Proof of Profit

Take care of the “proof of profit” cycle and you will consistently make the profits you think you should.

Companies repeat money-making activities every day but do they make the profit they think they’re making every time?

How can your business prove its profit?

Because if you can prove your profit then you can improve your profit!

By thinking about “Proof of Profit” not only can you make sure your core transactions are making the profit you think they should, you can increase that profit as well.


Five simple steps to proof of profit

1. Set your prices. Estimate the costs of the product or service, add on a profit margin and you have the price (which must be competitive). You also now know the profit you expect to make from the sale.

2. Perform the service or deliver the product. You want this to run like clockwork and mostly it will but from time to time you’ll face and have to overcome problems, which will add to your costs.

3. Measure the costs of the sale. Ensure you can gather together all the costs of making the sale and allocate them to the sale in question. Make sure your accounting system is robust enough to do this.

If you sold a chair, how much did the chair cost? What about delivery?

If you sold a haircut, how much did the hairdresser cost, how long did it take them, what were the other costs incurred?

Now you can ask:  Did I actually make the profit I expected?

4. Whatever the answer, improve upon it if you can. Think about ways in which you can edge your price upwards and your costs down. In particular, with transactions that are repeated hundreds or thousands of times a year, see what tasks you can automate or turn into systems and procedures and delegate down your organisation so that they are carried out as cost-effectively as possible.

Also, revisit any problems you had with execution and iron them out so they don’t repeat themselves and eat into your profits. Or price them in to what you charge.

5 Repeat!  Do the whole thing all over again and again and again. But each time try to do it more profitably.

If you take care of the “Proof of Profit” cycle then you will consistently make the profits you expect.

You’ll also be delivering to a consistent standard to satisfied customers and this should help your marketing and sales efforts so you can sell more and make more money.

You create a virtuous circle that always makes money for you.


It’s all about the data

In some businesses it’s easy to see what the costs and revenues from a sale are, in others proof of profit can be a little more difficult.

For instance, if you’re a consultancy selling time then make sure you accurately record the time spent on each job and begin to think of your service delivery people as variable costs of sale rather than as fixed overheads.

If your business is project-based and you buy in labour and materials for each job then make sure you can allocate each supplier’s invoice to the correct job.

Without the correct data you can’t do proof of profit accurately, so start to capture the data you need as soon as you can.


Proof of profit in different businesses

Gross profit officer

The Gross Profit Officer concept was born when we helped a marketing company that ran hundreds of individual projects each year, some worth thousands of pounds and some much smaller.

By looking at the actual profit achieved on a sample of projects each month the client was able to see which projects were making the profit they should have and which were not. They could also see the underlying reasons.

By addressing the causes of lower than expected profit on particular jobs they were immediately more profitable and good practice on project management was shared across the business.

Daily, weekly, monthly

This client takes two sales per day and drills down into them to measure the profit on each sale.

Which means they’re looking at ten sales a week.

Which means they’re looking at 500 sales each year.

Which means they’re spotting problems, fixing them and learning from them all the time.

All of which means they’re making more more money from each sale!

The more you do it, the easier it gets

Although they had all the data necessary to look at proof of profit, this consultancy struggled at first to turn it in to digestible, actionable information.

They measure proof of profit across their business for the last twelve months and the first time they tried it, it took a week!

Fast forward to today and using exactly the same data they can now produce their reports in under an hour.

Practice makes perfect!


Can we help your business with Proof of Profit?

“Proof of Profit” is a simple technique for helping you make more money. Can we help you?

Call Michael Austin on 020 7125 0270 or email info@bluedotconsulting.co.uk and let’s arrange a free, confidential meeting to discuss your business and the steps you could take to improve profitability.

Michael Austin

Related links:

Gross profit officer – appoint one today

Client profitability analysis – make more money from every sale you make

Profitability

© Blue Dot Consulting Limited

Chartered Accountants – Bedford House, Fulham Green, London, SW6 3JW

We could get a lot bigger if only we sell what we sell!

More often than not the great new customer doesn’t materialise. What we end up with is a sprat to catch a plankton!

The frustrated cry of the MD when we were looking at how profitable sales of the recent contracts had been and how his sales team had performed.

The pattern was clear – the profit margins were consistently higher where the product sold was the standard product that the company sells.

