve your market position and drive the kind of business you want your way.

5) Know the things that hurt.
What is your client’s “pain,” and how do you address it? Chances are, people will hurt more during a recession. How can you improve your services to address pain even more effectively? For example, if you’re a therapist losing your client base after marking up your prices (by necessity) to $95/hour, think about the alternatives you could offer. Could you facilitate a support group for $40/session/person? Could you offer mini-tune-ups to cash-strapped clients for $25/20 minutes? Could you offer package discounts? What about a cheaper email or IM counseling service?

Recessions don’t have to dictate an end to your fortunes. In fact, if you stay flexible and creative, opportunity abounds. 

Add comment November 7, 2008

Starting a Business

Opening a business and being one’s own boss is as much a part of the American dream as owning a home. In fact, being self employed or an entrepreneur is gaining a great amount of attention in this country’s economy. Citizens of this country are blessed with the freedom to start a business and enter an endless number of markets.

However, opening and running a business is not as easy as many make it seem. If you have flipped channels in the middle of the night, a funny looking man with question marks on his clothes lure others into the idea that there are numerous funds available for people to start their own businesses or that you can earn thousands working from home. This gentleman along with other copy cats are selling you untruths in order to sell their own books.

Business service providers, like the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center, wish there were easier ways to finance a business like the infomercials suggest. However, the reality is there are no free grant funds for people to start or grow their businesses. There are a small number of technology grants available to companies willing to engage in research and development for departments of the Federal government. These grant funds are highly competitive and come with many strings attached to the funding.

Moving forward on a business, the entrepreneur needs to be prepared to address the financial needs for the business. The entrepreneur needs to be able to sustain their personal finances first before moving toward opening the business. Rarely is a business profitable as quickly as the entrepreneur may think. Planning to sustain his/her personal finances is the first step in starting the business.

In the planning process of opening the business, the entrepreneur should prepare conservative financial statements. These financial statements should identify how much capital is needed to start the business. If the company requires more funds than the entrepreneur has, then he needs to seek outside financing to help open the doors. Usually, a business will seek out a business loan to help pay for the materials, inventory or equipment needed to operate the business.

The first place an entrepreneur should look for additional capital in starting their business is through what is commonly called “friends, family and fools (fff).” This form of capital is the easiest to find and obtain. After seeking support from friends or family, bank loans are often sought after. If your business is entering a fast growth industry and your capital requirements are great, then venture or angel funding may be needed.

Regardless of the type of capital source the business seeks, the entrepreneur needs to prepare a business plan, sound financial statements, and form a solid management team for the business. In addition to preparing the business for capital, the business owner must prepare their own financial worthiness. A good credit score or a cleaned-up credit report will be needed for the business.

The first step towards understanding business capital comes with learning as much as possible about the options, opportunities and the requirements of money and one’s business. Utilizing resources like the Small Business Development Center or the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center are good places to start.

Add comment October 30, 2008

NO FREE GRANT FUNDS

Opening a business and being one’s own boss is as much a part of the American dream as owning a home. In fact, being self employed or an entrepreneur is gaining a great amount of attention in this country’s economy. Citizens of this country are blessed with the freedom to start a business and enter an endless number of markets.

However, opening and running a business is not as easy as many make it seem. If you have flipped channels in the middle of the night, a funny looking man with question marks on his clothes lure others into the idea that there are numerous funds available for people to start their own businesses or that you can earn thousands working from home. This gentleman along with other copy cats are selling you untruths in order to sell their own books or services.

Business service providers, like the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center or the Small Business Development Centers, wish there were easier ways to finance a business like the infomercials suggest. However, the reality is there are no free grant funds for people to start or grow their businesses. There are a small number of technology grants available to companies willing to engage in research and development for departments of the Federal government. These grant funds are highly competitive and come with many strings attached to the funding.

Moving forward on a business, the entrepreneur needs to be prepared to address the financial needs for the business. He/she needs to be able to sustain their personal finances first before moving toward opening the business. Rarely is a business profitable as quickly as the entrepreneur may think. Planning to sustain personal finances is the first step in starting the business.

In the planning process of opening the business, the entrepreneur should prepare conservative financial statements. These financial statements should identify how much capital is needed to start the business. If the company requires more funds than the entrepreneur has, then he needs to seek outside financing to help open the doors. Usually, a business will seek out a business loan to help pay for the materials, inventory or equipment needed to operate the business.

The first place an entrepreneur should look for additional capital in starting their business is through what is commonly called “friends, family and fools (fff).” This form of capital is the easiest to find and obtain. After seeking support from friends or family, bank loans are then sought out for the business. If your business is entering a fast growth industry and your capital requirements are great, then venture or angel funding may be necessary.

