Thursday, June 30, 2011

Taking Your Business to the Next Level

“How can I evaluate new business opportunities?” “How can I determine whether to sell one of my three businesses?” “How can I better plan for future contingencies?” “Will I be able to sell my business in ten years and afford to retire?” These questions and others like them are ones that small business owners should be  asking themselves. As often happens, we become complacent when all is going well. We can breathe--and even take a vacation! However, businesses often take on a life of their own and may be headed down a path that is different from what the owner envisions. The owner just hasn’t told the business of his or her vision. Taking your business to the next level is that type of planning. It asks: “Where is my business going? Where do I want it to go? How can I get there?”


The First Step—Your Current Reality

To begin this type of planning, you need to know where you are—what is your current reality? This involves some data gathering and analysis. While this will be different for each business, there are four main areas you’ll typically need to look at to assess your current situation: finances; marketing; employees; and facilities. Let’s briefly look at some of the issues in each of these areas.

• Finances: Do you prepare monthly financial statements? If not, then this is the place to start. If you do, do you analyze them? What do you see when you look at trends in revenues and major expense categories? Are they changing? Is the change positive or negative? By calculating a few standard financial ratios, you can better understand what’s going on. You will also gain an idea of how your business compares with others in your industry.

• Marketing: How much do you know about your customers? Who are they? Where do they live? What other demographic data do you know about them? What influences their buying decisions? Has your customer base changed over the years? Is one type of customer more profitable than other ones? Who are your competitors? What are their strengths and weaknesses? What is your competitive advantage—why should customers come to your business and not the competition? What about your prices—are they too high or too low?

• Employees: Do your employees know what you expect of them? How do you communicate this? Can they take over for one another when necessary? Do they know what values your business is run on? What is your employee turnover rate? And why do employees leave?

• Facilities: Is your space adequate? Can you expand? How would your customers and employees evaluate your location and facilities?

The Next Step—Creating a Vision and a Plan

Where do you want to go and what do you want your business to accomplish? Now that you know where you are—what the current reality is—you can begin creating a vision of what you’d like to see as a future reality. Your vision can be broad in scope, including personal goals and goals for your community. Now ask yourself what part you want your business to play in fulfilling that vision. Your answer to that question becomes your mission statement. Armed with a firm understanding of your current Taking Your Business to
the Next Level  reality and what you’d like to create as your future reality, you can prepare an action plan that will help you to realize your vision.

How the SBDC Can Help

At the SBDC, we work with small business owners to help them gain an understanding of their current situation, create a vision, and develop a plan to get there. For example, a few years ago we worked with an entrepreneur who owned three businesses. He had a good understanding of his current situation and he had some components of a vision: he wanted more personal flexibility to enjoy life as he got older, and he wanted to be able to take advantage of opportunities to sell one or more of his businesses. We worked with him to fine-tune that vision, and we helped him to develop not only an action plan, but also a series of analytical tools for decision-making.

Businesses are never standing still, they are either moving forward or backward. By using the approach outlined above, you can move your business forward to the next level of success. Let us know if we can help you with this.

Kathleen Purdy is the Center Director of the Olympic Peninsula Small Business Development Center (SBDC),  This article was first published in Olympic Business Journal

Taking Your Business to the Next Level

“How can I evaluate new business opportunities?” “How can I determine whether to sell one of my three businesses?” “How can I better plan for future contingencies?” “Will I be able to sell my business in ten years and afford to retire?” These questions and others like them are ones that small business owners should be  asking themselves. As often happens, we become complacent when all is going well. We can breathe--and even take a vacation! However, businesses often take on a life of their own and may be headed down a path that is different from what the owner envisions. The owner just hasn’t told the business of his or her vision. Taking your business to the next level is that type of planning. It asks: “Where is my business going? Where do I want it to go? How can I get there?”


