Posts

The Most Common Causes Of Financial Problems In Business

As a business owner, it is essential that you stay on top of the finances in your company. After all, no business can get very far without a decent focus on the money itself. If you want your business to enjoy much success long into the future, then you need to make sure that you are taking a good look at the finances. The truth is, there are a few very common reasons that businesses experience financial problems. In this post, we will take a look at some of them. Looking at these should help any business owner put their own business into a healthier position. With that in mind, let’s take a look at the most common causes of financial problems in the business world.

The Most Common Causes Of Financial Problems In BusinessPhoto courtesy of Pexels

Overstock Of Equipment

It is often the way that young businesses find themselves buying plenty of equipment to get the ball rolling. This might seem necessary, but the truth is it often isn’t. One of the most common causes of businesses experiencing financial trouble early on is an overstock of equipment. It can easily happen, and it can cause more of a hole in your budget than you might at first assume. If you think your business might be suffering in this way, be sure to cut down. Sell some of that stock which you don’t need, and invest the earnings back into the company.

Paying Too Much Tax

There are few things as important as staying on top of the legal side of things. It goes without saying that tax is a very important part of this. However, it is often the case that businesses end up paying too much tax. While you certainly do not want to get into the trouble of not paying any tax, you should make sure that you don’t pay too much either. Doing so could land your business in some serious financial trouble before you even know what’s happened. Use the help of a professional like tax attorney Joe Callahan at MCC4Tax. That way, you are sure to only pay what you need to.

The Most Common Causes Of Financial Problems In BusinessPhoto courtesy of Pexels

Dropping Prices Too Early

It is a very good idea to do everything you can to keep your business competitive in the marketplace. That much goes without saying. However, that doesn’t mean that you should place your business in any kind of financial jeopardy. In fact, this is often easily done without noticing. When you are introducing a new sale or promotion, ensure that you don’t take it too far. There have been cases of businesses essentially bankrupting themselves by being a little too generous. Remember: you want to please the customer, but you also want to keep on trading!

Trying To Please Everyone

The fact is,your business will be much more successful if it focuses on a niche. While it might be tempting to try and have something for everyone, it is often not viable. Chances are, you will just end up spreading yourself too thin. Avoid this at all costs by focusing on a central demographic first and foremost. If you have the resources, you can then expand as and when you need to.

The Big Picture of Business – The Statistics Tree: Understanding Figures and What They Symbolize, Relating Directly to Your Business Success

Business bases much of what it does on statistics. Most often, they’re financial numbers or sales goals. More importantly are the Big Picture statistics that affect every aspect of business growth and success. The way in which the bigger issues are interpreted has direct bearing on strategy and implementation.

Here are some of the most significant statistics that relate to your ability to do business:

Only 2% of the businesses have a plan of any kind. What many of them think is a plan include some accounting figures or sales goals. That is not a full-scope plan. Of the companies who continue to operate without a plan, 40% of them will be out of business in the next 10 years.

Only 2% of those who call themselves Consultants really are just that. That 2% includes all the doctors, lawyers, accountants and engineers… those of us who actually advise. Most so-called consultants are vendors who peddle what they have to sell, rather than what the client companies really need. The answer is for companies to utilize seasoned advisers, rather than coaches and other vendors.

Research shows that change is 90% positive and beneficial. Why, then, do many organizations fight what is in their best interest? The average person and organization changes 71% per year. The mastery of change is to benefit from it, rather than become a victim of it.

92% of all business mistakes may be attributed to poor management decisions. 85% of the time, a formal program of crisis preparedness will help the organization to avert the crisis. The average person spends 150 hours each year in looking for misplaced information and files. One learns three times more from failure than from success. Failures are the surest tracks toward future successes.

One-third of the Gross National Product is sent each year toward cleaning up mistakes, rework, make-goods, corrective action and correcting defects. Yet, only 5.1% is spent on education, which is the key to avoiding mistakes on the front end.

50% of the population reads books. 50% do not. Of all high school graduates, 37% will never read another book after formal schooling. Of all college graduates, 16% will never read another book. Thus, a declining overall level of education in our society and serious challenges faced by organizations in training the workforce. Yet, the holdings of the world’s libraries are doubling every 14 years.

Today’s work force requires three times the amount of training they now get in order to remain competitive in the future. 29% of the work force wants their boss’ job. 70% of corporate CEOs think that business is too much focused on the short-term.

The human brain has more than 300 million component parts. The human brain connects to 13 billion nerves in the body. The human body has 600 muscles. The human body has 206 bones. The average person speaks 30,000 words per day. The average person is bombarded with more than 600 messages per day. More enlightened, actively communicating people are bombarded with more than 900 messages per day.

98% of all new business starts are small businesses. 45% of small business owners are children of small business owners. 83% of all domestic companies have fewer than 20 employees. Only 7% of all companies have 100 or more employees.

The current success rate for organizational hires is 14%. If further research is put into looking at the total person and truly fitting the person to the job, then the success rate soars to 75%. That involves testing and more sophisticated hiring practices.

