financial

Lean Business Planning and Understanding Financial Ratios

Whatever it is that you can do or visualize that you can accomplish; you should start lean planning and set it in motion. Your boldness has genius, power, and even a little “je ne sais quoi” in it. Begin it now!

Once entrepreneurs develop a comprehensive understanding of them, financial ratios are actually one of the most important significant tools available to business owners. The ratios enable you to accurately evaluate your company’s performance and the overall health of the business.

A good place to start your understanding is with the fact that all financial ratios use the information provided in historical and/or projected financial statements including balance sheets and income statements, to calculate resulting ratios. Most commonly used for trend analysis, ratios are used to follow and track your company’s financial figures over a period of time from daily to monthly, to quarterly and annually.

Financial ratios permit companies to compare performances, whether in a given period versus financial results in previous periods, or against the financial results of other businesses in similar industries, the ratios are the most effective tools available.

By putting financial statements into perspective financial ratios are a great tool that allows businesses to identify any financial issues that may pose a threat to cash flow, or even the overall feasibility of a specific business. Particularly for privately held companies, financial ratios generally fall into four categories:  profitability, liquidity, leverage and turnover.

Profitability Ratios: Return on Assets, Return of Equity, and Return on Sales

Liquidity Ratios: Current Ratio and Quick Ratio

Leverage Ratios: Debt to Equity, Interest Coverage

Turnover Ratios: Accounts Receivable Turnover and Inventory Turnover

Profitability Ratios offer a peek into a company’s operational performance and provide real help for business owners to verify if they are maximizing their efficiencies with positive impact on the bottom line. They also present insights into the return (return on equity) a company is generating from the value of its assets and invested capital. The ratios should always be compared on a period versus period basis (i.e. year to year). While these ratios may normally vary depending on the particular industry of your business, standard ratios include Return on Assets, Return on Equity and Return on Sales.

 Liquidity Ratios always focus on a company’s ability to pay its bills whenever they come due for payment. Both lenders (banks) and suppliers regularly use liquidity ratios to measure a company’s creditworthiness. Understand that if liquidity ratios remain comparatively high for an extended period of time, it can be interpreted that too much capital may be invested in liquid assets that include cash, short-term investments, accounts receivable, and inventory, with too little capital devoted to increasing shareholder value through capital assets. On the other hand, if liquidity ratios stay comparatively low, a company may have a serious situation of insufficient liquidity or cash to meet any continuing financial obligations.

Leverage Ratios present an indication of how well a company makes use of borrowed funds, instead of stockholders’ equity or investments for business expansion and growth. The business goal is to use borrowed funds while they’re at a low interest rate, and invest at the same time in business activities that generate rates of return exceeding the targeted rate of return established for investments.

Turnover (Efficiency) Ratios measure activities or changes in certain specific assets that include accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory. Whenever there is poor turnover it is evidence that resources are allocated and invested in non-income producing assets.

The Next Great Entrepreneurs – Think Entrepreneur

Is it me or does the world seems to be moving faster and constantly changing. We seem to have entered an era of many very significant (r)evolutionary changes, with both technology and major financial decisions changing and reshaping the everyday world we live in. Some change has directly affected our jobs that many of us felt strongly were secure, but no longer exist.  The global economic upheaval caused an opposite and rapid increase in entrepreneurship, a natural phenomenon of the global economic marketplace.

Many of us have been forced to come to the realization that employers don’t take care of us anymore, and we have made the crucial personal decision to become more self-sufficient in taking care of ourselves as a direct result. Along with this vital realization, some of us have been blessed with the clear understanding that our governments are having more trouble taking care of us.

It is no great secret that many social safety nets do not offer any significant retirement benefit, and none of us should still count on that as a major component of any retirement plans we might have had up to this point.

Which in the natural course of events brings us to the big question of what are we going to do? If the answer isn’t pretty obvious by now, the fact is that we need to become financially competent and start taking care of business ourselves, since it’s pretty apparent and clear nobody else is going to do it for us no matter how much they took care of us in the past. Believe it or not, for many other similar reasons we will be a great deal better off in the long run.

We have to entrust ourselves to the fact that financial competency and understanding is a mandatory aptitude that each of us must do our best to achieve, now more than ever in today’s global economy. You really need to know a lot about how to manage your cash flow if you haven’t already figured it out. You also need to be on the alert and especially watchful of both your assets and liabilities (balance sheet). In addition, you should become familiar with how to invest as well, since the days are over for arbitrarily throwing our money into nonproductive investments.

The upshot is that all of us need to understand and be on familiar terms with more about what we are doing, and by doing so, become better “entrepreneurs” and “investors” then we are today. We have arrived at the point in time where we really have no choice, and since the sooner we start taking charge of our financial lives, the better off we are all most certainly going to be, and in turn the world will be.

Things to Know About Building a Startup!

Aaron PatzerAaron Patzer is a visionary and the technical mind behind Mint, the first free, automatic and secure way to manage and save money online. He designed Mint to meet his own needs and those of people like him who value the immediacy of the Web.

