Financial Statements – The UN-Complicated Version!

When I first learned how to read and use financial reports, I would assemble the information to show my partner and husband, Hot Rod, how we were doing. I’d cover his desk with pages and pages of financial reports. His eyes would glaze over.

One day he sighed and said, “I really hate this. I’m glad you know what this means, but I can’t take all this information. Can you just show me the few numbers that make all the difference in our company? Can you give me the “Reader’s Digest” version?” Hmmmm. Hot Rod was on to something.

When it comes right down to it, there are only a few numbers that make all the difference. If there is a problem with one of the critical numbers, you can dig deeper and get more information. If you were to watch the critical numbers at your company, you would have a pretty good idea of what is going on. You would know for certain whether or not you are making money. You would know if you are going to have enough money to cover payroll.

Gail Gudell is a professional organizer and bookkeeper, par excellence! She is also my sister and in charge of Making Money at EllenRohr.com. Gail started working with us many years ago, and is one of the reasons Hot Rod and I didn’t kill each other in our early years of working together. Gail and I sat down, determined to put the few numbers that make all the difference on a single sheet of paper. The Financial Quick Check is what we came up with. (Thanks, Gail!)

The Financial Quick Check Meeting

This simple, powerful form summarizes the most important financial information from the balance sheet and income statement. Take a look at the Financial Quick Check form.

Download it here! Just enter your name and email…

If your accounting program allows you to assemble a neat, consolidated report like this, that’s cool. However, I still recommend that you or your bookkeeper manually enter your financial information into the Financial Quick Check Form. That “manual moment” causes you to confront the data.  It makes you look!  You’ll be able to find and fix mistakes so much easier when you are checking the financial information on a weekly basis. And, the Quick Check will help you break out of denial, if denial is keeping you from charging the proper selling price, or making tough financial decisions.

We recommend filling out this form every week. Then, use it as the basis for your weekly Financial Quick Check meeting.

To complete the form, print your current balance sheet and income statement reports. Summarize the critical numbers from those reports on the Financial Quick Check form.

Time Period

This form is set up to compare a period of time – we recommend filling this form out weekly – to the Year To Date (YTD) totals. List the budgeted information for the same period of time. Now you can compare actual performance to budgeted Goals.

Note the percentage columns. Numbers vary from day to day and week to week. Percentages present a clearer picture of trends and performance. By tracking critical numbers as a percentage of sales, you can assess data from different time periods. This makes it easy to see if you are on track…or way off.

Ratios

The Cash Flow Ratio matches cash and accounts receivable against current accounts payable (or current liabilities.) If you have $20,000 in cash and $40,000 in accounts receivable, and $30,000 in accounts payable, your Cash Flow Ratio is…

$20,000 + $40,000 = $60,000;    $60,000/$30,000  =  2:1

In other words, for every dollar of bills you have to pay, you have two dollars in cash and accounts receivable to pay it with. This is helpful data! Keep in mind that if your accounts receivable are more than 60 days old, you probably won’t collect all of it. Recalculate this ratio using 30 days or younger accounts receivable to be conservative.

Use the data to make decisions

The financial information tells you the score. The numbers tell you what is happening, but not why it is happening. If a dollar amount or a percentage is “off” investigate. It may be an accounting mistake. If not, look into what’s happening to cause that score. Then, figure out how to make it better.

Suppose sales are less than anticipated for this week. You could initiate a sales contest and offer performance awards to your sales team. You could call people on your customer list and offer a special product. And, you could hold off on buying that new coffee pot until next week. Make sense? Take action to increase sales and maintain profitability with the sales you have right now. You can act quickly!

Remember to think like a watermelon. If your sales amount is too skinny, it’s harder to make a profit. Get the top line where it needs to be. Certainly, you can look for ways to better manage expenses. Address the differences between budget and actual performance throughout the company. However, understand the top line – sales – has to be big enough to cover all the costs of doing business, including reasonable compensation and benefits for you and your employees. Get the top line to budgeted Goal level and lots of problems go away.

Customize for your company

Feel free to customize this form to best suit your company. You might want to create a form like this for each division at your company. You could customize a form like this to keep track of a big project. You could add numbers for callbacks, customer complaints, compliments…or safety violations. Keep it simple and real. Be consistent with your tracking.

Produce this report every week and you will sleep better every night. 

Are you holding a weekly Financial Meeting?  How is it working for you?  OR…what’s holding you back?  Comment below and let me know!  

xo$, Ellen