1 / 30

Seven steps to increase your profit through understanding business costs Andrew Mault ACMA

Seven steps to increase your profit through understanding business costs Andrew Mault ACMA. Introduction. CREDIT. COST CONTROL. BUDEGTING. BENCHMARKING & KPI’S. PRICING STRATEGIES. COST DYNAMICS. BASIC FINANCIAL REPORTS. The Picture. Financial Elements. Basic Financial Reports.

agalia
Download Presentation

Seven steps to increase your profit through understanding business costs Andrew Mault ACMA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Seven steps to increase your profit throughunderstanding business costs Andrew Mault ACMA

  2. Introduction CREDIT COST CONTROL BUDEGTING BENCHMARKING & KPI’S PRICING STRATEGIES COST DYNAMICS BASIC FINANCIAL REPORTS

  3. The Picture

  4. Financial Elements

  5. Basic Financial Reports Profit & Loss Account A summary of business transactions for a given period, and displays the turnover (or revenue) and the costs associated against the turnover figures. PROFIT = TURNOVER LESS COSTS It shows managers, directors and investors whether the business made or lost money during the period being reported.

  6. Basic Financial Reports Balance Sheet Is a financial statement of a business at any given point in time and is often described as a “snapshot of a company's financial condition”. It shows what a business owns or is owed (assets) and what it owes (liabilities) as of a specific date such as the end of its financial year (Year End).

  7. Basic Financial Reports Cashflow Statement Is a financial statement that shows how changes in balance sheet accounts and income, affect cash and cash equivalents. All cash received (inflows) and spent (outflows) by the business will be shown in this statement.

  8. Accounting Ratio’s Ratio analysis provides a starting point for further investigation into the performance of a company. • Profitability Ratio’s • Profit Margin is an indicator of a company's pricing strategies and how well it controls costs. Differences in competitive strategy and product mix cause the profit margin to vary among different companies. Two types: Gross & Net • Return On Capital Employed (ROCE) is used to prove the value the business gains from its assets and liabilities, a business which owns lots of land but has little profit will have a smaller ROCE to a business which owns little land but makes the same profit.

  9. Dynamics of Cost • Costs can be categorized by: • Nature or element: materials, labour, expenses • Functions: production, selling, distribution, administration, R&D, development • As direct and indirect • Variability: fixed, variable, semi-variable • Controllability: controllable, uncontrollable • Normality: normal, abnormal

  10. Costing Techniques • Activity Based Costing • Lean Accounting • Margin Accounting • Standard Costing • Job Costing Accounting

  11. Standard Costing

  12. Standard Costing

  13. Job Costing Revenues Costs Job P&L

  14. Pricing Strategies • How can it improve the business? • Costing helps to: • Set prices • Control and reduce costs • Plan for the future • Make better decisions • Write a business plan to obtain credit • Steps: •    1. Identify cost components •    2. Systematise costs •    3. Calculate variable costs •    4. Calculate fixed costs •    5. Calculate total costs per unit •    6. Set Prices, deduct the breakeven point

  15. Pricing Strategy Matrix QUALITY LOW HIGH Economy Penetration LOW PRICE HIGH Skimming Premium

  16. Break Even Calculation Breakeven analysisis used to determine how much sales volume your business needs to start making a profit. The breakeven analysis is especially useful when you're developing a pricing strategy, either as part of a marketing plan or a business plan. To conduct a breakeven analysis, use this formula: Fixed Costs divided by (Revenue per unit - Variable costs per unit) The break-even point (BEP)is the point at which the cost of producing a product or providing a service exactly matches the revenue gained from selling that product or service. For example, if a firm’s total annual costs are £1m and in the same year it generates £1m of revenue, then the firm is said to have broken-even, as it hasn’t made any more or less than it has invested.

  17. Break Even Point Fixed costs (Pink horizontal line) do not vary with output - they are the costs of running the business. Revenue(Blue line starting from zero) shows the total sales at a given price and volume. Variable Costs(Yellow line starting from zero) are directly related to volume and increase or decrease as production and sales increase or decrease. Total Costs(Green line starting on top of fixed costs) are fixed and variable costs added together. The BEP(Break-Even Point) is the point at which the revenue and total cost lines cross.

  18. Break Even Exercise A designer / photographic mug costs £10 to buy. The variable costs are £6 per mug which makes the contribution [price less variable costs] to fixed costs £4 per unit. The total fixed costs are £1,200. The BEP is calculated as follows: Fixed costs / contribution per unit = BEP 1,200 / 4 (10-6) = 300 units Or in terms of value BEP in units x price per unit = BEP value 300 x £10 = £30,000

  19. Benchmarking Benchmarking is the process of comparing one's business processes and performance metrics to industry bests and/or best practices from other industries. Dimensions typically measured are quality, time, and cost. Improvements from learning mean doing things better, faster, and cheaper. Information is available to benchmark your business performance against that of other business in your same market or sector. Useful websites: Companies House www.companieshouse.gov.uk Risk Disk www.riskdisk.com Dun and Bradstreet www.dnb.co.uk Experian www.experian.co.uk Alternatively, contact St Helens Chamber as UK limited company reports available through the Business Information Team as part of membership. Internal Benchmarking - comparing departments, sales reps etc.

