ProFound Impact Bellingham Business Coach
Quickbooks Advisor BSSNW, LLC

Streamlining Business and Increasing Efficiency

Profit and Loss Statements

by Chris 26. July 2010 10:24

Does everyone understand the Profit and Loss Statement, also known as the Income Statement? Sales and growth seem to be the big focus for most companies, regardless of how the bottom line performs.  Sure, sales can create growth and expansion, but it can also spell chaos and turmoil. Companies can choke itself financially with growth without preparation. Customer service, staff retention and owner satisfaction can all suffer. How about Cash Flow when a company goes through a growth spurt? Will it drain the company funds or feed the company?  New equipment, more staff and higher inventory often are prerequisites of growth.

There are some great reports in QuickBooks that can help an owner manage growth, stay liquid and sane at the same time. The first is to understand the Profit and Loss Statement and to ask yourself if the current model is creating profit? Can it be improved? Will sales solve the profit problem? Or do I need to look at the current cost structure and pricing structure? Is the  company carrying too much inventory? What is the right stocking level? The QuickBooks Sales by Item Summary report can show you the movement of each of the products and what is not turning. Why do we need 100 parts of an item that we only sold 1 of all of last year?

Did you know you can setup a forecasts and monthly budgets in QuickBooks? You can and it is hidden in the heading Company, Planning & Budgeting. This is a great tool to use when in a growth mode or when a company is just watching costs.  The forecast can be the basis for the Cash Flow Projection. The Cash Flow report is invaluable for any company that is growing and they want to predict the crunch months. 

Keep becoming a student of Profit and Loss, Balance Sheet, Forecasts and Cash Flow reports. Get to know your industry best of benchmarks and set sail for those markers. Be a student of inventory because it has a large affect on meeting the customer's expected delivery time and, if to high, can drain off valuable cash flow. 

 

Profit and Loss Statements

by Chris 10. December 2008 04:39

The Profit and Loss statement is the most important navigational tool of the business. It is often not checked enough to keep the business on course for success. We plan to change that using the ProFound Impact Process to create a deeper understanding of the parts for everyone and reviewing the Profit and Loss statements on a regular monthly basis.

Consider the elements of a Profit and Loss for Contractors broken down into five elements, just like a human being:

Head = Sales Estimates and Client Selling
Upper Body =Cost of Goods for Heavy Lifting & Doing the Job
Waist = Gross Profit
Legs = Expenses Supporting the upper business portion.
Net Profit = Feet- The more we make the faster we can move.

Gross Profit = Sales   -   Cost of Goods

Net Profit = Gross Profit  -  Expenses

Schedule a Free Consultation

Phone: 360-303-5798

Email: chris@pficoach.com

Location: 1001 E. Maple St.
Bellingham, WA  98225

 
Business Coach on Biznick

About the author

As a business coach with 18 years of experience, and Quickbooks expert, Chris McGee helps businesses all over the USA streamline their business.  read more

FeedSubscribe Log in
All content copyright ©2008 Chris McGee. All rights reserved.