Up Your Cash Flow / Goldstein 125-131
131 GOOD PEOPLE WILL MAKE THE DIFFERENCE
The most important and valuable asset in your company is highly trained and responsible employees. Your survival will depend on trained people.
Some of my notes from some of the books I'm reading.
131 GOOD PEOPLE WILL MAKE THE DIFFERENCE
The most important and valuable asset in your company is highly trained and responsible employees. Your survival will depend on trained people.
182 With many companies we start, we don't even do the figures in advance. We just feel there's room in the market...We try to make the figures work out after the event. Richard Branson/Virgin Group.
The differences, mostly, lie at the edge--sophisticated products and services on which the rest of us piggyback our way to relative success. Breakthrough products depend, in turn, on an astonishingly small number of people. Providing a climate that produces great microbiologists, aerospace engineers, and architects--and then offers an entrepreneurial infrastructure that turns their work into gold--it essential.
Are you regenerating? Are you dealing with new things? When you find yourself in a new environment, do you come up with a fundamentally different approach? That's the test. When you flunk, you leave. Jack Welch/CEO GE
As I see it, business problem No. 1 is that too many still follow the reluctant mutator strategy--e.g., IBM's continuing and ultimately futile efforts to keep an iron grip on its major customers in a computational world gone bonkers.
"Advantageous mutations occur so rarely that...it may be helpful to arrange for an increased mutation rate"
9 The conversion of price into investment prepares a consultative seller to propose giving money to a customer rather than taking it away.
The conversion of technical performances into financial performance defines the subject matter of sales consultation: improving customers' profitability so that their competitive advantage is enhanced.
The conversion of product-line sales management into profit-project portfolio management enables consultative sellers to integrate their mission with the customer operating managers who must become their partners.
125 Often companies need to develop a broader business plan that gives long range goals and ideas to convey the overall philosophy and direction of the company.These plans are used to secure capital through loans, private financing and/or venture capital.
181 The best hope of success lies in having numerous projects percolating at once; this ups the odds of one of them boiling over.
8 The traditional buyers are cost-controllers. If you choose to confront them as your decision makers, they will faithfully negotiate away your margins in order to lower "the cost of goods bought"
On the other hand, you can choose to partner with managers who act as your economic sellers inside their businesses, promoting your proposals to improve their contributions to profits.
If you make the three right choices, you are in position to compare your value against a customer's current value, attach your price in the form of an investment to your value, and partner with a business manager who sells your value. You are selling like a consultant.
Vendor sales representatives become consultative sellers by making three conversions in their mindsets:
1) They must convert price into investment.
2) They must convert a product or service into the dollar value that comes from being applied to a customers operation (value added by application VABA.
3) They must convert their focus on making individuals stand-alone sales into making a portfolio of continuing sales, each one of which is a logical migration form its preceding sale. A customer's profit improvement cannot be sporadic, periodic event. Instead , it must be an ongoing process whose continuous inflow of new streams of cash is predictable. Reliability of profit improvements is every consultative partnership's middle name.
194 Enduring great companies don't exist merely to deliver returns to shareholders. Indeed, in a truly great company, profits and cash flow become like blood and water to a healthy body: They are absolutely essential for life, but they are not the very point of life.
119 BUSINESS PLAN: QUESTIONS TO ASK
These are a must for a business plan.
What kind of business am I in?
How much cash will you need in the future?
When will you run out of cash?
Where will you get the cash? Bankers? Partners? Public? Profits? Or use your own?
PRODUCING THE PRODUCT
FACILITIES AND ADMINISTRATION
MONEY
174 Once we have appointed our managers, we let them reinvent the wheel...The world is changing so fast you'll always be needing different wheels for changing terrain. Paul van Vlissingen, chairman, SHV ($10 billion revenue, Dutch-based retailer)
Van Vlissingen says that integrity in all business dealings is a must. Other than that, the idea of a common corporate culture is wrongheaded. Keep finding and developing great people, he says, then let'em do it their way.
The object of business is to invent, to grow--and add to employment over time.
The study's winners got to above-average profits via below-average costs (along with average revenues) or above-average revenues (with average costs)
186 THE FLYWHEEL AND THE DOOM LOOP--Key Points
Unexpected results
103 Using Ratios to Interpret the Data
Current Ratio: (Current Assets Divided by Current Liabilities) ...tells you how many dollars should be available in the next 12 months to pay the liabilities that will mature in the next 12 months. The higher than $1 the better.
Quick Ratio: (Cash & Accounts Receivables Divided by Current Liabilities)...gives an indication of how quickly a company can pay its current obligations without relying on future sales. The higher than $1 the better.
Debt to Equity: (Total Debt Divided By Total Equity) is the ratio that compares the amount invested in the business by creditors versus the amount invested by owners. 1 to 1 excellent. 3 to 1 typical for small business.
Net Income to Equity (Net Income Divided By Stockholders' Equity) indicates the return on the investment (ROI) that shareholders are receiving based on the equity they have in the business. .22 represents 22@ return on equity remaining in the business.
Inventory Turnover: (Cost of Goods Sold Divided By Inventory) ...the number of times that a business turns inventory during the year. Many companies try to strive for the most turnovers within an operating cycle. Be cautious with this approach. To increase your inventory turnover you must reduce the amount of inventory on hand, and this might result in lower sales if you have an insufficient amount of goods available for sale of customers.
Net Income to Net Sales (Net Income Divided by Net Sales)...indicates how many dollars of profit you earn from each dollar of sales made. 8.9 would mean that for every dollar of sales the company earns 8.9 cents profit.
Account Receivable Turnover (Net Sales Divided by Accounts Receivable)...indicates how many times the accounts receivable are being paid and re-established during the accounting period. The higher the turnover, the faster the collections. The collection of accounts receivable is critical. Keep a close eye on this ratio. If it begins to indicate that collections are slowing down, take strong action to improve the company's collection policies.
Accounts Payable Turnover (Purchases Divided by Accounts Payable)...indicates the number of times accounts payable will be paid during the year.
173 Sometime during a two-year curriculum, every MBA student ought to hear it clearly stated that numbers, techniques, and analysis are all side matters. What is central to business is the joy of creating. Peter Robinson/The Red Herring.
You should be looking at projects that promise to transform a corner of your industry.
4 Consultative Selling vs Vending