Alliance Advisory Group Blog

August 4, 2010

Driving Profitable Execution Through Benchmarking

Filed under: Strategic Advisory — Tags: , , , — admin @ 1:51 pm

How do you determine whether you are performing to an acceptable level? In the sports world teams and players get an opportunity to measure their performance against their peers through their win/loss record and other specific sport related measurements.

In the business world benchmarking can be used to identify trends and opportunities that allow for specific strategies to be developed for execution to enhance an already existing competitive advantage or to improve in area’s that fall below your peer group.

Benchmarking is a process used to aid a company in measuring its products, practices and performance against their peers. It is one of the most beneficial tools a business owner can use in order to clearly identify whether their company is performing well within specific functions and activities, especially in terms of whether their financial results are similar to their competitors. By using this tool, a business can also identify any improvements they may need to make within its processes.

However, its main aim is to measure a businesses internal processes against an external standard and aid companies in learning about which same companies are more experienced in particular activities and functions in comparison to them. In short, it allows companies to investigate into new and different techniques, enabling them to successfully improve on their own.

Benchmarking is extremely advantageous as it allows a business to focus on company to company comparisons in regards to how basic and advanced functions and processes are performed. Along with the different improvements which can potentially be made within the company, it also looks at how materials and equipment are purchased, how a companies suppliers are paid, the manner in which inventories are organized and so forth. When it comes to using benchmarking effectively, the level of analysis which is completed is vital in order for a company to use benchmarking to their full advantage.

This analysis can take two different forms: vertical and horizontal. Vertical benchmarking focuses on specific departments or functions within the company, while horizontal focuses on a specific process or activity. In regards to the strategic issues within the company, the main goal of this is to clearly identify factors which are of the greatest importance in order to provide an advantage over competitors and isolate those companies who are your main competitor and evaluate their processes and achievements through these processes.

The process of benchmarking involves using a range of different sources which can include published literature, information from past meetings and conversations with marketing representatives, consultants, customers and so forth. The internet has helped evolve the ways in which businesses operate and succeed, and has even changed the way in which the benchmarking process works. With the use of the internet, a business can easily access a large amount of databases which contain performance data for thousands of different companies.

In order to be successful with benchmarking, there are a number of factors you must take into account. One of the main factors is management commitment which is commonly used within many successful companies. Management is vital for any business’ success and must be thoroughly performed throughout the company to maintain the companies operation. Successful benchmarking can only be achieved in the event that you have a well-trained team who will aid in your processes working accurately and efficiently. It is only with your team attempting to use your gathered information to make improvements that you will truly see these improvements come to light. Within your company you will no doubt have a number of set goals and objective for your different departments, etc; benchmarking works in much of the same way. By identifying your objectives and remaining focused on them, your company has higher chances of success via successful benchmarking. The key to this is to ensure that you only gather the most accurate and relevant information and transfer this into data which can be understood and easily used within a comparison to other similar companies.

A second key success factor is determining the areas and data to be tracked or benchmarked against. Many of them are very standard across industry segments such as your current and quick ratio, turnover of accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory, debt to worth ratio and debt service coverage ratio. Others will be very industry specific and will change depending on your segment. Industry associations can be helpful in determining those areas most pertinent for you industry type.

Once you have your benchmarking data it is extremely important that you can properly interpret what the comparable analysis is conveying to you and how to make the best use of it for your own situation. In other words how to utilize the information in such a way that you can develop and implement successful performance improvement within your company.

It is only by ensuring that you successfully use benchmarking to your advantage that you will be able to clearly identify where your weaknesses are through the success of other, similar companies. By following through with your goals to improve your processes and functions, you could soon be part of a newly improved and highly successful organization.

June 28, 2010

Measuring Winning Financial Performance

Financial management of a small business is a challenging endeavor. For any business to succeed cash must flow and profitability must increase at a rate that provides a reasonable return on investment. Yet the fluid nature of a business sometimes makes keeping track of performance as easy as nailing Jello to a wall.

Knowing what to track is the most important part of developing an effective bookkeeping system. Most businesses only have a few “key performance indicators” that will provide the vital signs for success. Reviewing these indicators on a regular basis will help assess the true health of your business.

