Author Archive

31
Jan

Lancaster, Pa (PRWEB) January 26, 2012 – Written by Ira S. Wolfe Success Performance Solutions

Recent studies show that it takes 100 or more applicants to find one qualified candidate. Finding the time to sift through all of the paperwork and emails is one luxury (and skill) few small businesses have these days. An online applicant processing system helps small business cut through resume overload faster and smarter.

Today’s job market is tough, not just for prospective employees, but for employers as well. Recent studies show that it takes 100 or more applicants to find one qualified candidate. Finding the time to sift through all of the paperwork and emails is one luxury (and skill) few small businesses have these days.

Learn more about “resu-mess” and how to manage applicant resumes.

 

Category : Human Resources | Workforce | Workplace Productivity | Blog
31
Jan

Discover tips on how to adapt to the new delivery schedule by the U.S. Postal Service:

Published January 12, 2012 by David M. Katz, CFO.com

The U.S. Postal Service’s decision to end next-day delivery could tie up millions of dollars in working capital.

Delivery by letter carriers seems so old-fashioned that it’s been called “snail mail” for years. Yet, as it turns out, most of Corporate America’s invoices still get delivered that way. And the U.S. Postal Service’s December 5 decision to move first-class mail to a two-to-three-day standard seems sure to slow down bill collection for companies large and small.

Indeed, the move could cost a U.S. company with $10 billion in revenues up to $100 million in working capital as a result of its impact on accounts receivable, according to Veronica Heald, a practice leader at REL Consulting, a division of The Hackett Group that focuses on working capital. (CFO is developing a working capital benchmarking product in partnership with REL.)

The impact of the mail delay will be felt in at least two ways, says the consultant, who estimates that 60% of payments received in the United States are via checks in the mail. There will be lags in both the distribution of invoices and the receipt of payments, she adds. Click here to read full story.

 

Category : Cash Flow | Finance & Lending | Blog
31
Jan

Published by Miami Herald, January 16, 2012 by  James Cassel

Small businesses have a responsibility to evaluate their lending relationships and to look for signs of lender fatigue.

Earlier this month, it was reported that Bank of America capped credit lines and restructured repayment plans for an undisclosed number of its small business customers. The move came as a complete surprise to some of these business owners. After all, the capital market is supposedly rebounding, and economic forecasts for 2012 have been encouraging. So, could these small business owners have predicted a falling out with their bank?

Perhaps. Small businesses, more vulnerable and considered more risky by lenders, have a responsibility to evaluate their lending relationships and to look for signs of lender fatigue – signals that their ability to borrow capital may be threatened. I have identified some of the reasons why your bank might consider changing its relationship with you. Some may be the result of what you do, and some may be out of your control. Stay aware of these signs, so you’re not caught by surprise.

Click here to read full story about what to look for in a lender.

Category : Finance & Lending | Blog
16
Dec

What’s the best way to collect money due your business? The answer is surprisingly simple: ask for it.

One caveat, though: sending out yet another past due notice doesn’t count. Collections-by-mail is an exercise in futility. What you need is direct contact. Pick up the phone and call someone. Most customers will talk to you. If the individual refuses kick it upstairs.

When on the phone, there are three things to remember: commitment, commitment, commitment. Whatever it is – an assurance to pay, a promise to investigate, an agreement to seek authorization – be sure to get some type of commitment. Also be sure to set a clear time to call back for follow up.

If you’re overburdened with collections responsibilities, remember the Pareto principle – namely that roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes. Applied to collections, this means that approximately 20% of your past due accounts are responsible for 80% of your past due money. Sort your past due accounts from highest to lowest in terms of dollar amount and this will become self-evident. Then, start making your calls top-downward. Keep a record of the commitments and times for your follow-up – and do a new 80/20 analysis every week.

It’s a business truism that what gets measured gets done – and this is as true for collections as for any other aspect of your business. To measure your collections performance, start by calculating your accounts receivable days and use this metric as your benchmark. We’ve seen dramatic results – such as receivable days cut in half in just a matter of months.

