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.

July 21, 2010

Back to Basics-Financial Management

There is one simple reason to understand and observe strong financial planning in your business – to avoid failure. Eight of ten new businesses fail primarily because of the lack of good financial planning.

Business financial planning affects how and on what terms you will be able to attract the funding required to establish, maintain, and expand your business. Financial planning determines the raw materials you can afford to buy, the products you will be able to produce, and whether or not you will be able to market them efficiently. It affects the human and physical resources you will be able to acquire to operate your business. It will be a major determinant of whether or not you will be able to make your hard work profitable.

No matter how small or large your business, there are a few basic things any company should be doing in the area of good financial management:

* Have a system in place to capture financial information important to your business, i.e. sales, COGS, expenses, receivables, payables, etc.
* Measure everything! What gets measured gets done. Create a financial budget and compare your actual performance to your plan.
* Monitor your financial performance regularly:
o Review the balance sheet to analyze trends within your assets and liabilities.
o Review your cash flow statements and projections. Remember, profits don’t pay the bills, cash does.
o Analyze your profit and loss statement in comparison to prior periods, as well as your budget. This can point out positive or negative trends in sales, gross profit margin and net profits.

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.

June 24, 2010

Small-Business Confidence Increased in May

Filed under: Strategic Advisory — Tags: , , — admin @ 7:26 pm

Confidence among U.S. small businesses rose in May to the highest level since September 2008 as executives became more upbeat about the economy six months from now, a private survey found.

The National Federation of Independent Business’s optimism index increased to 92.2 last month from 90.6 in April, the Washington-based group said today. Seven of the index’s 10 components increased, and three declined. The measure is still lower than levels reached in past economic rebounds, indicating the recovery will take time to gain strength.

The small-business optimism gauge has recovered more slowly than measures such as the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index that capture activity among companies of all sizes.

A gauge of whether firms think this is a good time to expand rose 1 point to a net 5 percent. The survey’s net figures are calculated by subtracting the percent of business owners giving a negative answer from those giving a positive response.
A net 1 percent of respondents plan to hire over the next three months, up two points from April. Nine percent of firms said they currently had job openings that were hard to fill, compared with 11 percent a month earlier.

Plans for capital investment rose one point to a net 20 percent, matching the highest level since November 2008.
A measure of profit trends rose 3 points to a minus 28 percent, 24 points below the best expansion reading, which was reached in 2005.

Concerns within the small business community still exist as noted below:

Thirty percent of respondents cited “poor sales” as their top business concern, up 1 point from April. A net negative 12 percent of business owners expected credit conditions to ease, a 3 point improvement.

A net 2 percent of firms plan to add to inventories, the first positive reading since November 2007 and up 4 points from April. A net zero percent, down 1 point, reported inventories as too low.

The NFIB report was based on 823 survey responses through May 31. Small businesses represent more than 99 percent of all U.S. employers and have created 64 percent of all new jobs in the past 15 years, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. A small business is defined as an independent enterprise employing up to 250 people.

June 7, 2010

Business Sellers Increasingly Play Banker

During the recession, merger and acquisition activity in the lower-middle market (private companies with up to $100 million in annual sales) was anything but active. Now sharp discounts of private company valuations are again piquing buyer interest.

With the tightness of the traditional bank credit markets (historically a major provider of credit in these situations), which we have written about in this space, buyers are increasingly turning to sellers to fill the funding gap.

We turned to Greg Caruso (a strategic partner of Alliance Advisory Group), President of Harvest Associates, LLC, a noted local expert in the M&A community to provide his insights regarding this situation. Here are his thoughts:

“Seller take-back is an essential component of getting a transaction done today because of the lack of bank financing. In evaluating an offer where substantial seller financing is involved we recommend the following be considered:

1. What will the price be without the financing? Often the price without the seller financing will be very close to the amount being put down by the buyer with financing. Buyers only have the cash they have. The internal rate of return on 3rd party equity is cost prohibitive. If you must sell in this environment what is your real risk from taking a note when the alternative is a guaranteed $0 ?

2. On a more positive note the buyer must be carefully underwritten and transaction structures sometimes must be modified to reduce the risk of taking a buyer note. We recommend that the seller consider – **The buyer’s experience with business in general. Ownership experience is highly preferred. Owning a business is just different than even being the 2nd in command and not an owner. I equate it to the difference between riding a bike and being in the bike seat. Seems the same to the person in the bike seat but it is not. Of course, the buyer’s experience in the exact industry is also helpful. **Additional resources from other sources of cash such as investments, other businesses etc. Remember to consider the likelihood that those sources of cash could become a cash drain and what that would mean. **Collateral such as outside real estate, security in the business assets etc.

3. The seller may have to stay involved with the business for 1-5 years to make sure the buyer can manage the business and pay the note. If the buyer can’t pay the note at least the seller will have a shot at taking the business back over.

