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Casual Articles - 10 Financial Yardsticks for Your Small Business
Employment Services as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head.Employment Services is a mediating or consulting business that has become a great solution provider for the employers and the job seeks. In the service business industry, recruitment service is a booming and dynamic one. The rest of the industries are depended on the employment service providers. Employment services targets are increasing by all industries projection towards their growth and fastest production. There are no limits of jobs for skilled and non-skilled candidates in manufacturing, sales, servicing industries. Companies have temporary as well as permanent jobs openings for all categories from matriculate to bachelors or higher degrees. Based on the hiring companies’ objective the Employment Service providers provide three types of employment services: Contract •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make It's Not That Difficult To Increase Your Business Profits... Time and again, accountants and consultants who specialise in small businesses say that such enterprises don't pay enough attention to cash flow. That's the measure of how much money you really have in the business.Face it; Business is driven by profit and you must make a profit to have a successful business. While it is the most important thing, you can’t dwell on it. You need to get busy, and try different things to boost your overall profit. Every business is different, so the following ideas and suggestions that I have may not work for everyone. Also, trying to implement them all immediately into your business will drive you crazy. Start with just one or two, track your numbers, and try a couple more in a few months. Drop what doesn’t work and expand on the ideas that do. You will see your profits grow and your business grow along with it.* Tie in some back end products that are not related to your main product but are needed by most people.* Take on as many of Be Wary of Big Contracts "Small entrepreneurs wind up taking big orders that get them in trouble," says Ronald Lowy, who heads a college business administration department. "They want the big contract, but they're not getting enough money at the front end of it and they don't have the cash reserves to pay workers and other bills while they're waiting to get paid themselves. They might show a profit on an accrual basis, but from a cash-flow standpoint, they don't." Judith Dacey, a certified public accountant, calls a cash-flow statement "probably the most important thing in telling you if your business is on or off target." As an example she describes how board members of a non-profit group were not examining their cash-flow statements. "They were hiring people and spending money on membership campaigns, and doing all of these things based on money they thought they had from looking at the profit-and-loss (P&L) statements," Dacey says. "They didn't realise that the profit-and-loss statement was an accrual statement, which basically means you are including paper promises of payments to come, not money that you have in the bank." The non-profit board became aware of the difficulty only when the organisation bounced a check. Employees had to be laid off, and belts were tightened. "That could have been avoided if they'd seen the cash-flow statements," Dacey says. "A cash-flow statement tells you here's the cash that has actually come in and that you can work with." A statement of cash flow starts with the bottom of your profit and loss statement — the line that shows your net income. Several adjustments are made to that number. The details are a little complex but a good accounting program that does a P&L and a balance sheet will also calculate this statement for you. Tracking the Big 10 If you've established a way to track cash flow, then you can go on to organise and track 10 financials for your small business. That's a big list, but don't panic: As with profit and loss statements, you can take advantage of software programs to automate tracking for many of the following: • Your Assets Tracking your equipment, furniture, real estate and other holdings should be easy. But to have a true idea of the value of your business, you also have to track changes in the value of those assets. More than one small business has found itself located on a piece of land that's worth more than the business itself. Similarly, you also will want to track the declining value of assets such as computers and office furniture. • Your Liabilities On the face of it, this is easy — liabilities are what you owe. But what you owe isn't always as obvious as a bill from your landlord. Payroll taxes are a liability that depend on the size of your payroll. Loans are a clear liability, but in repaying them you'll want to be able to track how much of a payment is applied against principal and interest. •What does it Cost You to Produce What You Sell? If you're buying a finished item for resale, this is relatively easy. It's trickier if you have to calculate all the factors, such as labour, that go into manufacturing a product. . •What's it Costing You to Sell What You Sell? Advertising, marketing, labour, storage and the catch-all category of overhead — it's useful to know how much it costs you to get a product sold as well as what it costs you to create it. •What's Your Gross Profit Margin? This is calculated by dividing your total sales into your gross profit. If your gross profit margin is staying consistent or trending upward, you're probably on track. Being able to track a declining margin can give you a heads-up that you must adjust your prices or your costs. In the worst cases your gross profit and profit margin disappear altogether. At that point, you'll be like the fellow who lost money on every sale but figured