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If you’re not leveraging your financial statements to guide decisions, you’re essentially running your business blind. These statements—your profit and loss statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement—are the ultimate tools for understanding your business’s financial health and plotting a course for growth. Yet, for many small business owners, they remain underutilized. If you don’t know your numbers, you don’t know your business!
In my previous experience as a business owner, and now in working with clients, I’ve learned that consistently tracking and interpreting these reports can make or break a business. My latest client made the mistake of allowing their CPA to generate these reports just once a year, which led to cash flow surprises and missed opportunities. Once I created and implemented consistent financial processes, the team was able to monitor these statements religiously and then was able to see the business differently—clearer, more actionable, and in control. Let’s demystify these financial tools and show you how they can transform your business.
Financial statements are the pulse of your business. They provide a snapshot of profitability, liquidity, and overall financial health. Beyond the numbers, they reveal trends, uncover inefficiencies, and guide smarter decision-making.
Failing to track financial statements regularly can lead to:
Sometimes, especially when companies have been around for a long time, they all too often rely on intuition or even worse, they assume their business is thriving because sales are strong. This is such a rookie mistake to only focus on the top line instead of the bottom one. When I ask clients if they would rather own a 2 million dollar business or a 40 million dollar business, their answer gives me a keen insight into their experience and also what is important to them. If the 2 million dollar business is netting $1 million and the $40 million dollar business is netting $500k – which would you choose?
The profit and loss statement, also known as the income statement, tracks your business’s revenue, costs and profitability (gross/net margins) over a set period. It answers the essential question: “Are we making money?”
The P&L is your go-to statement for tracking profitability trends. It helps you identify areas where costs can be trimmed or revenue streams expanded. You can break it down to look at months, quarters and years. Some businesses might have cycles that are more profitable than others while other business might be more stable regardless of what season of year it is. Once you have some historical data built up, you can run trending analysis to learn even more about how your business behaves under different circumstances.
If you’re not reviewing your P&L regularly, you might:
The balance sheet is a snapshot of your business’s financial position at a specific point in time. It answers the question: “What do we own, and what do we owe?”
The balance sheet provides a comprehensive view of your business’s net worth. It’s crucial for:
Without monitoring your balance sheet:
The statement of cash flows tracks the movement of cash in and out of your business over a specific period. It answers the critical question: “Where is our cash coming from, and where is it going?” This often gets confused with profitability or the P&L. It’s important to remove the idea of profit when thinking about this statement and truly look at this as a flow of cash – in and out of the business, when and why. It’s an analysis to make sure you have enough of it when you need.
Even profitable businesses can run into trouble if cash flow isn’t managed effectively. The cash flow statement ensures you have enough liquidity to cover expenses, reinvest in the business, and weather unexpected challenges.
Reviewing our cash flow statement revealed a lag in accounts receivable collections, causing a temporary cash shortfall. By renegotiating payment terms with clients and delaying a non-essential purchase, we avoided a crisis. Another way we helped this situation was to require down payments from our customers to help pay for the initial start up costs of each job.
Understanding how these financial statements work together is key:
Why You Need All Three: Imagine your P&L shows a profit, but your cash flow statement reveals a lack of liquidity. Or your balance sheet shows growing liabilities that might jeopardize future stability. Together, these statements give a complete picture.
Timely and consistent accounting ensures your financial statements are reliable. Inaccurate or delayed data can lead to poor decisions and missed opportunities.
Involve managers in understanding key metrics to align operations with financial goals. When your team understands the numbers, they can contribute to improving them. Many of the financial reports can be used operationally and conversely the financial reporting can be taken to the next level in terms of value if you have feedback from your operations team. This is where teams and businesses are set apart from the rest – when they are working together and not operating as separate departments to input the data and decipher the data coming out of the reports.
Financial statements aren’t just for accountants; they’re essential tools for small business success. By regularly reviewing your profit and loss statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement, you’ll gain valuable insights to make informed decisions, avoid pitfalls, and seize growth opportunities.
Take time this month to review all three financial statements. Identify one actionable insight—whether it’s reducing costs, improving cash flow, or managing debt—and take a step to improve your business’s financial health. Mastering these tools is a game-changer, and your business will thank you for it.