If you are involved in, or have been involved in a technology based startup you will have a great understanding and appreciation of the behind-the-scenes look at Mint’s internal growth strategy before a crowd of some couple hundred budding entrepreneurs, investors, and professionals in the entrepreneur community, as Mint CEO Aaron Patzer presented a step-by-step narrative on how he built his company in three years to $170 million target for personal finance giant Intuit. Patzer, who spoke at the Juice Pitcher event, hosted by TheFunded.com and Vator.tv, also revealed a bit of his personality by admitting to Adeo Ressi, the founding member of The Funded, that he sold Mint for cash to Intuit, so it didn’t matter what happened to Intuit’s shares.

As always enjoy, and share the start up information!

Mint CEO Aaron Patzer on Startups from Techcrunch on Vimeo.

How to Structure the Business Plan Financial Projections

feasibility Project PlanningCreating financial projections for your business is both an art and a science, and although investors prefer to see cold, hard numbers, it is difficult to predict with great accuracy what you expect your financial performance to be three years down the road, especially if you are still raising capital, but regardless, a short- and medium-term financial projection is a critical part of your business plan if you want the serious investors’ attention, and even if your business plan will only serve as a blueprint for managing and monitoring your business, it is imperative that you make financial projections, since the financial projections can be an effective guide to future business decisions.

Financial projections can be intimidating, but however, they are less a matter of mathematical aptitude and more a matter of your knowledge of your business, the industry, and the market, and financial projections are most often viewed as the most Analyzing the Datacritical part of the business plan by investors, lenders, shareholders and other stakeholders with a financial interest in the potential future of the business and its projected growth and return on investment (ROI).

The financial projections section of the business plan should be thought of as simply quantifying the effects of what was presented in the plan narrative, although the projections are concerned with the future don’t think of the projections as merely a prediction, instead of the projection should be thought of as goal-setting with respect to revenues and expenses, and it always must be remembered that we cannot predict the future and yet this is precisely why planning is necessary, because we can make plans, that set expectations and goals.

feasibility gca_economic_advocacyProjections should at least include a list of required funds and their uses, a sales forecast of at least monthly for the first year, and quarterly for additional years, a variable cost of sales analysis, a fixed-expense operating budget, a projected profit and loss statement, and possibly a projected cash flow statement, balance sheet, and breakeven analysis.

You should list out exactly how much money you need to make your plan a reality, and your listing should break these costs down into Fixed Assets and Working Capital. Fixed Assets are property that usually has some sort of long-term value, and Working Capital is money that will be used to finance the short-term operations of the business.

For your sales forecast don’t let the fear of prediction stop you from arriving at projected revenue figures, as every business sells units of something, whether it be hours, projects, products, services, etc. Simply set goals for the numbers of units you believe you can sell taking into account any seasonality factors, and finally, multiply these feasibility marketinggoldbars2units by your average established a prices and the result is your sales forecast in dollars. Each fundamental assumption that you make needs to be documented in this section since the assumptions themselves can be more important than the final numbers.

Variable costs are those cost incurred every time a sale is made and they of course vary with sales, while they are the direct cost associated with the producing or selling your products and services, which include the cost of goods themselves, any direct labor associated with creating the product, or any materials that go into the product itself.

Fixed expenses do not vary with sales and are usually tied to some contractual arrangement or indirect cost of doing business such as rent, salaries, loan obligations, insurance, and advertising, and you should develop a monthly fixed expense budget for the year detailing these amounts and when they occur.

Balancing StonesA profit and loss statement commonly called the “P&L” combine’s the revenue, variable cost, and fixed cost amounts in order to see if the business is operating at a profit or at a loss, and this statement tries to line up all revenues and expenses to determine the profit potential of the business.

Finally, as mentioned before, financial forecasting is as much art as it is science: You’ll have to assume certain things, such as your revenue growth, how your raw material and administrative costs will grow, and how effective you’ll be at collecting on accounts receivable, and it’s always best to be realistic in your projections as you try to recruit investors for equity-based capital, and any uncertainty in the future industry trends should be reflected in the information and associated assumptions from revenue, to costs, to payroll, to operating expense, and to the bottom line/profit, and remember to always maintain a conservative approach to the projections and you will eliminate most surprises that might occur once actual operations commence.

California Businesses Fight for Cash and Lives: Who’s Next?

california_iou_license_plate_lgTeam Altman Interesting News:

Entrepreneurs that own small businesses in California are now faced with the daunting task of getting IOUs paid that were issued by the state of California in some sort of timely manner, and they not only have to stand in line with other business owners, but taxpayers due refunds from the state as well, and although there are options available to IOU holders, waiting for all of them are high fees charged by check-cashing storefronts and online marketplaces that do nothing but eat into already slim profit margins and cash flow.

The big questions now is will other states on the edge of the “financial no-mans land” go down the IOU path, and will Entrepreneurs that can afford to move their businesses stick around?

The Rest of the Story: http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/12/smallbusiness/california_small_vendors_ious.smb/index.htm?postversion=2009071210

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