Growth Feels Great—Until It Doesn’t
At first, owning a business appears simple: money comes in, bills go out, and if there's anything left over, you're OK.
Then growth occurs.
More clients. Larger projects. Increased payroll. Perhaps a second place.
Cash no longer flows as freely as it did previously. Despite achieving record sales, your bank balance appears to be low. You're working harder than ever, but the strain to pay next week's bills feels heavier.
Welcome to the paradox of growth: the larger your company becomes, the tighter cash flow can feel.
Why Growing Businesses Feel Cash-Poor
It's not bad management; it's mathematics. As revenue increases, so does:
- Accounts receivable: Clients take longer to pay hefty invoices.
- Inventory or project costs: You spend money for weeks (or months) before you get it back.
- Payroll: Growth usually implies additional people—and payroll arrives on time, even if consumer payments do not.
- Taxes: Higher profits result in higher projected payments, which draw cash out of your account quarterly.
Growth widens the time difference between money going out and money coming in. Without a method to monitor and forecast it, you are flying blind.
The Shift: From Bookkeeping to Cash Flow Strategy
Most small businesses begin with simple bookkeeping: track your earnings, record your expenses, and file your taxes. However, as your business grows, you will require additional cash flow management that looks ahead rather than backward.
Financial professionals play a critical role in this regard.
They can help you:
- Forecast inflows and outflows several weeks or months in advance.
- Identify cash gaps early and plan accordingly.
- Make provisions for seasonality or growth spikes.
- Consider "what-if" situations (additional personnel, equipment purchases, and expansions) before making a commitment.
In other words, they assist you transform growth from a guessing game to a system.
Real-World Example: The Busy-but-Broke Dilemma
One of our clients increased income in a year and nearly ran out of funds. Why? Every large new contract necessitated additional up-front costs and personnel before payments were received.
When we charted cash flow month by month, they saw the problem plainly. With a few adjustments—changing invoice terms, modifying payroll time, and establishing a short-term credit line—they went from panic to predictability.
The revenue did not change. The system did.
Bottom Line
Growth gives opportunities, but it also introduces complexity. What used to fit on a spreadsheet now requires organization, planning, and strategy.
If your company is rapidly expanding yet cash is tight, it's time to go beyond simple bookkeeping.
Contact us today to create a cash flow strategy that develops as smartly as you do.
