These are significant questions for
every business. Managing the cash flow is critical to a business's
viability. The cash flow equation and conversion cycle has several
components:
- Actual cash
- Inventory
- Accounts receivable
- Accounts payable.
Managing each of these components
and understanding the impact and implications to the "cash
available" is important. A recent addition to the complexity
of cash management is the impact of the Check 21 Act. It makes
each check written a nearly instantaneous conversion to a cash
payment out of your account but does not require that the funds
you deposit be paid “instantaneously” available). It is a rare
business that isn’t focused on managing the cash balance and
cycle.
Actual cash needed at any point in
time or over a certain period is tied to your operational
decisions, level of business activity, and the terms of
"acquisition" for your business inputs - labor,
materials, supplies, etc. The greater the magnitude of the demand
for inputs in your "production and delivery process" the
greater the cash demand. If you are able to negotiate favorable
terms with your suppliers, you are able to delay the outflow of
cash for those resources while employing those resources to
generate sales. In fact, when your business is experiencing
significant growth, cash demands are usually the strongest.
Success demands CASH!
As you make sales, your customers
are either paying you cash today or you are granting them terms -
time to pay – which delays your cash inflow. The amount of time
you take to collect from your customers and the amount of time
your suppliers/vendors take to collect from you - how synchronized
those periods are - influences/impacts your cash availability. For
companies that sell goods the amount of time the product sets on
the shelf before purchase - inventory turnover - further impacts
the cash equation.
The impact of "terms"-
net 30, 2/10, and others - is measured in the days of cash that
are made available to the company by extending the amount of time
between when a purchase transaction occurs and when it must be
paid for, and the reciprocal - making the sale and then collecting
the cash from the customer. Two parts of the same equation. How
successful you are in gaining favorable terms from your suppliers
and granting and enforcing your terms to your customers makes all
the difference to your business.
When terms are agreed to, they
should be adhered to. Not meeting the terms extended by a
supplier/vendor shifts the burden to them for carrying your
business. The repercussions can include:
- Cash only transactions
- Loss of credit rating
- Loss of supplier as a source
- Bad public relations
Businesses often "manage"
cash flow by not paying the invoice on time or in full. This is an
all too common practice - you'll get paid when we get paid - is
also a frequent refrain. Business transactions are about both
parties benefiting from the relationship. When one party unfairly
burdens the other by failing to meet the agreed terms – it is
bad for credit ratings and it is bad for business.
If you are a company with
customers/clients who aren't adhering to credit terms, then it is
time to analyze just how good a customer that customer really is.
In evaluating the customer keep in mind that the cost of
"floating a loan" to that customer needs to be in the
equation. You also need to consider the cost of not having the
merchandise available to sell to someone who will pay on time and
in full. There are other effects on your business processes that
also increase the cost of doing business with them - the time and
effort spent trying to collect, the other uses of the funds
deployed to cover that costs, the inability to use those funds to
grow the business, pursue another opportunity, etc.
From the beginning of the cash
conversion cycle, acquiring the inputs for the "sale"
whether they are products, inventory, or worker hours, the clock
starts ticking on the need for cash. The timing of those flows and
how long it takes you to convert the inputs into a sale and then
collection of cash is measure of how quickly your cash conversion
process moves. If you have instituted credit terms that are net 30
and your customers average net 45 or more, then the implications
to your business can be catastrophic.
If your vendor extends to you net
30 terms, you have 30 days from receipt of an accurate invoice to
pay. If you make a sale to customers on day 31 and extend to your
customer net 30 terms, then you should be paying your vendor on
day 30, before your customer buys from you and you still have 30
days before you will receive cash from your customer - if they pay
on time.
If the same vendor purchase is on
cash only terms due to slow payments or late payments, then you
spend cash to acquire merchandise to sell. So cash flows out on
day one, and if the customer buys from you in 30 days with net 30
terms, you have your cash tied up in inventory and accounts
receivable for 60 days.
The importance of establishing and
maintaining sound credit policies with your vendors and with your
customers can’t be emphasized enough. Negotiating credit terms
with your vendors that you can live with is important. Meeting or
doing better than those terms can provide you with options your
business won’t have with poor credit. Then your only option is
cash only transactions.
Deciding what credit terms to
extend to customers and how to determine which customers get which
terms means making clear decisions, setting guidelines for
granting credit, and getting credit references on your customers.
A business may choose to do cash only or cash and credit cards
only – no checks, no terms (accounts receivable). Depending upon
your business, this may severely limit your customer base. On the
other hand, your business may choose to offer credit terms of net
15, 30, 45, 60 or even longer. Companies also provide incentives
for customers to “opt” for cash by providing discounts for
paying cash at time of purchase or within a short period of time
say 2% discount if paid within 10 days (2/10, net 30). Whatever
credit policies and terms you decide on, your business will also
need guidelines for deciding when to refuse credit, put customers
on cash only, and other key decisions.
Customers are necessary to
business. Profitable customers are critical. Do you know which of
your customers provide the most profit? It may not be your most
frequent or largest customer. Analyzing your customer accounts on
an annual, quarterly or even monthly basis can provide you with
important insights into what it is costing you to get and keep the
business. The cost of the sale includes cost of goods sold,
financing (terms and late payments), special handling, internal
resources devoted to supporting a particular customer, and all the
other direct and indirect support of getting and keeping the sale.
If you don’t know which customers are generating the most profit
and are consistently on time (or early) in payments, then it is
time to take a look, analyze, and understand that you might be
more profitable without some of your customers.