Tyreny said:
Cash is king. Classic working capital/liquidity crisis.
Yes it is. There"s nothing like bringing in 30k in sales in a week, but only receiving $300. Our customers tend to pay within 60 days, so when we really get busy, our accounts receivable balloon, expenses go through the roof, and cash on hand goes down. Within the first few months of me buying the business, we had a spike of business, and I was concerned I"d need to borrow money until customers paid us. And the phone was ringing off the hook with customers.
You can go broke making money.Our customer default rate is like 1/10 of a percent of sales, so its not bad, they just pay late. There"s nothing like having one week of cash to operate on, while being owed 40-50k.
As far as an update, after addbacks, the company has probably made in the mid six figures CYTD. Its a far cry from 300k last year, but in general, its been rough for our industry. It was the coldest winter in 20 years, and people stopped going outside to see what work they needed. Factor out the worse than normal winter and its been a good year.
When we got busier in the spring, we ran some interviews for hourly laborer, and I intereviewed six other owners of companies in our industry that had gone under. I saw alot of my small to mid size competitors coming to me for jobs to make $11 an hour! They didn"t even ask for a manager spot. So we are thankful to be even a little bit profitable. All the bills are paid. One common denominator that they said why they went under was that the phone had stopped ringing.
That reminded me of Peter Drucker saying that getting customers is the most important thing, everything is detail work. Since I saw our competitor"s starving from not getting the phone to ring, I"ve doubled our advertising.
I just put up my first billboard a few weeks ago.When I look at what we are billing and in two days see that there is $1800 coming from a mailer, 1300 from the internet and 790 from a newspaper, I am very thankful. These are all new initiatives I"ve put in place, and its all plus business.
Typically, December is when we start to slow down, but I am hoping that a little bit of hard work and providence will make for a not so bad winter. We"ve got our new things we are doing for advertising. We"ve taken care of every customer complaint, by either doing re-work or discounting the job to make them happy. The business is very active in the community, and I"ve given away 1-2k a month to different charities. As one customer said it, they"d spend more money with us than a competitor, because we were very reputable.
So the takeaways from this post:
1-
Realize that there are ups and downs in business, and make sure you have enough working capital to go a few months. Before I bought my business, I made sure I had a 150k credit line.
2-
Know your numbers.For me, since I had someone else"s history, I knew that winter could be rough, so I had to have money put back. I also know how much cash I am burning through, and where I am at profit-wise every morning (do your own books yourself if you have time - QuickBooks is a life saver).
3-
Don"t downplay the importance of marketing your business.One of the main things that seperates my company from others with the same equipment is that we are more aggressive in advertising. From my time in sales, I know its all a numbers game. We are going to close 50% of the people we talk to. So the best way to increase sales is to talk to more people. The competitors I interviewed were just relying on word of mouth, that"s not enough. Find something that you do differently than the competition (and is something that customers value. For us, we"ve been around for 50 years, have a rep for treating people right, are fully insured (95% of my competitors don"t have it), and we handle alot of big and famous commercial contracts for some of the corporations in the area. In the last week, we just did a job for a Kohl"s and a Lowes. So in a pinch, I can be lower than my competitors on resedential, because we have big customers who cover our fixed costs. I know in our last update, I said we were doing 98% resedential, but our commercial customers have come back in full force. Bottom line is that name dropping doesn"t hurt when trying to close customers, and when you can say that these large local entities use you, customers see you as a cut above the competition.
Speaking of sales, if you plan on running your own business, like Robert Kiyosaki said, spend some time in a sales job.Believe me, later on, you"ll thank me for this. In your business, you are selling yourself and your business, and you need to pick up those selling skills.
4-
Take care of customers, no matter what.The golden rule applies. One of my largest competitors approached me to get me to buy him out. But some of my employees have friends that work for him, and they tell me stories of the owner threatening to punch customers out if they complain LOL. At the end of the day, we try to make customers happy, even if it costs money. Most of our business still comes from repeat-referral, and I"ve had times where we fixed a customer problem, and then that guy has sent is ten customers over the course of a year. Reputation is everything.
I can"t stress these things enough, especially in this economy. You need to run very efficiently and your people do also. The competition is too willing to do jobs at a price that is below their cost (eventually that puts them under), but you do have to deal with that environment.