Regardless of the type of capital source the business seeks, the entrepreneur needs to prepare a business plan, sound financial statements, and form a solid management team for the business. In addition to preparing the business for capital, the business owner must prepare their own financial worthiness. A good credit score or a cleaned-up credit report will be needed for the business.

Before jumping into a business idea, the first step towards understanding business capital comes with learning as much as possible about the options, opportunities and the requirements of money and one’s business. Utilizing resources like the Small Business Development Center or the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center are good places to start.

Add comment September 3, 2008

Entrepreneurial Finance: The Function of Financial Statements

Money is the bottom line. We start, grow and invest in businesses for money. All the pains, highs and lows of business ownership are to provide for the business owner’s family, lifestyle, employees and so forth. Money allows entrepreneurs to open their business, and it is the key component to keeping the business open. While we may master our inventories, be the best at the services we offer or are brilliant at research and innovation, each business needs money to survive.

Despite the simple objective to make money in business, it is very common amongst entrepreneurs and business owners to overlook their abilities to manage the business finances. Many business owners will engage a bookkeeper or an accountant to set-up and manage the books. Others will buy financial accounting software programs and do their best to understand the power behind those types of software. However, a solid understanding of the business financial statements is critical for all business leaders regardless of how the reports are generated.

The good news is that regardless of the legal structure, type of business or size of business, the same basic financial statements apply. The financial statements are to serve as a mechanism of internal fiscal control, a tool to attract investors, a snapshot into the fiscal health of the company, a way to capture fraud before the business suffers major losses and a means to evaluate the overall functions of the business.

The first financial statement that a business needs to regularly generate is the income statement (also known as the profit and loss statement). Most businesses will want to generate this report on a monthly basis and compare the information with the previous months or to the same month from the previous year or two. If the business hasn’t opened yet, then the entrepreneur will want to generate an income statement for the first twelve months based on projected numbers they think the business will achieve. These projections need to be realistic and will be based off the market research completed during the business planning process.

The first section of the income statement will review the reporting time period’s gross revenues or how much money the business made during that time. Business owners need to include the total dollar amount of the returns and allowances the business gave in that time. The net revenue is found through subtracting the gross revenues from the returns. This is how much money the business made in the given reporting period.

The next section looks at the cost of goods sold. The business should list each major line item that contributes to how much the business pays for the products being sold. For instance, a manufacturer of widgets would track the costs of raw materials, and a retailer may wish to track the direct costs of inventory. Service oriented agencies can total the cost of delivering the service or they may opt to track overhead expenses in the next section.

The third section on the income statement tracks the operating expenses of the business (also known as overhead). Here the business should track salary expenses, which should include salary, payroll tax and any fringe benefits that the company will pay. This section should also include; rent or mortgage expenses, property taxes, sales taxes, depreciation expenses, utilities expenses, advertising expenses, insurance expenses, and any regular expenses incurred by the business.

The last section of the income statement will look at other expenses the business has on a regular basis. Typically, this is where loan interest is noted. While the business owner writes one check to pay off a loan or debt, the principal and interest are traced separately on the financial statements.

To finish the income statement, take the net revenue from section one and subtract that from the total cost of goods sold, operating expenses and other expenses. The resulting number will be your profit or loss for the reporting period.

The second financial statement is the balance sheet. The balance sheet lists all the assets and liabilities for the company. In simplest terms, this is a snapshot of the financial health of the company. A healthy business will show a well rounded balance of assets to liabilities.

On the balance sheet, current assets should be listed first. Current assets includes how much the business has in the bank, accounts receivable, inventory or any other account the business has money available in. Additionally, the business should also list all fixed assets it has. Under the fixed assets section, the business should list the value of all the land that it owns, the value of the building (if owned), value of any cars or major pieces of property owned by the business. The fixed assets should also note the cost of depreciation for any property owned by the business as well. The total fixed assets will be the value of the assets minus the depreciation.

Next, the balance sheet will list all current liabilities. Current liabilities include accounts payable, notes payable (credits, etc.) and taxes payable. Additionally, the balance sheet will list long term liabilities, which include building mortgage payable, equipment loan payable or other large debts owed by the business. Lastly, the owner’s equity will have its own line item on the balance sheet.

The magic of the balance sheet is the total assets added together, should equal the total number of liabilities plus owners equity added together. If the two numbers do not match, then a problem exists in the business or in the preparation of the balance sheet.

Whether the business owner hires help to establish and maintain the financial statements and books or whether they seek to maintain this information on their own, it is important to understand how the numbers work and what the numbers mean. Watching the business financial statements will help guide the business along in its progress, prevent fraud, alert the owner to business trends and show the business owner how the business is working for him or her.

2 comments August 18, 2008


 

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