It’s also important to keep your collector incentivized. Paying a monthly bonus based on each day of reduction works particularly well. If your monthly sales are $500k then each day would be worth roughly $17k. A $50 bonus for each day reduction is a good deal for everyone. When your receivables are under control, adjust the bonus based on a new target so that you can maintain control and still provide the incentive.

Remember, the squeaky wheel gets the oil. Your customers may have limited resources – but they’ll pay you before they pay a silent vendor.

If you need help setting up a collections program let us know. The CFO Connection will be happy to help.

Category : Part Time CFO | Blog
1
Nov

When you work with The CFO Connection, you get a dedicated CFO that acts as an integral member of your executive team – helping you make decisions and drive initiatives that move your company forward. The model is not project-by-project. To the contrary, the relationship is designed for enduring business continuity and value. Your CFO, provided at a reasonable cost, remains connected to your company, building relationships within your organization that pay off in the near and long-term alike.

After twelve years of delivering CFOs according to this model, The CFO Connection knows that it works. On more than one occasion throughout our history we have successfully replaced full time CFOs – delivering more value at less cost to our business partners. We have never been told that we do not give enough support.

The model is based on a combination of on-site and off-site support. This includes visits throughout the month coupled with off-site connections throughout the course of the relationship, either by telephone, email, or remote desktop support. While on-site, we review and set things in motion. While off-site, we monitor and direct. This allows us to have a continuous influence on your organization on a daily basis. It also delivers to you the expertise of a permanent, highly experienced CFO at a fraction of the cost of a full time executive-level position.

Category : Case Studies | Part Time CFO | Blog
18
Aug


Strategic planning is a concept that many businesses embrace only with a sense of wariness. This is because the process is often rooted in “feel good” language and visionary aspirations. The typical CFO prefers a little more meat on the bone.

So how do we put the “plan” back in strategic planning? This is done by focusing on the customer and adding the concept of profitably to the process.

Starting with the customer is important. If you do not define your customer well, then you won’t know what resources to employ, how to go to market, or what business to accept or reject. If you try to be all things to all people, then you make no one happy in the end.

Defining your customers and their needs helps you position your products and services. Keep in mind that what you identify as a customer need may not necessarily align with your customer’s buying criteria. For example, many customers will evaluate you not so much on how you meet their needs, but by how you compare to the competition. If you offer something that is too much better than the next guy, you could price yourself out of the market. The point, of course, isn’t to settle for mediocrity. Rather, when positioning your products and services, simply spend some time thinking about what your customers need and what they think they need.

Once you have your customers down, it’s time to focus on profitable growth. Start with long term objectives – perhaps five years out but maybe shorter. Next, define what you need to do in the short term to realize these objectives. Both long term objectives and short term activities need to be realistic, easy to communicate, and measurable. For example, let’s say your long term objective is to double your sales in five years. This may be ambitious, but it’s doable, clear, and easy to evaluate. Your short term objective in such a scenario might be to expand your sales force by 10% in the first quarter. Equally doable, clear, and easy to evaluate.

Of course, a 10% increase in your sales force over several quarters doesn’t automatically translate into a doubling of sales. And even if it did, you have to consider the impact of the cost of the sales force on profit margin. Which brings us to the importance of reporting.

To realize your goals, you need to put a solid reporting/feedback mechanism in place. By defining your activities well, you can better understand their costs and judge whether or not they’re realistic. If they’re not, then reset your sights. Good reporting highlights both your opportunities and vulnerabilities. It also tells you where to put your resources and when to re-evaluate your strategy.

The purpose to this approach is to put quantifiers and measurements on an otherwise highly visionary and therefore qualitative exercise. If you remain realistic and set at least some of the measurements for your objectives in P&L terms, then you can put yourself on better footing for profitable growth.

Category : Case Studies | Part Time CFO | Strategic Planning | Blog
13
Jul

Where’s the White Space in Your Organization? 

LOST IN the white SPACE

Don

Most companies organize vertically. The CEO sits on top and subordinate corporate roles report up the chain of command.