The First Step—Your Current Reality

To begin this type of planning, you need to know where you are—what is your current reality? This involves some data gathering and analysis. While this will be different for each business, there are four main areas you’ll typically need to look at to assess your current situation: finances; marketing; employees; and facilities. Let’s briefly look at some of the issues in each of these areas.

• Finances: Do you prepare monthly financial statements? If not, then this is the place to start. If you do, do you analyze them? What do you see when you look at trends in revenues and major expense categories? Are they changing? Is the change positive or negative? By calculating a few standard financial ratios, you can better understand what’s going on. You will also gain an idea of how your business compares with others in your industry.

• Marketing: How much do you know about your customers? Who are they? Where do they live? What other demographic data do you know about them? What influences their buying decisions? Has your customer base changed over the years? Is one type of customer more profitable than other ones? Who are your competitors? What are their strengths and weaknesses? What is your competitive advantage—why should customers come to your business and not the competition? What about your prices—are they too high or too low?

• Employees: Do your employees know what you expect of them? How do you communicate this? Can they take over for one another when necessary? Do they know what values your business is run on? What is your employee turnover rate? And why do employees leave?

• Facilities: Is your space adequate? Can you expand? How would your customers and employees evaluate your location and facilities?

The Next Step—Creating a Vision and a Plan

Where do you want to go and what do you want your business to accomplish? Now that you know where you are—what the current reality is—you can begin creating a vision of what you’d like to see as a future reality. Your vision can be broad in scope, including personal goals and goals for your community. Now ask yourself what part you want your business to play in fulfilling that vision. Your answer to that question becomes your mission statement. Armed with a firm understanding of your current Taking Your Business to
the Next Level  reality and what you’d like to create as your future reality, you can prepare an action plan that will help you to realize your vision.

How the SBDC Can Help

At the SBDC, we work with small business owners to help them gain an understanding of their current situation, create a vision, and develop a plan to get there. For example, a few years ago we worked with an entrepreneur who owned three businesses. He had a good understanding of his current situation and he had some components of a vision: he wanted more personal flexibility to enjoy life as he got older, and he wanted to be able to take advantage of opportunities to sell one or more of his businesses. We worked with him to fine-tune that vision, and we helped him to develop not only an action plan, but also a series of analytical tools for decision-making.

Businesses are never standing still, they are either moving forward or backward. By using the approach outlined above, you can move your business forward to the next level of success. Let us know if we can help you with this.

Kathleen Purdy is the Center Director of the Olympic Peninsula Small Business Development Center (SBDC),  This article was first published in Olympic Business Journal

Taking Your Business to the Next Level

“How can I evaluate new business opportunities?” “How can I determine whether to sell one of my three businesses?” “How can I better plan for future contingencies?” “Will I be able to sell my business in ten years and afford to retire?” These questions and others like them are ones that small business owners should be  asking themselves. As often happens, we become complacent when all is going well. We can breathe--and even take a vacation! However, businesses often take on a life of their own and may be headed down a path that is different from what the owner envisions. The owner just hasn’t told the business of his or her vision. Taking your business to the next level is that type of planning. It asks: “Where is my business going? Where do I want it to go? How can I get there?”


The First Step—Your Current Reality

To begin this type of planning, you need to know where you are—what is your current reality? This involves some data gathering and analysis. While this will be different for each business, there are four main areas you’ll typically need to look at to assess your current situation: finances; marketing; employees; and facilities. Let’s briefly look at some of the issues in each of these areas.

• Finances: Do you prepare monthly financial statements? If not, then this is the place to start. If you do, do you analyze them? What do you see when you look at trends in revenues and major expense categories? Are they changing? Is the change positive or negative? By calculating a few standard financial ratios, you can better understand what’s going on. You will also gain an idea of how your business compares with others in your industry.

• Marketing: How much do you know about your customers? Who are they? Where do they live? What other demographic data do you know about them? What influences their buying decisions? Has your customer base changed over the years? Is one type of customer more profitable than other ones? Who are your competitors? What are their strengths and weaknesses? What is your competitive advantage—why should customers come to your business and not the competition? What about your prices—are they too high or too low?