The numbers don’t lie and if you are keeping good financial records, the vital signs of your business will become glaringly apparent; and for many small business owners, it is not uncommon to find these vital signs conflict with the owner’s intuitive measures of performance (which is usually the checkbook balance).

At a minimum, the review should include:

Liquidity – is your cash balance in your checking account increasing? Are inventory levels and accounts receivables increasing or decreasing?

Profitability – did you have more income than expenses for this period?

Return on Investment – is the percentage of profitability divided by your assets increasing or decreasing? You may also want to measure this against just your fixed assets.

No matter what the reasons may be for your performance to date, there is always hope for a better future. Tomorrow’s balance sheet is always going to differ from today’s if you are conducting business. By learning the lessons of how your business has performed to date you can develop plans to improve for the future.

Once you have honestly addressed why your business is where it is, you will be better positioned to develop plans to grow and prosper in the future. Any effective plan should have a scorecard of what you intuitively think will happen. This way you can measure success and make adjustments if things don’t go as planned.

Growing a successful business is a balance of measuring performance to date and developing new possibilities for a better future. As you study your performance, don’t dwell only on the results; also think about what you are going to do better in the future.

April 6, 2010

Planning for Growth in the New Normal: Alliance Advisory Group Sees Opportunity in “Lessons Learned” from Recession

Filed under: Strategic Advisory — Tags: , , , — admin @ 2:27 pm

This February, Forbes Insights and CIT Group Inc. released an eye-opening report: “U.S. Small Business Outlook 2010: Lessons Learned—A Case for Greater Optimism.” The authors interviewed more than 200 business owners and key executives in $1-15 million companies, creating a snapshot of where we are now, in the “new normal.” The study’s real value is in the implications the data holds for businesses of any kind as we move cautiously into the recovery.

Nearly all of us faced challenges during the downturn—some more dramatic than others. The question is: how will business owners apply the lessons we’ve learned to make the most of their opportunities, internal and external?

Here are the four key lessons from Alliance Advisory’s perspective:

Lesson 1: Have a plan

In the last 18 months, many companies hit a wall, or worse yet, broke through that wall only to fall off the top-line revenue cliff.

The recession has shown us that small and mid-market businesses did not have the control necessary to maintain or stop the decline, and took drastic action to limit losses. In large part, these actions were reactive rather than planned.

The downturn—and its eventual impact on operations—was not something many smaller companies had prepared for. From mid-2008 and back, we were fat, dumb and happy. Times were good. Money was flowing freely and being spent. A certain degree of complacency worked its way into the system. The majority of companies, as indicated by the survey, did not have a plan of action to put in place if tough times hit, so they made changes on the fly, scrambling to redefine themselves without a model.

Only 64 percent of the companies surveyed intend to aggressively seek growth in 2010. What about the other 36 percent? They are not done reacting to the downturn. The unspoken fact is, they are worried about survival, not growth.

Lesson 2: Plan for profitability within the “new normal”

Having survived the recession is an accomplishment in itself. Just being in existence puts you in a position to benefit where others have failed. The exact definition of the “new normal” is in flux, but we can say unequivocally that the mentality of “if it isn’t broken, why fix it?” proved suicidal. Assume that your business model is broken somewhere and you have just not noticed yet.

Smart companies thrive by constantly reinventing themselves. Does that mean radical change? No. It means evolutionary awareness: constantly analyzing what they do, and how, where, and for whom they do it—adapting to the changing competitive landscape.

If your company has survived, you might be tempted to let down your guard. Don’t! You may have dodged a bullet, but the next shot is unpredictable. Protect yourself by truly understanding your operating expenses. Start by taking the top ten expenses by percentage of total, and drill down into them, identifying opportunities and risk. For service businesses, the biggest expense will be human resources. Do you have the right people, doing the right things, and are the roles and expectations clearly spelled out and articulated?

Revenue growth is an excellent goal, but in the new normal, focus on profitability first. Our clients have seen up to triple-digit increases in profitability from single-digit increases in revenue, just by making their operational mechanisms more efficient.

Warren Buffett remarked that when the tide goes out, you learn who’s been swimming naked. Plan now for low tide.