Take a look at the typical org chart and you’ll see this thinking played out on paper. There’s only one problem: customers don’t experience your company vertically. They experience it horizontally.

To your customers, the chain of command is irrelevant. What your customers care about is whether or not different parts of your business communicate effectively with one another.

Let’s say I order a pair of high-end hiking boots for a planned trek up the Kilimanjaro. Does the shipping department know that I want the boots tomorrow instead of next week? Or what if I have to return them because they don’t fit correctly? Will the customer service rep have a record of my purchase? And will I be able to get a new pair before I leave for Africa?

This example – admittedly simplified – gets at the problem of “white space.” Here’s what Wikipedia has to say about it.

“White Space  … is the area between the boxes in an organization chart or the area between the different functions: Very often no one is in charge or responsible for the White Space. The important handoffs between functions are happening here, and this is very often the area where an organization has the greatest potential for improvements.”

White space, in other words, is about cross-functional coordination within the enterprise. Do it poorly and you’ll be surprised at the problems it can cause. If I don’t get my boots in time for my African trek, for example, I’m going somewhere else – and you’ve just lost a customer.

In a sense, it all comes down to focusing on the customer. The goal is to deliver consistent customer experiences where customers feel like they’re dealing with a single entity rather than a collection of independent actors.

Yet some companies take this idea in the wrong direction with the concept of the “internal customer.” Here, groups treat one another as they would any other customer. The hope is to foster cross-functional harmony – but in the end it simply fosters an inward-looking organization.

It’s always better to keep your eye on your real customers – and to do whatever you can to keep them happy. One method that works well is to form smaller cross-functional units within the enterprise where different roles come together – all benefiting from direct customer contact. For example, you may put sales reps, engineers and financial management people in a single division focused on, say, small businesses. Thus when a sales rep hears back from a customer that something doesn’t work, the engineer – or somebody else on the team – hears it as well. The idea is simple: put more people in front of the customer. In the end, this makes your organization more customer-focused.

For a deeper dive into this subject, see the book that started it all: Improving Performance: How to Manage the White Space in the Organization Chart by Geary A. Rummler and Alan P. Brache.

Category : CFO Connection POV | Blog
1
Jun

White collar productivity is notoriously difficult to measure. Some estimates have it as low as 50%. It could a bit higher, maybe a bit lower. But that’s the point: we don’t really know.

What we do know is that it’s lower than it should be. For example, there’s plenty of evidence that it lags quite substantially behind blue collar productivity. Why?

One of the main reasons is that IT investments aimed at increasing productivity have focused predominantly on operational execution – which falls into the domain of blue collar work. White collar work is far more difficult to pin down.

Focused more on strategic concerns, white collar work often involves a lot of meetings, discussions and collaboration with colleagues.  While some of this is necessary, much of it acts as a productivity-killer.

A lack of measurements, meanwhile, leaves many white collar workers to prove their value the old fashion way – by working longer hours. But longer hours do not necessarily mean better results.

The CFO Connection offers a solid solution to productivity-killing situations and we are appreciated by our clients.

Our seasoned pros understand the importance of being productive. When we engage a client, we hit the ground running – with no training required. And while we work intimately with management teams to meet corporate objectives, we keep the water cooler at an arm’s length and meetings to an absolute minimum.

Because we work on a part-time basis, we’re also less entangled with organizational politics. At the same time, we’re high powered professionals with long track records of success. This brings instant respect – which allows us to get to work quickly so that we can be productive as soon as possible.

Category : CFO Connection POV | Part Time CFO | Workplace Productivity | Blog
16
Mar

In large companies, CEOs typically have large staffs that they can rely on for advice. For smaller companies, the in-house capability is much less.

For instance, a larger company may have a risk manager while a smaller company would use an insurance agent. Same thing for in-house counsel as opposed to an outside lawyer on retainer. Then, of course, there are bankers, CPAs, and consultants – all playing a greater role for small companies and filling in some of the internal void.

Call this the trusted advisors network. Sometimes they emerge out of other networks – such as a CEO roundtable where business leaders meet their peers to discuss business strategies. Sometime they emerge organically out of existing business relationships. Whatever the case, the network works best when each participant has a stake in the success of the business they serve.

