Let's be honest about cash-flow for your business. It's not always something to brag about. We all hear people say cash-flow is king [and it is]. After all, without it you basically have a hobby rather than a business. Or if you have cash-flow but it's not good then that probably means your expenses are greater than your revenues.
But if cash-flow is king, then are we prepared for the times when our cash-flow isn't so awesome?
Before we dive in let's see if we can agree on something. Financing is always a means to an end. In other words, nobody gets a loan for no reason and for no purpose. We use it to buy properties, equipment, and for working capital among other things. If we had the cash reserves that Apple has then we probably wouldn't be trying to figure out how to get an SBA loan or how to get a working capital line of credit. At its best we use financing as a tool to start, build, and grow our businesses and at its worst we use it to stay afloat when times are tough.
Below are four key ingredients that will not only have you prepared for slow times and unexpected cash-flow crisis, but they will also help you be prepared to obtain your financing in the future as your business grows and has additional financing needs to support that growth:
When Possible, Get Your Financing âBeforeâ You Need It
It may sound counter-intuitive, but it's simple. You can't get a real estate loan or equipment financing âbeforeâ you need it. However, you can [and should] get your working capital line or lines of credit before you need them.
If you're like most people you're familiar with the loan process because you've probably bought homes and cars and got loans to pay them off over time. If you're obtaining a loan then you'll normally want to wait until you âneedâ the funding because loans require you to make monthly payments regardless of what the money is being used for. Whereas a line of credit has no monthly payments until you draw on the funds and begin using them. There's a big difference between loans and lines of credit.
Be Sure You Understand The Options That YOU Can Employ
We all have different options based on things like our industry, geographic location, collateral, business seasoning, personal and business credit, etc. Do you know what you can and can't do? This is important or you'll make one of two mistakes. You'll either get the wrong type of financing or your confusion will lead to fear and paralysis.
Doing nothing is worse than making the wrong decision because there's no action when you do nothing. Action at least means you're moving and you can change course or learn from mistakes but never getting into the game and making decisions is a crime punishable by you never reaching your goals and dreams. Learn your options and take advantage of them.
Use Your Credit Cards The Right Way
This may seem odd but it's one of those things that nobody really talks about. Statistically, according to NFIB, 79% of small business owners use credit cards (PDF). Meredith Whitney says that 82% of small business owners use credit cards as a âvital partâ of their overall funding strategy.
The problem is that most small business owners use credit cards the wrong way. That means they don't separate their personal and business credit with their credit cards, they hurt their personal credit profiles and FICO scores, and they limit their ability to obtain additional financing in the future. Credit cards are definitely a tool to help with some cash-flow issues but you'll obviously have to cover that additional debt service in the future if you use it today to get out of a cash-flow crunch. I've done it, as have many others, but do it responsibly.
Protect, Preserve And Build Your Personal And Business Credit
We all know that credit is important for mortgages, car loans, business loans, and many other areas of our lives but, what are you doing to either preserve it or improve it? Are you treating your credit as an asset and protecting and preserving it? Do you know âhowâ to do that?
Monitoring your credit, cleaning up errors, and not over-utilizing your credit cards (the ones that show up on your personal credit report) are all ways to start treating your personal credit as an asset. Business credit is a different animal and will likely require a strategic build.
Business credit doesn't âjust happenâ the same way your personal credit does. It's usually a process of strategically acquiring a series of vendor lines of credit for things like office supplies, computers, gas, etc. It takes time and the rewards rarely come quickly but you'll be glad you did it if you stick with it.
We recently bought a new phone system and, because of our good business credit, I didn't have to personally guarantee the loan and they only looked at our business credit in order for us to get approved â" they did not review my personal credit as part of their underwriting process.
Businesses have cash-flow cycles â" and it's not just the âseasonalâ businesses. It comes with the territory and especially as you are building the organization. Use some of these strategies to be prepared to deal with that slow month (or more). It's never fun to deal with the curve balls that running a business throws at us but if you do these things and execute them properly you'll set yourself up to hit the curve balls and stay in the game rather than striking out.
If cash-flow is king, what are you going to do about managing the tough times when the cash-flow is slow?
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