None of this is as simple as a bank taking the financing risk. What it means is sellers need to be prepared to share in the risk to gain the upside and sell earlier so they have the energy to stay involved if they want full value. Unfortunately it may be the only way to get full value for your business for quite a while.”

If you are a buyer or seller in this, or any, market it is important that you have a strong advisory team supporting you in the area’s of strategic advisory, legal, accounting, risk management/assessment, etc. The dollars you spend on the front end will save you a tremendous amount of money and heartache in the long run.

May 24, 2010

Successfully Navigating the Current Bank Lending Environment

* Has your lender tightened the terms on your existing loans?

* Have you found getting new loans a challenge?

* Has your lender been merged or bought and your relationship lost in the confusion?

* Not sure what is really happening in the banking industry?

Credit is the life blood of our economy and particularly our business-to-business relationships. This flow has been severely disrupted and threatens to take many viable businesses down with it. If you think the impact is just confined to Wall Street or the money center financial institutions, think again! We are now seeing the cascading ripple effects flowing into all corners of our national economy. Cases in point:

* Our client (whose bank recently changed hands) contacted the bank to inquire about their line of credit and was told the bank had no record of any such LOC.

* Another client received a form letter from their bank telling them their line of credit had been frozen. This left the client without their expected operating funds on which to run their business.

Although we are starting to see some freeing up of the credit markets, we still have a long way to go before we get back to “normal.” Many of our clients have had to devote much time and attention to establishing new bank relationships or reestablishing existing ones.

Here are some tips for getting and keeping a solid bank relationship:

1. Have a business plan that provides the company’s background, its history, and most importantly, where it’s going in the future.

2. Provide budget and financial projections. An entrepreneur who’s borrowing money should detail what he or she is planning to do with those funds and how they’re going to help the business grow or thrive.

3. Check your personal credit score regularly. Banks often do. Most lenders are going to look at your credit score because it tells a lot about the individual that you won’t see otherwise in a business set of financials. If an individual has a bad credit score, it doesn’t matter how good the company financials are.

4. Maintain up-to-date financial records prepared by a business accountant even if you use accounting software. A lot of people use canned software systems, but [records] should be prepared by someone who’s financially astute, who can prepare a balance sheet, income statement, tax returns, and updated personal financial statements for the chief executives.

5. Plan for the possibility that you may have to personally guarantee the loan.

6. Be prepared to provide personal collateral for the loan if asked.

7. Seek out information from the Small Business Administration to see if you qualify for a loan guarantee.

8. Start and maintain a relationship with the bank. If a bank is going to make a loan, they want you to bring your entire banking relationship to them—deposits, business accounts, even your personal account.

9. Refer other businesses. Banks are always interested in receiving referrals. It’s not a bad thing to refer other businesses to your bank.

10. Don’t surprise your banker. Banks don’t like surprises. If there are things happening at the company—good or bad—be sure to communicate with the bank. Let them know how you’re doing—the things that are positive and negative. Make a concerted effort to meet with the bank regularly.

April 27, 2010

Preparing for the economic upturn

If your business is struggling take decisive steps to turn it around and be poised to grow this year. Below is a quick list of things to focus on that can have an immediate impact.

1. Get your finances under control. The most apparent message you get during tough times is your financial performance. Make sure you have good information on which to base decisions. Knowledge is key here in order to determine good choices, invest in high ROI items, and manage your day-to-day finances.

2. Evaluate marketing effectiveness. Don’t cut your advertising and marketing budgets, but put tight controls in place that allow you to gauge the response and adjust your expenditures on a weekly basis. If something’s not working, make changes sooner rather than later.

3. Anticipate opportunities. In whatever form it takes, there will likely be a large influx of government money this year as part of President Obama’s economic stimulus plan. Prepare a strategy for tapping into this and any other opportunities you can take advantage of.

4. Create a rapid response team. Set up a recession-busting team that can anticipate the effects of the downturn and react quickly. You may find that your best answers will come from within your organization.

5. Get creative. Brainstorm innovative solutions to your business problems and begin to execute on them. Make sure you designate a champion for each initiative to be undertaken and to report on its progress within the company.

6. Minimize layoffs. You may have no option but to cut some staff. However, do your best not to make sweeping cuts that will cause morale and productivity to drop among your remaining employees and drive other workers out the door.

7. Touch base with customers. Provide clients with reports showing the work you’ve done for them and the results you’ve achieved. Make it a point of holding face-to-face meetings periodically. Meeting in person says you are interested and gives you an opportunity to literally see things that you can help address.

8. Ask for feedback. Don’t assume your customers are satisfied. Ask how you’re doing and take their suggestions seriously.

9. Take complaints seriously. If clients ask for changes, investigate what it is they want and then accommodate them if at all possible. If not, explain why not.

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