However, in all the cases where the sales guy had tried to offer something slightly off-piste, not quite the standard product – the margins dropped!

A sprat to catch a mackerel

The time-honoured phrase which the sales guy uses to justify why he’s done a deal with a client that sits well outside the company’s standard products and services.

“It’ll be great, the customer will love it and come back for more. They’ll be a great customer!”

Reader, more often than not this isn’t how it works out. What we end up with is a sprat to catch a plankton!

Not only does the great new customer rarely come on board, it’s often the case with these off-piste deals that there’s a great deal of extra administration, tweaks are required to contracts and to product / service literature and – perhaps worst of all – payment terms may be stretched.

All of which, should they sign up for more, the great new customer will expect to see as the norm.

What’s wrong with selling what the company sells?

Which takes us back to the frustrated MD.

He can see:

  • the time wasted
  • the profit margin lost
  • the extra administration
  • the frustration across the rest of his business

And he can see that he has to do something about it!

Get the sales team back on track, selling what the company sells and making more money for everyone.

Profitable sales

Underlying this situation, the MD had the financial information he needed both to identify and to rectify the problem.

This information could be in a CRM system, such as Salesforce, or in the bookkeeping system.

In either case, the correct sales and costs data needs to be input in the right way to ensure the business gets a useful flow of profitability information coming out.

Are your systems up to that?

If not – can we help you?

Call Michael Austin on 020 7125 0270 or email info@bluedotconsulting.co.uk and let’s have a free-of-charge chat about profit improvement.

Michael

Related links:

Client profitability analysis – make more money from every sale you make

Proof of Profit

Profitability and cashflow

© Blue Dot Consulting Limited

How do you fill the gap between the books and the board?

You can create bad practices that embed themselves like fossils at the heart of the business and continue to be corrosive for a long time to come.

In many businesses there is a gap between the day-to-day bookkeeping and the information the management team needs to understand, measure and improve performance.

The gap might be created for good reasons but the bigger the company gets and the faster it grows – the more this gap will act as a drag on profits.

A familiar accounting problem

Firstly, as a business gets going the cost of accounting may be something to be minimised. Often a part-time bookkeeper or the MD or a family member will do the work, hopefully using a recognised accounting package.

This is fine – if it’s done right.

When it’s not done right, when processes are set up that are not very efficient, you can create bad practices that embed themselves like fossils at the heart of the business and continue to be corrosive for a long time to come.

No-one questions how things are being done because that’s how they’ve always been done!

Fast forward a couple of years and the business needs to know how it’s performing in a more sophisticated way – monthly management accounts, profit centres, job costing, budgets and cashflow forecasting, for example.

Who knows how to do these things, let alone that they may need to be done at all?

If the gap is not closed at this point then profits will be hit, often despite strong sales growth, and it will cost more to rectify the situation later on.

A sensible solution

Our solution is based around the idea that very few companies need a full-time finance director.

What they need is an occasional dose of experienced financial management to keep them on track as they grow.

To begin with, this might require an intensive period of hands-on help:

  • improving and streamlining processes
  • improving (or even introducing) the right level of management accounts
  • minimising risks through better credit control and cashflow management
  • training current staff to do a more accomplished job

Phase two is when the accounting is being done on automatic pilot. This is much more of an advisory phase

  • reviewing performance
  • contributing to one-off issues – annual budget, overseas subsidiary etc.
  • working with the management team to ensure targets are hit and sustainable growth is achieved

The business continues to evolve successfully, confident that it has strong financial management and that the board is getting the financial information that it needs to run the business.

But it controls its costs because it doesn’t create a full-time role for a part-time job.

Michael

Related links:

We’re a small business, I do all the bookkeeping – I just need someone to keep us on the right track

Part time finance director

Profits, cashflow and getting paid – the more things change, the more they stay the same!

© Blue Dot Consulting Limited

Chartered Accountants – Bedford House, Fulham Green, London, SW6 3JW

Five tips to improve your sales invoicing

If you are being paid on credit terms then sending the URL instead of the invoice is simply creating a reason for your invoice not to be paid.

Sales invoicing is vital whatever you are selling: you have to get your invoices out to customers in good time or face ongoing cashflow difficulties that could make you go bust. Continue reading “Five tips to improve your sales invoicing”