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Budgets, Forecasts, and Cashflow “A budget tells us what we can’t afford, but doesn’t keep us from buying it!”

Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

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Page 1: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Budgets, Forecasts, and Cashflow

“A budget tells us what we can’t afford, but doesn’t keep us from

buying it!”

Page 2: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

By the End of This Meeting:

• Understand the difference between budgets and forecasts

• Understand your role (CEO) in the financial management process

• Understand:– Your business income needs– Forecasting annualized cash flow– Your retirement needs– Forecasting periodic cash flow

• Know your next steps

Page 3: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Budgets Versus ForecastsBudgets Forecasts

Create: Annually Annually

Update: Quarterly Weekly / Monthly

Purpose: Tells you where you want to go

Tells you where you are at and where you will likely go given your current heading

Best Used: Goal setting, incentives

Managing day to day operations

Who: Collaborative company / department / team effort

Limited group to allow for faster turn around times

Importance in Decision Making Less More

Page 4: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Budget Versus Forecast

The “Budget”

The “Forecast”

Page 5: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Budgets Versus Forecasts

Budgets Forecasts

Sales: Quarterly Weekly / Monthly

Raw Materials / COGS: Quarterly Weekly / Monthly

Labor: Quarterly Monthly

Fixed Expenses (e.g. Rent): Annually Semi-Annually

Variable – Predictable Cost: Quarterly Monthly / Quarterly

Variable – Unpredictable Cost: Quarterly Weekly / Monthly

Asset Purchases / Disposals: Quarterly Quarterly

Debt Service: Quarterly Quarterly

Equity Transactions: Quarterly Quarterly

Update Frequency

Page 6: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

CEO’s Role

What: How:Ensure timely and accurate accounting and reporting systems.

• Set meeting with finance team to review balance sheet, p&l 15 days after month close. Periodically ask to see reconciliations to each balance sheet account (e.g. how did this number get here?)

• Require weekly cash reports produced by Monday 9:00 am.

Identify the right numbers / key indicators to watch.

• Profit – sales, gross margin, EBITDA• Liquidity – debt / equity, quick ratio, working capital• Operations – 3 – 5 KPIs

Know how to read the key financial documents.

• Balance sheet – a snap shot in time• P&L – what happened over a period of time• Cash flow – what happened to cash between two periods in time

Manage cash flow. • Don’t confuse sales and profit with cashUse financial information to forecast the future.

• See previous slides

“In entrepreneurial companies, CEOs generally achieve success for reasons other than finance. Failure to understand the numbers can kill your company.”

Page 7: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Why Do You Need To Make More?

1. I want to provide a better lifestyle for my family today? (e.g. more vacations, college, new car)

2. I want to retire comfortably?3. I want to leave something for my kids /

legacy?4. I just want to keep score (Donald Trump)?

Page 8: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

What Do I Need to Make? - 1Sales Budget Worksheet

Monthly Household PaymentsPrincipal Home - Total Payment 2,200.00$ Auto Loans 1,200.00$ Credit Card Payments 1,200.00$ Child College / Education / Retirement 5,150.00$ Other Personal Debt 300.00$

Total Monthly Payments 10,050.00$ Annualized 120,600.00$

Gross Income Requirements - Personal 402,000.00$ Annualized / .3

Operating Company Ownership % 25%

Company Income Required - Pre Debt, No Owner Salary 1,608,000.00$

Company DebtMonthly Principle Payments - Long Term Debt 6,500.00$ Monthly Lines of Credit Payments 1,200.00$

Total Monthly Payments 7,700.00$ Annualized 92,400.00$

Total Income Requirement 1,700,400.00$

Total Sales - Prior Year 3,000,000.00$ Net Income - Prior Year 400,000.00$ Offi cer Salaries 600,000.00$

Extrapolated Net Income - Including Offi cers 1,000,000.00$ Extrapolated Profit Margin 33.3%

Increased Sales Required to Produce Necessary Profit 2,101,200.00$ Growth Required 70.0%

Page 9: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Exercise 1 – What Do I Need to Make?

• Take 10 minutes to complete exercise – ask BGW team members for help if you need to.

Page 10: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Annualized Cash Flow

Page 11: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Annualized Cash FlowIt’s difficult to change operating results over a long time period – therefore

forecasting cash flow can be simple.

