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When did you last take a holiday?

Couple Many business owners feel stuck in their business and feel unable to take a holiday.

Why do you think this is the case?

Normally it is because the business owner is working in the business without drawing a wage and in order to take a holiday they have to find someone to do the same as them. Someone who will work for NOTHING.

These people normally don’t exist outside immediate family (who you hope would come on holiday with you) and so the business owner soldiers on getting more and more tired.

The good news is that you deserve to draw a wage and the sooner you start paying yourself a market wage for your position, the closer you will be to correct profitability by getting your prices right, and on the way to being able to take a well deserved holiday.

Banish One Step Thinking – The key to better understanding (Part 3)

man in warehouseThis series is about discussing how one step thinking can cause incorrect profits to be reported in a business. I want to deal with areas where incorrect recording of purchases can cause incorrect profit to be reported in a business.

1. Beating the Tax Man
There is a well known pastime by most business owners of trying to beat the tax man. This means that people try and write off items as fast as they can and therefore mis-match costs to revenue. Bringing costs forward happens subliminally and causes the Jekyell and Hyde which goes on a business owners mind.

2. Failure to keep up to date with book work
Business owners fail to keep their book work up to date and only records items when they PAY for them which can bear no resemblance to when they were purchased ( refer to part 1 of this series).

Read the rest of this entry »

Banish One Step Thinking – The key to better understanding (Part 2)

timeIn the last post I mentioned that the learning was to make sure that you use the same process for sales and purchases in your books.

In this post we’re going to look deeper into making sure that items are matched correctly in your profit and loss account.

Many people have turned their books of account into a glorified set of cash books.

What do I mean by this?

They post the transactions in their computer records as though they were spending money from the bank. All the money out goes on one side and all the money in goes on the other side and what’s left is money in the bank.

Sounds simple doesn’t it

In fact this is often encouraged by external accountants because business owners with their DIY attitude can often get their accounts so mixed up it takes a long time for the external accountant to unravel the mess when it comes time to file a tax return.

Well everything remains simple until there are transactions which are time critical. The timing of the cash is different to the timing for the profit.

An example would be making a sale on credit and not recording it until the money is received from the customer. How would a business owner know what their current sales are? Receiving the cash could be at a very different time to making the sale.

Another example would be buying a new piece of equipment and recording the TOTAL cost in one month which would not make sense when calculating profitability.

What this means is that TIMING becomes a critical element in working out how much profit a business is making. We all know that intuitively but fail to see how this works in keeping the business records.

The effect of timing can make a huge difference when trying to work out whether you’ve made a profit or not.

In practice, most people get the timing of their sales correct because computer programmes handle the two step process of recording the sale, establishing the account receivable and then later receiving the cash.

The biggest area of confusion is on the purchasing side of the business.

Why do you think this might be?

There are three areas which often cause the purchasing side of a business to use incorrect timing and therefore confuse the reporting of true profit.

They are:
1. Beating the Tax man.
2. Failure to keep up to date with book work.
3. Failure to appreciate the affect of inventory in the business.

The next part of the series will discuss these three issues.

Banish One Step Thinking – The key to better understanding (Part 1)

bird on a poleWhat would it be like for you if you only had one leg?

How would walking work for you?  Probably more like a hop I suspect!!

This is how many people think about the money side of their business.

They never think about the ‘other side’ of what they’re doing.

Cause and effect never enter their minds because they’re completely focused on the single task at hand.

Let me give you an example:
When you make a sale, what do you get?

The answer you may have come up with was CASH,
but in most circumstances you get an account receivable.

It is a two step process to get to CASH!

How about when you make purchases?

Most of you would hope you could get the goods on account
and then at a later stage pay the supplier.

Again this is a two step process.

Now the fun begins in bringing these two types of transaction together.

In a business most people want to know what their profit and loss account shows them so they try and match their sales and purchases together to see what profit they made.

BIG PROBLEM
For many people this is a complete miss match because they use a two step process for their sales and a one step process for their purchases.
What do I mean by this?

Most computer programmes automatically do a two step process for sales.
When it comes to purchases the same is offered but people choose to ignore the accounts until someone is screaming at them to pay and then AFTER paying they enter the amount into their books.

Think about it. What sort of profit and loss account is this going to produce?

A miss match of sales and purchases which will tell the business owner absolutely nothing about their real profitability!

The learning here is to make sure that you use the same process for sales and purchases in your books.  There is another step which I’ll talk about in the next post which relates to matching real sales against cost of sales.  This is different to purchases so look for part 2 in this series.