he could make it up in volume. Don't do it. •What's Your Debt-to-asset Ratio? This ratio can let you know how much of the stuff you have in your company is actually owned by someone else — your lender. Having this ratio climb can be a bad sign. It can happen as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head. •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make How to Sell a Feeling cey says. "They didn't realise that the profit-and-loss statement was an accrual statement, which basically means you are including paper promises of payments to come, not money that you have in the bank."To be totally in tune with the needs of your customers or prospective customers you have to listen to them. Listen to them – it sounds easy enough to do but not everybody gets it right. What you must always bear in mind when you are selling something is that you are not selling an item or object – you are selling a feeling.I was taught this particular lesson whilst working for a friend who was very much into NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) which studies the structure of how humans think and experience the world. One small part of this vast subject centred on how people can be persuaded to relax and immediately place their trust in you if you use the language they want to hear; how do you know what they want to hear? It’s simple, they will supply the clue, and as The non-profit board became aware of the difficulty only when the organisation bounced a check. Employees had to be laid off, and belts were tightened. "That could have been avoided if they'd seen the cash-flow statements," Dacey says. "A cash-flow statement tells you here's the cash that has actually come in and that you can work with." A statement of cash flow starts with the bottom of your profit and loss statement — the line that shows your net income. Several adjustments are made to that number. The details are a little complex but a good accounting program that does a P&L and a balance sheet will also calculate this statement for you. Tracking the Big 10 If you've established a way to track cash flow, then you can go on to organise and track 10 financials for your small business. That's a big list, but don't panic: As with profit and loss statements, you can take advantage of software programs to automate tracking for many of the following: • Your Assets Tracking your equipment, furniture, real estate and other holdings should be easy. But to have a true idea of the value of your business, you also have to track changes in the value of those assets. More than one small business has found itself located on a piece of land that's worth more than the business itself. Similarly, you also will want to track the declining value of assets such as computers and office furniture. • Your Liabilities On the face of it, this is easy — liabilities are what you owe. But what you owe isn't always as obvious as a bill from your landlord. Payroll taxes are a liability that depend on the size of your payroll. Loans are a clear liability, but in repaying them you'll want to be able to track how much of a payment is applied against principal and interest. •What does it Cost You to Produce What You Sell? If you're buying a finished item for resale, this is relatively easy. It's trickier if you have to calculate all the factors, such as labour, that go into manufacturing a product. . •What's it Costing You to Sell What You Sell? Advertising, marketing, labour, storage and the catch-all category of overhead — it's useful to know how much it costs you to get a product sold as well as what it costs you to create it. •What's Your Gross Profit Margin? This is calculated by dividing your total sales into your gross profit. If your gross profit margin is staying consistent or trending upward, you're probably on track. Being able to track a declining margin can give you a heads-up that you must adjust your prices or your costs. In the worst cases your gross profit and profit margin disappear altogether. At that point, you'll be like the fellow who lost money on every sale but figured he could make it up in volume. Don't do it. •What's Your Debt-to-asset Ratio? This ratio can let you know how much of the stuff you have in your company is actually owned by someone else — your lender. Having this ratio climb can be a bad sign. It can happen as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head. •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make Public Relations, Small Businesses & Viral Marketing panic: As with profit and loss statements, you can take advantage of software programs to automate tracking for many of the following:Most business owners do not realise that they are an expert in their field. The media always require expert opinion when collating data for a story. How can you bridge the gap and get your business in the papers?To do this affectively you need to keep a look out for any breaking story that is in the same line of business as yours. As an example say you are in the computer repair business and a story breaks out about a new virus doing the rounds. Contact the reporter or media organisation that broke the story and offer them your expert opinion.At this point, do not talk about your business but rather focus on the story, possible solutions and problems if this virus is not controlled quickly. If you are lucky the newspaper will publish your expert opinion and n • Your Assets Tracking your equipment, furniture, real estate and other holdings should be easy. But to have a true idea of the value of your business, you also have to track changes in the value of those assets. More than one small business has found itself located on a piece of land that's worth more than the business itself. Similarly, you also will want to track the declining value of assets such as computers and office furniture. • Your Liabilities On the face of it, this is