• Employees: Do your employees know what you expect of them? How do you communicate this? Can they take over for one another when necessary? Do they know what values your business is run on? What is your employee turnover rate? And why do employees leave?

• Facilities: Is your space adequate? Can you expand? How would your customers and employees evaluate your location and facilities?

The Next Step—Creating a Vision and a Plan

Where do you want to go and what do you want your business to accomplish? Now that you know where you are—what the current reality is—you can begin creating a vision of what you’d like to see as a future reality. Your vision can be broad in scope, including personal goals and goals for your community. Now ask yourself what part you want your business to play in fulfilling that vision. Your answer to that question becomes your mission statement. Armed with a firm understanding of your current Taking Your Business to
the Next Level  reality and what you’d like to create as your future reality, you can prepare an action plan that will help you to realize your vision.

How the SBDC Can Help

At the SBDC, we work with small business owners to help them gain an understanding of their current situation, create a vision, and develop a plan to get there. For example, a few years ago we worked with an entrepreneur who owned three businesses. He had a good understanding of his current situation and he had some components of a vision: he wanted more personal flexibility to enjoy life as he got older, and he wanted to be able to take advantage of opportunities to sell one or more of his businesses. We worked with him to fine-tune that vision, and we helped him to develop not only an action plan, but also a series of analytical tools for decision-making.

Businesses are never standing still, they are either moving forward or backward. By using the approach outlined above, you can move your business forward to the next level of success. Let us know if we can help you with this.

Kathleen Purdy is the Center Director of the Olympic Peninsula Small Business Development Center (SBDC),  This article was first published in Olympic Business Journal

8 Ways to Increase Your Cash Flow in a Cash-Crunched Economy

Every day I hear about cash flow problems from business owners. In this economy, most of us are having cash flow concerns. I am hearing that sales of most small retail businesses are down 10% to 20% from
last year. If you don’t understand the different ways to increase your cash flow, you can get stuck thinking you have no options. If you are having cash flow concerns, chances are it is difficult for you to get a loan  from the bank.


My clients continue to come up with inventive ways to solve their cash flow concerns. I wanted to share some of their stories in the hope it will be helpful to you. I’ve broken these down into 8 ideas to help you increase your cash flow:

1 Create a positive cash flow cycle. The cash flow cycle refers to the difference in timing between when you pay for products or payroll and when you get paid by your clients. A negative cash flow cycle means you pay out before you get paid. A positive cash flow cycle means you get paid before you have to pay out. One client recently asked her vendors for 30 day terms and got it. It put her into a positive cash flow immediately. Other clients have started asking for ½ down before they start the job and some clients offer small incentives for paying accounts receivables early.

2 Increase your average sale. If you can get your customers to buy more of your stuff, for more money, and more often you will increase your average sale. When your average sale goes up more dollars go into your bank account. I have one retail client that started carrying more upscale products, increased her prices on some items, and bundled or packaged some products together. She saw an immediate improvement in her cash flow.

3 Increase your sales and marketing efforts. This is a hard time for building supply companies. One client opened a building supply company just before the real estate market slow down. Oops! So, he took a gamble and advertised on T.V. It was hard to spend the money, but the results are that he has been increasing sales every month since he opened. Another client doubled her sales force and has increased sales every month of the downturn. There really is a lot of opportunity out there.


4 Cut your costs. This one seems like a no brainer, however, many of my clients have been slow to do the difficult cost cutting that is required to stay profitable. One of my clients was very slow to cut costs. We worked together and talked about each expense and explored other ways to get what she needed without spending so much. We found several creative ways to cut costs without hurting productivity or customer service.

