You already know that your company’s turnover and profits play a big role in how much your business is worth.
Are you also aware of the role cash flow plays in your valuation?
Cash vs. Profits
Cash flow is different from profits in that it measures the cash coming in and out of your business rather than an accounting interpretation of your profit and loss. For example, if you charge £10,000 upfront for a service that takes you three months to deliver, you recognize £3,333 of turnover per month on your profit and loss statement for each of the three months it takes you to deliver the work.
But since you charged upfront, you get all £10,000 of cash on the day your customer decides to buy. This positive cash flow cycle improves your company’s valuation because when it comes time to sell your business, the buyer will have to write two cheques: one to you, the owner, and a second to your company to fund its working capital – the cash your company needs to fund its immediate obligations like payroll, rent, etc.
The trick is that both cheques are drawn from the same bank account. Therefore, the less the acquirer has to inject into your business to fund its working capital, the more money it has to pay you for your company.
The inverse is also true.
If your company is a cash suck, an acquirer is going to calculate that she needs to inject a lot of working capital into your business on closing day, which will deplete her resources and lessen the cheque she writes to you.
How To Improve Your Cash Flow
There are many ways to improve your cash flow – and therefore, the value of your business. One often overlooked tactic is to spend less on the machines your company needs to operate.
In the restaurant business, for example, there is an often repeated truism that it takes three bankruptcies at a single location before any restaurant can make money. The first owner of the restaurant walks in and – with all of the typical optimism of a new entrepreneur – pays cash for a brand new commercial kitchen complete with fancy stove, commercial grade walk-in coolers, etc., as well as all new dish ware, pots and pans, thus depleting his cash reserves before opening night. Within a year, the restaurant owner runs out of cash and declares bankruptcy.
Then along comes a second entrepreneur who decides to set up her restaurant at the same location and buys all of the shiny new equipment from owner number one’s creditors for a 30 percent discount, figuring she has made a wonderful deal. But the outlay of cash is still too great, and she too is out of business within a year.
It’s not until the third owner comes along that the location actually survives. He saves his cash by buying all of the equipment from the second owner at a 90 percent discount.
The moral of the story is: find a way to reduce the cash you spend on equipment, however you can. Can you buy your gear used on sites like eBay? Can you share a very expensive piece of machinery with another non-competing business? Can you rent instead of buying?
Profits are an important factor in your company’s value but so too is the cash your company generates.
Richard Wickes