easy — liabilities are what you owe. But what you owe isn't always as obvious as a bill from your landlord. Payroll taxes are a liability that depend on the size of your payroll. Loans are a clear liability, but in repaying them you'll want to be able to track how much of a payment is applied against principal and interest. •What does it Cost You to Produce What You Sell? If you're buying a finished item for resale, this is relatively easy. It's trickier if you have to calculate all the factors, such as labour, that go into manufacturing a product. . •What's it Costing You to Sell What You Sell? Advertising, marketing, labour, storage and the catch-all category of overhead — it's useful to know how much it costs you to get a product sold as well as what it costs you to create it. •What's Your Gross Profit Margin? This is calculated by dividing your total sales into your gross profit. If your gross profit margin is staying consistent or trending upward, you're probably on track. Being able to track a declining margin can give you a heads-up that you must adjust your prices or your costs. In the worst cases your gross profit and profit margin disappear altogether. At that point, you'll be like the fellow who lost money on every sale but figured he could make it up in volume. Don't do it. •What's Your Debt-to-asset Ratio? This ratio can let you know how much of the stuff you have in your company is actually owned by someone else — your lender. Having this ratio climb can be a bad sign. It can happen as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head. •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make Employment Binders: Golden Handcuffs for the Working Class o into manufacturing a product. .Stock options and the availability for executives to cash in on them are often accompanied by what they called golden handcuffs. In other words if you leave the company you lose the rights to exercise the stock options and that means you will stay there longer working for the company rather than leave and take your working knowledge and expertise and go to another company. This strategy works very well for keeping intact organizational capital amongst the top executives.But did you know that there are employment binders and strategies such as the golden handcuffs that are used for the working class as well? Consider if you will that most large corporations have credit unions and they can help you buy a home and they know you will pay back the money because you ha •What's it Costing You to Sell What You Sell? Advertising, marketing, labour, storage and the catch-all category of overhead — it's useful to know how much it costs you to get a product sold as well as what it costs you to create it. •What's Your Gross Profit Margin? This is calculated by dividing your total sales into your gross profit. If your gross profit margin is staying consistent or trending upward, you're probably on track. Being able to track a declining margin can give you a heads-up that you must adjust your prices or your costs. In the worst cases your gross profit and profit margin disappear altogether. At that point, you'll be like the fellow who lost money on every sale but figured he could make it up in volume. Don't do it. •What's Your Debt-to-asset Ratio? This ratio can let you know how much of the stuff you have in your company is actually owned by someone else — your lender. Having this ratio climb can be a bad sign. It can happen as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head. •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make The 7 Rules of Networking Made Easy as part of a major expansion, but it can also indicate that you're getting in over your head.How many of you think networking is overrated?I used to think so. Not until recently I started realizing that everything I have (my apartment, my car and my real estate) and everyone I know (my boyfriend, my friends, my colleagues) are all results of my past networking. Networking is a fancy word for building relationship. Most people think networking is planned activities that only happen in a defined space for a short period of time (i.e. drinking champagne in your best outfit at cocktail party for 3 hours talking about nothing). My suspicion is that probably someone in the professional world invented this term just to make it sounds more technical so the introverts would just shy away. My fellow readers don’t let this little trick fool you. The true defi •What's the Value of Your Accounts Receivable? This is the money you are owed. If accounts receivable are on the rise, you may be getting a warning that the folks you sell to are starting to stumble. •What's Your Average Collection Time on Accounts Receivable? This is probably one of the most aggravating pieces of information for cash-strapped businesses, because it tells you how many days you're acting as 'banker' for the people who owe you money. •What Are Your Accounts Payable? The flip side of accounts receivable. An increase in your accounts payable may merely reflect a larger amount of purchases overall. But an increase that hasn't been planned or managed can be an internal warning that your company's financial strength is waning. •What's Happening With Your Inventory? There are occasions, even in this just-in-time business world, when building up a significant inventory can be a good thing. If prices for items you sell or use in production are relatively low, putting some of your money into inventory may make sense. Being able to track your inventory can tell you whether business is increasing or slowing down. It also tells you how much money is tied up in this unproductive asset. Knowing what's up with your cash flow is essential to your business. But sometimes the figures can be difficult to understand. Don't ever be afraid to turn to professionals for some help.
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