5 Reduce or restructure debt payments. The payments you make on business debts, because it is money out of your bank account, are an important area that affects your cash flow. One client talked to their banker, but the banker was reluctant to refinance or restructure the debt. I told this client that the secret was to talk to a bank different from his own. Banks other than yours view gaining your deposit and loans accounts as a big win. Your current bank doesn’t always appreciate your accounts until they are about to lose them. Needless to say, this client did well in lowering their debt payments and received some other nice perks as well.

6 Reduce or eliminate capital expenditures. One business I worked with had a very tight cash flow because she is growing. Growth always creates a drain on cash. She needed equipment and trucks to get the next step. Buying new stuff was out of the question. She started asking people she knew for what she wanted and got the equipment and trucks for almost nothing.

7 Increase the productivity of your staff. I worked with a small business with a tight cash flow that was doing about $800,000 in annual sales but there was very little profit they were just breaking even. We determined through a break even analysis that if we increased sales to $1,000,000 they should add about $100,000 to the bottom line. When they came back the next year they had actually increased their sales to $1,400,000, but there was still no profit. Based on the numbers, our analysis of the situation was that they hadn’t increased the productivity of their staff. When they added new business, their staff costs expanded with their sales. The idea is to find ways for your staff to get more done with less time, energy, effort, or cost.

8 Increase your prices. Increasing price is one of the hardest things for business owners to do. I worked with one owner to research the prices of her competitors. We found that her prices were at least 25% below what her competitors were charging for the same type of products. We experimented with pricing and found that some items actually sold faster when they were priced higher. One business owner increased his prices by just $1. It added an extra $3,000 a month or $36,000 annually to the cash flow. You know that “cash is king.” It is the key to surviving the down times. By working smarter as well has harder you will improve your chances of survival and increase the value of your business. Think of it this way; by improving your cash flow now in this economy, when it bounces back (and it will), you will benefit from improved profitability, productivity, and a positive cash flow.

This article was written by Kirk Davis, an SBDC Certified Business Advisor for the Kent Small Business Development Center, To locate your local SBDC advisor please visit the SBDC web site  www.wsbdc.org/map

8 Ways to Increase Your Cash Flow in a Cash-Crunched Economy

Every day I hear about cash flow problems from business owners. In this economy, most of us are having cash flow concerns. I am hearing that sales of most small retail businesses are down 10% to 20% from
last year. If you don’t understand the different ways to increase your cash flow, you can get stuck thinking you have no options. If you are having cash flow concerns, chances are it is difficult for you to get a loan  from the bank.


My clients continue to come up with inventive ways to solve their cash flow concerns. I wanted to share some of their stories in the hope it will be helpful to you. I’ve broken these down into 8 ideas to help you increase your cash flow:

1 Create a positive cash flow cycle. The cash flow cycle refers to the difference in timing between when you pay for products or payroll and when you get paid by your clients. A negative cash flow cycle means you pay out before you get paid. A positive cash flow cycle means you get paid before you have to pay out. One client recently asked her vendors for 30 day terms and got it. It put her into a positive cash flow immediately. Other clients have started asking for ½ down before they start the job and some clients offer small incentives for paying accounts receivables early.

2 Increase your average sale. If you can get your customers to buy more of your stuff, for more money, and more often you will increase your average sale. When your average sale goes up more dollars go into your bank account. I have one retail client that started carrying more upscale products, increased her prices on some items, and bundled or packaged some products together. She saw an immediate improvement in her cash flow.

3 Increase your sales and marketing efforts. This is a hard time for building supply companies. One client opened a building supply company just before the real estate market slow down. Oops! So, he took a gamble and advertised on T.V. It was hard to spend the money, but the results are that he has been increasing sales every month since he opened. Another client doubled her sales force and has increased sales every month of the downturn. There really is a lot of opportunity out there.


4 Cut your costs. This one seems like a no brainer, however, many of my clients have been slow to do the difficult cost cutting that is required to stay profitable. One of my clients was very slow to cut costs. We worked together and talked about each expense and explored other ways to get what she needed without spending so much. We found several creative ways to cut costs without hurting productivity or customer service.