Study of operating performance of over 10,000 public companies over a period of 10 years demonstrates convergence to a “standard.” In addition, the relationship

to operating performance and asset growth stayed constant.

Page 12: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Annualized Cash FlowInputs Where / How

Net Income % • Use historic averages from profit and loss statements.

Sales Growth % • Use sales budgets adjusted for historic performance.

Opening Balance Sheet • Cash• Operating Assets (e.g. A/R, Fixed Assets)• Debt Service Requirements• Planned Equity Transactions (draws)

Page 13: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Annualized Cash Flow - Example

Sales Growth – 70% - Negatives are Use of CashINPUTSCash - End of Last Year 150,000.00$ Tangible Assets - Last Year 275,000.00$ Planned Owner Draws - This Year 1,008,000.00$

Cash ForecastBeginning Cash 150,000.00$

Plus Net Income 1,700,400.00$ Less Owner Salaries (600,000.00)$ Less Asset Growth (192,610.00)$ Less Debt Service (92,400.00)$ Less Owner Draws (1,008,000.00)$

Ending Cash (42,610.00)$

From previous exercise

PY Asset * Growth Rate 70%

D’oh!

Page 14: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Exercise 2 – Annualized Cash Flow

• Take 10 minutes to complete exercise – ask BGW team members for help if you need to.

Page 15: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

My Retirement Needs

• Inputs (Conservative Method – Net of Inflation)– Income Requirements (previous exercise)– Current Retirement Savings– Desired Legacy Amounts– Planned Retirement

Page 16: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

My Retirement Needs4% - Net of Inflation

Annualized Income 402,000.00$ Income in Retirement 261,300.00$ 65% of AnnualizedRetire In 15 YearsAt Age 63EOL 95Retirement Years 32

My Income Needs 8,361,600.00$

Existing Retirement 400,000.00$ Investments + PropertyDouble In 18 Years 72 / 4%Future Value 733,333.33$ Existing + Growth

Current Contributions 35,000.00$ AnnuallyAnnualized 525,000.00$ Future Value 787,500.00$

Total Planned 1,520,833.33$

GAP (6,840,766.67)$ Gap to Close w/Biz Value

Page 17: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Exercise 3 – Retirement Needs

• Take 10 minutes to complete exercise – ask BGW team members for help if you need to.

Page 18: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Business Value – Close the Gap

• General Rule of Thumb:– COGS w/Physical Materials - .4 - .7 X Sales (lower

multiple of net is lower, higher multiple if net is higher)– Services - .7 - 1 (lower multiple of short term contracts,

higher multiple of long term contracts)– Technology – 1 – 2 X Sales

• Take Today’s Value Versus GAP value to understand required growth

• EX: $5m value today, gap $2m. Gap / Multiple = required sales growth.

Page 19: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Periodic Cash Flow

• Annualized data tells you the annual picture, but doesn’t tell you “when” or account for seasonality.

• Start small, then increase duration (e.g. a payroll cycle to 90 days).

Page 20: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Periodic Cash Flow

Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4

Sources:

Beg Cash Cash from the end of the prior week.

Collections Use A/R turns or actual A/R to project.

Uses:

Payroll / Labor Use historic / planned data.

A/P Use actual A/P.

Rent Use actual – if not in A/P.

Debt Payments Use actual – if not in A/P.

Equity (Draws) Use historic / planned data.

Sources Less Uses

Use this number as the beginning point for the next week.

Example – Short Term – Each Week

Page 21: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Periodic Cash Flow

Month 1 Month 2 Month 3

Sources:

Beg Cash Cash from the end of the prior month.

Collections Use A/R turns or actual A/R to project month 1 and 2. Use Month 1 (or prior month) sales to predict Month 3.

Uses:

Payroll / Labor Use historic / planned data.

A/P Use actual A/P for Month 1, 2. Use historic operating margin for month 3.

Rent Use actual – if not in A/P for month 1. Use historic / planned for month 2, 3.

Debt Payments Use actual – if not in A/P for month 1. Use historic /planned for month 2, 3.

Equity (Draws) Use historic / planned data.

Sources Less Uses Use this number as the beginning point for the next week.

Example – Long Term – Each Week

Page 22: Budgets, forecasts, and cashflow presentation

Tools / Next Steps

• Diagnostic Checklist• BGW Dashboard• Steroid Dashboard• Sustainable Growth Rate• Trailing 12 Months• Daily Cash Report• Z-Score• Executive Summary