  20. Benchmarking Report

  21. Key Performance Indicators KPI’sare measures by which the performances of organizations, business units, and their division, departments and employees are periodically assessed. The principles of SMARTA (Specific, Measurable, Agreed to, Realistic, Timely and Aligned) must underpin the KPI's. • The measurement must make a difference • Employees must have a significant degree of control over achievement of the KPI. • They need to provide positive reinforcement for desired behaviour. • There needs to be alignment between individual and organisational KPI's. • Types of KPI’s • financial and non-financial measures • short-term and long-term indicators • performance drivers (future-oriented) and outcomes (past-oriented) • quantitative and qualitative measures • 'lead' and 'lag' indicators Examples include: Creditor days, Debtors days, Gearing, Fixed Costs, Variable Costs, Invoice Processing Costs, Profit Per Product, Profit Per Project / Job

  22. Key Performance Indicators Range of indicators to include … • Financial measures – including profitability, return on investment, revenue growth and mix, cost control, productivity, asset use, investment strategy • Customer perceptions – market share, customer acquisition and retention, customer satisfaction • Internal business processes - such as customer service, innovation, operational efficiency, quality, cycles, resource consumption • Innovation & learning – measures that allow the organisation to develop, change, improve, respond to changing circumstances, and remain sustainable. The main categories are employee capabilities/skills, retention, productivity, information systems capability, knowledge management, employee empowerment, motivation and values alignment How many KPI's?

  23. Budgeting Very important and all businesses need them How we set them with our clients - Zero based using shuttle forms • Analyse the numbers and type of car including mileage travelled etc and all the associated costs. • Analyse staff and their salary overtime other paid components. • All the cost drivers • Produce budget for each cost centre or nominal code. If don’t have time or the resource or skills for the above, have a look at what you did last year and review the transactions on use as a base for this year -not ideal but better than nothing! • Must remain • Flexible • Easy to produce and report on (Actual vs Budget) • Clear • Automatically produced and updated each Month / Quarter

  24. Budgeting

  25. Cost Control • Your costs • Identify your major cost centres. • Identify the major types of cost within each cost centre. • Choose the costs to focus on first. • Systematic cost control • Start from your business objectives. • Establish your ‘standard costs’ for achieving your objectives. • Establish realistic ‘budgeted costs’ based on your actual experience. • Record your actual costs and compare them with the standard and budgeted costs. • Periodically review what you are doing and how you are doing it. • Who is involved? • Each cost centre is usually the responsibility of one manager. • Involve employees in cost control. • Include your customers and suppliers. • External consultants.

  26. Cost Control • Easy savings • Checking supplier invoices may reveal overcharging. • Eliminate unnecessary costs. • Crack down on excessive costs. • Root out inefficiency. • Opportunities • Reduce your payroll costs. • Improve your purchasing. • Find ways to make production more efficient. • Review your finances. • Get the most out of your premises. • Cut the cost of communications. • Pitfalls • Reducing costs which directly impact on employees is fraught with difficulty. • Almost every cost saving has a potential downside. • Consultants • External consultants can offer an advantage over purely internal cost control. • Select a consultant carefully. Negotiate a clear, written contract.

  27. 10 Simple Cost Cuts • Consumables • www.cartridgeworld.co.uk/business-direct • www.inkcycle.co.uk • Energy Efficiency • www.Uswitchforbusiness.com • www.comparethemarket.com/business-energy • www.sthelenschamber.com/extranet/membership_services/chamber_utilities • Postage • Quotations • Networking • www.bni.eu/chapter.php?chapter=544 • www.freshnetworking.co.uk • www.sthelenschamber.com/events/2010/11/l/Networking

  28. 10 Simple Cost Cuts • Direct Debits • Paperless Business • www.greengrantsmachine.co.uk www.freefaxtoemail.net • www.efax.com • Telecommunications • www.skype.com www.business.bt.com • www.voiptalk.org www.voipcheap.co.uk • Brand Visibility • www.facebook.com www.twitter.com • www.youtube.com www.linkedin.com • www.qype.co.uk www.yelp.com • www.google.com/maps • Credit Checks & Control

  29. Effective Credit Control • Optimising cash flow and reducing bad debts are two key objectives of any successful business. • Setting up a good credit control system is a starting point for both: • Improve Cash flow • Reduce bad debts • Increase profits • Build customer loyalty • Build financial confidence • Increase sales • Credit Account Application Form • www.sthelenschamber.com/extranet/guidance_documents

  30. Summary • Understand • Analyse • Listen to your business • Focus on key areas of cost • Take Advice • Watch for signs • Plan • Budget • Forecast • Reduce Costs • Increase Profits!

More Related