5 Reduce or restructure debt payments. The payments you make on business debts, because it is money out of your bank account, are an important area that affects your cash flow. One client talked to their banker, but the banker was reluctant to refinance or restructure the debt. I told this client that the secret was to talk to a bank different from his own. Banks other than yours view gaining your deposit and loans accounts as a big win. Your current bank doesn’t always appreciate your accounts until they are about to lose them. Needless to say, this client did well in lowering their debt payments and received some other nice perks as well.

6 Reduce or eliminate capital expenditures. One business I worked with had a very tight cash flow because she is growing. Growth always creates a drain on cash. She needed equipment and trucks to get the next step. Buying new stuff was out of the question. She started asking people she knew for what she wanted and got the equipment and trucks for almost nothing.

7 Increase the productivity of your staff. I worked with a small business with a tight cash flow that was doing about $800,000 in annual sales but there was very little profit they were just breaking even. We determined through a break even analysis that if we increased sales to $1,000,000 they should add about $100,000 to the bottom line. When they came back the next year they had actually increased their sales to $1,400,000, but there was still no profit. Based on the numbers, our analysis of the situation was that they hadn’t increased the productivity of their staff. When they added new business, their staff costs expanded with their sales. The idea is to find ways for your staff to get more done with less time, energy, effort, or cost.

8 Increase your prices. Increasing price is one of the hardest things for business owners to do. I worked with one owner to research the prices of her competitors. We found that her prices were at least 25% below what her competitors were charging for the same type of products. We experimented with pricing and found that some items actually sold faster when they were priced higher. One business owner increased his prices by just $1. It added an extra $3,000 a month or $36,000 annually to the cash flow. You know that “cash is king.” It is the key to surviving the down times. By working smarter as well has harder you will improve your chances of survival and increase the value of your business. Think of it this way; by improving your cash flow now in this economy, when it bounces back (and it will), you will benefit from improved profitability, productivity, and a positive cash flow.

This article was written by Kirk Davis, an SBDC Certified Business Advisor for the Kent Small Business Development Center, To locate your local SBDC advisor please visit the SBDC web site  www.wsbdc.org/map

8 Ways to Increase Your Cash Flow in a Cash-Crunched Economy

Every day I hear about cash flow problems from business owners. In this economy, most of us are having cash flow concerns. I am hearing that sales of most small retail businesses are down 10% to 20% from
last year. If you don’t understand the different ways to increase your cash flow, you can get stuck thinking you have no options. If you are having cash flow concerns, chances are it is difficult for you to get a loan  from the bank.


My clients continue to come up with inventive ways to solve their cash flow concerns. I wanted to share some of their stories in the hope it will be helpful to you. I’ve broken these down into 8 ideas to help you increase your cash flow:

1 Create a positive cash flow cycle. The cash flow cycle refers to the difference in timing between when you pay for products or payroll and when you get paid by your clients. A negative cash flow cycle means you pay out before you get paid. A positive cash flow cycle means you get paid before you have to pay out. One client recently asked her vendors for 30 day terms and got it. It put her into a positive cash flow immediately. Other clients have started asking for ½ down before they start the job and some clients offer small incentives for paying accounts receivables early.

2 Increase your average sale. If you can get your customers to buy more of your stuff, for more money, and more often you will increase your average sale. When your average sale goes up more dollars go into your bank account. I have one retail client that started carrying more upscale products, increased her prices on some items, and bundled or packaged some products together. She saw an immediate improvement in her cash flow.

3 Increase your sales and marketing efforts. This is a hard time for building supply companies. One client opened a building supply company just before the real estate market slow down. Oops! So, he took a gamble and advertised on T.V. It was hard to spend the money, but the results are that he has been increasing sales every month since he opened. Another client doubled her sales force and has increased sales every month of the downturn. There really is a lot of opportunity out there.