For example, a loan officer at a bank might want to lend a CEO money for a new venture. The bank, however, might have concerns about the company’s financial management. In turn, the loan officer may introduce the CEO to a financial expert who can develop a plan to bring down the company’s debt or otherwise restructure its finances.

Now, let’s say that this financial expert finds that the company could save substantially by outsourcing in any number of areas – such as fleet management, IT support, or HR. Here, the financial expert may recommend service providers with proven track records of driving down costs and delivering quality work.

After making a series of such moves, the company puts itself on more solid financial footing. This, in turn, makes it possible for the loan officer to do business with the CEO – enabling the CEO to secure the financing needed to expand.

The point is that the CEO’s focus is on the customer and whatever it takes to deliver the best products or services.

As an intricate part of the management teams we work with, the part time CFOs from The CFO Connection constantly create and maintain relationships with trusted advisors. When the CEO has a need not filled by the organization, we are ready to make an introduction.

Category : Part Time CFO | Blog
30
May

What’s going on with your business?

If your company is one of the many that have hunkered down to weather the storm, then this article is about you.

Let talk about a two part strategy that may help you come out of the deep recession stronger that you went in.

Understand where you are making money.

If you are selling more than one product line or to more than one industry or geographic area or a combination of all three, then it behooves you to understand what is going on.
Break out your Profit and Loss Statement into fixed and variable cost and isolate those cost that won’t go away. Next develop a break-even analysis for each market. You now have a friendly statement that will lead you to decisions on where to focus and how to reallocate your resources. Eliminating unprofitable product lines can result in the reduction of more cost  than sales  You can only do this effectively with a properly structured financial statement.

Having more meaning Financials, you will have a better understanding of your cost and profitability than most of your competitor.

Attack

Some of your competitors won’t be around when we come through the storm. Some will  but may be so crippled that they won’t be positioned to take advantage of the new day. Here is a way that you can gain the advantage. Right now identify those competitors and go after their customers. How?

Here’s how:

•    Turn your under utilized work force into a task force. Ask them to help you identify the weak competitors. Then do your homework and identify their customers.

•    Identify their profitable offerings. If your competitors have loss leaders, let them keep that business and attack the profitable business.

•    Give these potential customers attractive incentives to buy from you, maybe even below your total costs, BUT…Do not lower your price. You will be stuck with that pricing when the economy comes back. The incentives should be in the form of signing bonuses or other one time compensation that results in money in your customer’s pocket and in an investment in a long term relationship.

Category : The U.S. Economy | Blog

Financial Analysis Software

If you need financial modeling but are too busy to do it yourself, one of our experienced CFOs can do it for you quickly and cost-effectively.

Workshops

We offer custom designed workshops at your facility or ours and tailored for your exact requirements.

Customized Financial Models

Whether you're a start up or a mature company we can help you by creating a customized financial model to set your business in the right direction.