Lesson 3: Plan for complementary revenue streams

For companies targeting growth in 2010, much of the past two years was spent looking inward, rationalizing the business model based on the new revenue reality. Once you’ve planned for profitability in the face of 20, 30, even 50 percent revenue declines, it’s time to expand market planning and evaluate new revenue opportunities.

Your company has a skill set and capabilities in a particular area. Going forward, you must find ways to exploit these to get a bigger slice of the pie. I advise clients to identify what they do well, boiling it down to their core competencies, and leverage these to take advantage of other opportunities in the marketplace.

When you’ve defined new offerings to take to the marketplace, start with your existing clients. With good will already established, your chances of selling something new or additional will be much greater than recruiting a new customer.

The greatest threat to finding new revenue opportunities is tradition (we do business this way because we’ve always done business this way). A resistance to change equates to a failure to take risks.

Lesson 4: Build accountability into your plan

Planning is not a once-and-done exercise. It is a process. When you’ve set a plan for a period of time—say, your fiscal year—you need to revisit it regularly. I recommend evaluating results against your plan at least monthly. Develop a standard process for measuring performance against the plan, and evaluate progress on your key objectives at least monthly. Once a quarter, evaluate the bigger picture. How has the landscape changed? What new needs or threats have appeared and how will you maneuver around them?

Entrepreneurs create businesses around a passion or a particular proficiency, but the disciplined management and execution of strategic, operational and financial plans tend to be elusive.

If that is the case in your organization, building accountability into your planning process can mean the difference between growth and mere survival.

March 27, 2010

Corporate Balance Sheets Show Surprising Strength

Filed under: Strategic Advisory — Tags: , , , — admin @ 12:53 pm

A recent Business Week article, http://bit.ly/duusrO, discusses how large cap companies have restructured their balances sheets in light of the economic slowdown, namely deleveraging.

Whether this was voluntary or forced upon them it was obviously the right thing to do in light of falling revenues and squeezed margins.

We have been leading many of our clients through the same sort of exercise but in a much more strategic and focused fashion.

Engaging in a process to actually measure a firm’s financial health we help them understand where they are, where they should or need to be and, more importantly, the specific steps they need to take to get there.

The raw numbers on your balance sheet, income statement and cash flow statement are just that. They only have value when tracked and measured against some standard of performance (either internally oriented or externally generated). The secret to effective financial management lies in knowing which ratios to track and what they tell you about the state of your business.

Unlike the profit and loss (income) statement, which is a historical recording that never changes, the balance sheet is a living, breathing document that changes on a daily basis. Three important balance sheet ratios to track are:

* Current ratio (Current assets/current liabilities)
* Quick ratio ([Cash + receivables]/current liabilities)
* Debt-to-equity ratio (Net worth/total liabilities)

The P&L statement focuses on revenues, expenses and net income (or loss) over a defined period of time. It measures the company’s ability to turn sales/revenues into profits, a key ingredient for long-term success. Key P&L ratio’s to track would include:

* Gross income (Revenues – cost of goods sold)
* Gross margin (Net sales – cost of goods sold)
* Net operating profit (Gross margin – SG&A expenses)
* Net profit (Net operating profit + income) – (other expenses + taxes)

Gross margin the most important ratio on the P&L. If you lose the gross margin battle you can do a lot of other things right and still go out of business.

Key operating ratios combine information from the balance sheet and income statement to provide a more sophisticated look at what is happening with the business. These include:

* Gross profit ratio (Gross profit/sales)
* Pretax profit ratio (Pretax profit/sales)
* Sales-to-assets ratio (Total assets/sales)
* Return on assets ratio (Pretax profits/total assets)
* Return on equity ratio (Pretax profit/equity)
* Inventory turnover ratio (Cost of goods sold/inventory)
* Days in inventory ratio (Inventory turnover/365 days)
* Accounts receivable turnover ratio (Sales/accounts receivable)
* Collection period ratio (Accounts receivable turnover/365 days)
* Accounts payable turnover ratio (Cost of goods sold/accounts payable)
* Payable period ratio (Accounts payable turnover/365 days)

You should track and measure your performance ratio’s at least monthly and compare them to internally generated standards of performance (i.e. budget) or against an external source of data (i.e. peer comparisons for your industry)

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