This is the second of two articles, the first of which I posted last week. Judging from the puny number of click-throughs it received, not many people are interested in how much money it takes to increase their sales.
That is about what I expected because most of the small business owners I’ve met aren’t aware of the effect sales have on working capital until they are writhing in agony in a cash crisis.
If you are among the many who did not read last week’s article, it’s worth a brief review. The article was about a small business owner who started his business with $31,000 of cash in July. By the following February his sales had risen to over $100,000 per month. That sounds like a great success story, which it was with regard to sales, but it was a disaster for his business. Even though his books showed a nice profit, he was completely out of cash and he eventually quit business.
He had allowed 90 day credit terms for his customers and as a result had over $250,000 in accounts receivable. His problems were compounded by his enthusiastic buying practices which had resulted in $140,000 of stagnant inventory and about $150,000 in past due accounts payable. (Does any of this sound familiar?) His customers were howling for their product, much of which hadn’t even shipped because his suppliers had him on credit hold. The man was frazzled and at his wit’s end.
Even though his books showed a nice profit, he was completely out of cash and he eventually quit business.
Had the man forecast his cash needs, he would have known that, under the conditions he created for himself, he would have needed $344,730 in net working capital to finance the inventory and accounts receivable required to support $1 million in annual sales. He would have known in advance that his $31,000 was insufficient (way insufficient!), and he would have known to take action to head off the difficulties he was suffering.
He would have known to take action to head off the difficulties he was suffering.
Last week’s article discussed some of the things he could have done to avoid a crisis. In this week’s article we’ll see how we came up with his net capital requirement.
As always with financial matters of this sort, if you don’t want to do the calculations yourself, have your accountant do them for you - but get the numbers! They will guide your decisions and help you avoid a dismal life of perpetual stress. Weakness in financial functions is one of the 3 Reasons Businesses Fail so make sure you get the numbers, one way or another.
Here is how to find the amount of cash necessary to support sales:
In the last article, we said that there are three factors associated with sales that most affect working capital:
Increases in accounts receivable and inventory consume cash. Increases in accounts payable provide cash.
To see how it works, we’ll use our small business owner’s numbers. He was selling product at the pace of $1,000,000 per year. His cost of the goods he sold was 60% of sales. We will assume (because it was true) that 100% of his sales were made on account, that his average accounts receivable took 90 days to collect, and that he keeps three month’s worth of inventory on hand. His credit terms with suppliers required him to pay all accounts payable in 30 days.
One method for finding net working capital requirements (there are others) looks like this:
The working capital required to fund accounts receivable is equivalent to the percent of sales made on account (100%) times the number of days accounts receivable are outstanding times the average sales per day.
To find the working capital we need to support accounts receivable, multiply the average daily sales times the days receivables are outstanding:
The result tells us that, under the credit terms he allowed, our business owner needed $246,000 of working capital to fund accounts receivable resulting from $1,000,000 in annual sales.
The working capital required to fund Inventory is equivalent to the average days inventory is held times the average daily cost ($.60) of sales:
To find the working capital we need to fund inventory, multiply the average days
inventory is on hand times the average daily cost of sales:
The result tells us that his inventory tied up an average of $147,960 of working capital to support $1,000,000 in sales.
The working capital provided by accounts payable (which are loans to us from our suppliers) is equivalent to the number of days they allow us to pay (30) times the average daily cost of sales:
To find the working capital provided, multiply the days credit allowed times the average daily cost of sales
The result tells us that accounts payable provide an average of $49,230 of working capital in support of $1,000,000 sales.
The net working capital required to support $1 million of sales under the conditions our owner allows are:
$246,000 to fund receivables plus
$147,960 to fund inventory minus
($49,230) provided by suppliers, equals a
$344,730 net working capital require to fund $1,000,000 of sales.
We can make that number more useful by converting it to a percentage of sales:
$344,730 working capital / $1 million in sales = 34.5%
The 34.5% is more useful because we can apply it to any amount of sales to find our working capital requirements. For example, if we forecast $750,000, $500,000 or $2 million in sales, our net working capital requirements would be:
$750,000 sales X .345 = $258,750 net working capital
$500,000 sales X .345 = $172,500 net working capital
$2 million sales X .345 = $690,000 net working capital
Percentages are a useful tool over a reasonable range of sales, but we have to use them with caution. It’s not hard to imagine that if we double our sales that our expenses, and therefore our working capital requirements might go up as a percentage of sales.
AGAIN: if you do not enjoy understanding or doing working capital calculations, don’t worry. Get you accountant to do it for you. But do it!
If your accountant gives you a far - off look when you ask about working capital, find a different accountant.