  • guys
  • indian design braclet instructions
  • reference com encyclopedia slang
  • suga ytv
  • cpanel hosting
  • tarantula the smashing pumpkins
  • trustee fees california revocable
  • flyer
  • darkest mermaids
  • job center cheque cash
  • urge free download
  • vibrational resonance inst
  • charbroil turkey frier
  • candi caricatura de mexico
  • cynical dynamics servo tester
  • gilda radner animals
  • irrigation canal ditch kansas
  • timeline greek fire
  • cornelius
  • mary j blige jordan
  • janette miller pa vermont
  • toplist jobs london
  • father morin maine
  • reel mower sharpening equipment
  • jerry woodall purdue university
  • athlete coach relationships
  • muster
  • staging areas iraq
  • chief
  • affection
  • emphysema smoking cessation information
  • sponges and classification
  • texan hospital hearth
  • lucien piccard model 26651
  • job qualification pizza hut
  • garman 498c
  • ngo projects selection criteria
  • intervention boot camp texas
  • brass pedestal base
  • sweetest hello myspace comment
  • daley
  • cross stitch keepsakes complaints
  • cops
  • vinyard restaurant
  • ladies pooping video
  • blaze restoration moline
  • pabst blue ribbon carbs
  • assessments middle school dra
  • techniques berlin
  • vegtable
  • incarcerated poa arizona
  • barbeque
  • pursuit of authentic being
  • politically advanced guestbook 2.3.2
  • baby constipation in newborn
  • quattro pro macro guide
  • mandarin oriental macau girls
  • animal sprays kill vegetation
  • hillary hawke saxophone
  • voicecon aspect microsoft
  • salisbury grounding equipment
  • grey's anatomy nobody knows
  • edenpure purification plate
  • tulane polo shirt
  • bomb threat maps
  • recette de pate feuilletee
  • consignment auctions minnesota
  • sohc
  • seafood served butterflied
  • animal vidios for kids
  • dacula georgia vet
  • literatura de la onda
  • singapore amarican high school
  • tomas panek praha
  • adrienne leigh printz
  • kia sportage repair manual
  • airsoft biodegradable pellets
  • eureka airport schedule
  • ruffle boot
  • charleston clicks photography
  • manipulation of macbeth
  • monkeys babies
  • moor park addresses
  • concave
  • veneto toilet
  • correlation r23 bushel
  • mannheim steamroller biography
  • vista mediation advocate
  • lose
  • kitchenaid
  • pflugerville preschools
  • performer amina baraka
  • pumpco fatality tx
  • islam
  • spruce beer recipes
  • decreasing carbon in blood
  • catfish breading
  • hutch harbor hideaway michigan
  • vintage fairy advertising art
  • danial a cox attorney
  • elope smoky mountains
  • oregon auto wrecking yards
  • dekameter to centimeter conversion
  • airbrushing classes washington state
  • wilks lambda distribution
  • adventist high schools
  • reusable handwarming device
  • stated
  • beale st barbecue
  • welland canal fees
  • roaming
  • counterproductive feedback examples
  • bronze plaques raleigh nc
  • cookers
  • conductor in telecommunication systems
  • crude
  • moles
  • hinges for secret doors
  • photography institutes in india
  • remixes
  • wheel of fortune freeware
  • moira swanhart
  • young babysitter flat chested
  • coarse ventricular fibrillation
  • zaragoza spain medical
  • eddie vedder quotations
  • sweetheart badges
  • elk circulatory system
  • babysitting
  • echinacea plant
  • footage
  • symphony
  • inflation
  • adrianne watson
  • jennifer gray usn
  • prostitution in oslo
  • inspiron 6000 power cord
  • armenian holidays
  • james jacobs knott ky
  • debate
  • bynum advanced guestbook 2.3.2
  • wineries skaneateles
  • genome
  • railway
  • who is aretha franklin
  • edgewood iowa locker
  • cooks illustrated mixer review
  • 3d sonogram nj
  • fingerprint tech
  • loch lomond holst
  • bailout roll call
  • teds lounge
  • alex grey layouts
  • matlock flies on line
  • geneve
  • ghost recon female model
  • published manuals
  • thing thing
  • airforce crib bedding
  • song kristy words
  • asphalt paving maintenance guidelines
  • nerf vortex sale
  • windjammer bonaire
  • tundra
  • sonne
  • concealed
  • polycarbonate frames
  • expeditions
  • tustin basketball court construction
  • ferrell industries scope mounts
  • maryann newkirk
  • teac wall alarm
  • helio for sale
  • hcpcs depo
  • metering
  • pivot animator editor
  • bump
  • heiko pfleiderer
  • fergie grind it up
  • wrong
  • nurse practitioner progams online
  • weed eater pe550 kit
  • dielectric reaction
  • ministries
  • elliott segal baltimore
  • why was hipaa started
  • steele
  • genealogie koekenbier france
  • scanjet 5100c unistall
  • laura ingraham photo
  • artur schelkle
  • deisel
  • abbott laboratories astellas
  • response
  • shawl collar sewing instructions
  • usb rc airplane cable
  • leicester leicestershire england