Retaining good employees, involving training, motivation and incentives, is yet another matter. According to research conducted by the Ethics Resource Center:

  • Employees of organizations steal 10 times more than do shoplifters.
  • Employee theft and shoplifting accounting for 15% of the retail cost of merchandise.
  • 35% of employees steal from the company.
  • 28% of those who steal think that they deserve what they take.
  • 21% of those who steal think that the boss can afford the losses.
  • 56% of employees lie to supervisors.
  • 41% of employees falsify records and reports.
  • 31% of the workforce abuses substances.

On any given day, Americans spend over $33 million buying lottery tickets. On that same day, 99 American families fall below the poverty line. 68% of Americans do not like to take chances. 5% of all Americans go to McDonald’s every day.

99% of American women think that contributing to or bettering society is important. 35% of Americans are involved in community service and charity activities. During the last 3,500 years, the world has been at peace only 8 percent of the time.

Data from the Census Bureau shows that 69% of new companies with employees survive at least two years, and that 51% survive at least five years. An independent analysis by the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that 49% of new businesses survive for five years or more. 34% of new businesses survive ten years or more, and 26% are still in business at least 15 years after being started.

Small businesses really do drive the economy. Many people believe that businesses frequently fail because there are a large number closing every year. In 2009, for example, more than 550,000 businesses were opened, and more than 660,000 closed. This occurred during a recession. However, during an economic expansion, the number of new businesses would outnumber the closures.

Many people may not realize how many small businesses there are in the country. In 2011, the Department of Commerce estimated that there were 27.5 million businesses in the United States. Only 18,000 of those businesses had more than 500 employees, and the rest were considered small businesses.

29% are still in business at the end of year 10. And the biggest drop comes in the first 5 years, when half of startups go belly up. This shows that the odds are against startups staying in business. The internet home business success rate is only 5%.

7 Primary Factors of Business Failure:

  1. Failure to value and optimize true company resources.
  2. Poor premises, policies, processes, procedures, precedents and planning.
  3. Opportunities not heeded or capitalized.
  4. The wrong people, in the wrong jobs. Under-trained employees.
  5. The wrong consultants (miscast, untrained, improperly used).
  6. Lack of articulated focus and vision. With no plan, no journey will be completed.
  7. Lack of movement means falling behind the pack and eventually losing ground.

What Could Have Reduced These High Costs:

  1. Effective policies and procedures.
  2. Setting and respecting boundaries.
  3. Realistic expectations and measurements.
  4. Training and development of people.
  5. Commitments to quality at all links in the chain.
  6. Planning.
  7. Organizational vision.

Success is just in front of our faces. Yet, we often fail to see it coming. Too many companies live with their heads in the sand. Many go down into defeat because it was never on their radar to change.


About the Author

Power Stars to Light the Business Flame, by Hank Moore, encompasses a full-scope business perspective, invaluable for the corporate and small business markets. It is a compendium book, containing quotes and extrapolations into business culture, arranged in 76 business categories.

Hank’s latest book functions as a ‘PDR of business,’ a view of Big Picture strategies, methodologies and recommendations. This is a creative way of re-treading old knowledge to enable executives to master change rather than feel as they’re victims of it.

Power Stars to Light the Business Flameis now out in all three e-book formats: iTunes, Kindle, and Nook.

Budget Management Best Practice 3 – Monthly Budget Presentations

Monthly business budget presentationBudget performance is important to the successful management of any organization and to the personal performance of individual executives and managers. Consequently, budget reviews occur on a monthly or quarterly basis; allowing enough time to pass for meaningful trends to develop but not so much time that corrective action could not be taken so to ensure a business group remains on budget.
Hi there! This article is available to StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor Remote Access and Dedicated Advisor clients and those who subscribe to one of the article's related categories. If you're already a Remote Access or Dedicated Advisor client or a related category subscriber, please log in to read this article. Not a client? We'd love to have you on board. Check out our StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor service options.

Budget Management Best Practice 2 – Monitor the Market and Be Prepared for Change

Monitoring changes in the global marketplaceToday’s marketplace is both dynamic and complex; changing rapidly and possessing interrelationships between products, services, and commodities that are often difficult to perceive. These changes and interconnections favor organizations capable of responding to the evolving supply and demand for their current products as well as fulfilling new consumer needs.
Hi there! This article is available to StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor Remote Access and Dedicated Advisor clients and those who subscribe to one of the article's related categories. If you're already a Remote Access or Dedicated Advisor client or a related category subscriber, please log in to read this article. Not a client? We'd love to have you on board. Check out our StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor service options.

Budget Management Best Practice 1 – Line Item Awareness

Budget Management Line Item AwarenessThe primary organizational responsibility of every executive and manager is the diligent management of resources. This oversight is clearly expressed through the effective management of an executive or manager’s assigned budget.
Hi there! This article is available to StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor Remote Access and Dedicated Advisor clients and those who subscribe to one of the article's related categories. If you're already a Remote Access or Dedicated Advisor client or a related category subscriber, please log in to read this article. Not a client? We'd love to have you on board. Check out our StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor service options.