4 Cut your costs. This one seems like a no brainer, however, many of my clients have been slow to do the difficult cost cutting that is required to stay profitable. One of my clients was very slow to cut costs. We worked together and talked about each expense and explored other ways to get what she needed without spending so much. We found several creative ways to cut costs without hurting productivity or customer service.

5 Reduce or restructure debt payments. The payments you make on business debts, because it is money out of your bank account, are an important area that affects your cash flow. One client talked to their banker, but the banker was reluctant to refinance or restructure the debt. I told this client that the secret was to talk to a bank different from his own. Banks other than yours view gaining your deposit and loans accounts as a big win. Your current bank doesn’t always appreciate your accounts until they are about to lose them. Needless to say, this client did well in lowering their debt payments and received some other nice perks as well.

6 Reduce or eliminate capital expenditures. One business I worked with had a very tight cash flow because she is growing. Growth always creates a drain on cash. She needed equipment and trucks to get the next step. Buying new stuff was out of the question. She started asking people she knew for what she wanted and got the equipment and trucks for almost nothing.

7 Increase the productivity of your staff. I worked with a small business with a tight cash flow that was doing about $800,000 in annual sales but there was very little profit they were just breaking even. We determined through a break even analysis that if we increased sales to $1,000,000 they should add about $100,000 to the bottom line. When they came back the next year they had actually increased their sales to $1,400,000, but there was still no profit. Based on the numbers, our analysis of the situation was that they hadn’t increased the productivity of their staff. When they added new business, their staff costs expanded with their sales. The idea is to find ways for your staff to get more done with less time, energy, effort, or cost.

8 Increase your prices. Increasing price is one of the hardest things for business owners to do. I worked with one owner to research the prices of her competitors. We found that her prices were at least 25% below what her competitors were charging for the same type of products. We experimented with pricing and found that some items actually sold faster when they were priced higher. One business owner increased his prices by just $1. It added an extra $3,000 a month or $36,000 annually to the cash flow. You know that “cash is king.” It is the key to surviving the down times. By working smarter as well has harder you will improve your chances of survival and increase the value of your business. Think of it this way; by improving your cash flow now in this economy, when it bounces back (and it will), you will benefit from improved profitability, productivity, and a positive cash flow.

This article was written by Kirk Davis, an SBDC Certified Business Advisor for the Kent Small Business Development Center, To locate your local SBDC advisor please visit the SBDC web site  www.wsbdc.org/map

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Can You Increase Sales by Exporting?

The Washington Small Business Development Center Export Program focuses on working with new-to-export and new-to-market companies with little or no expertise in international trade. The program has set an ambitious goal of establishing a “Culture of Exporting” across the state within the next two years.
The Washington SBDC recently opened two Export Centers to assist Washington businesses to prepare for or expand their export capabilities. Located in South Seattle and Spokane, each center is staffed with two seasoned trade specialists. These new centers join a statewide network of 24 small business development centers and 26 certified business advisors who provide no-cost small business advising services.

The four trade specialists bring to their work assisting new-to-market businesses several decades of experience in international markets, unique skill sets and many years of living and working abroad. In addition, a group of WSU interns are conducting targeted export market research that will assist SBDC clients as they develop business plans that ensure successful and long-term export activities.

The Export Centers:
• Provide no-cost confidential, in-depth, and long-term one-on-one export advice
• Assist in preparing market and trade research
• Help clients assess their export readiness and determine next steps
• Collaborate with clients to develop a plan that ensures short and long-term exporting success
• Provide or locate additional resources as needed

The Export Web Portal at export.wsbdc.org is also available, featuring the following:
• Extensive research resources that are categorized and link to specific web pages not just websites.
• Export process “mind map” that outlines the process of preparing and executing an export plan. The process includes links to information, outlines, resource documents and partner resources.
• Frequently asked questions “mind map” that leads to specific resources that have the needed information.