Quick Find

Home

Guesthouses / B&Bs Managing your cashflow

Managing your cashflow

This Managing your cashflow Info Guide suggests actions you can take and tools you can use to improve your cashflow.
 

Know your business

Understand the types of payments and receipts that arse. Anticipate the timing of cashflows


The timing of cashflows is affected by:

  • seasonality.
  • overtime payments.
  • required refurbishments and improvements.
  • supplier terms.
  • tax and bank repayments.

top
 

Managing your cashflow (Flash animation)
 

 

Cashflow forecasting

A Cashflow Forecast is a tool which you can use to estimate the amounts of cash coming into your business and the amounts of cash going out for the forthcoming three-month period or for the forthcoming year. This will help you to spot potential cashflow shortfalls in advance and take corrective action.

top

Prepare for the unexpected

Things often take twice as long and cost twice as much as you anticipate.

Remember!

Build in an amount for contingencies to give you a margin of safety.


top
 

Communicate

Once you have prepared a flexible Cashflow Forecast and have identified times when you may have cash shortfalls, you should speak to the relevant people, for example, your bank manager, as early as possible.

Example

- Organise a bank overdraft needed for later in the year well in advance before it becomes an issue.

- If you have difficulty meeting a forthcoming lease or mortgage payment, be open and honest with your landlord or bank manager in good time – this may help you avoid serious problems.


top

Cash security

Put controls in place to protect cash takings and to prevent customers from leaving without paying.
 
top
 

Monitor your cashflow position

Keeping on top of your cashflow position requires ongoing monitoring from you or your book-keeper. Your Cashflow Forecast should be a living tool that is rolled on from one week or month to the next with actual information providing the new starting point to project forward.

top