The industry standard for business cost calculation

Keys to Success

Dear Colleague,

One of the major keys to success of any company lies in the ability to properly manage and assess the financial performance of your business.

Most individuals who start a business want to make a living or build wealth from the endeavor. For many, the desire to be your own boss and escape from the shackles of traditional employment is part of the motivation, but the bottom line usually comes down to attaining some form of financial success so that you are not living from paycheck to paycheck.    More...

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Profit

At its most basic level, profit is defined as the difference between a business' income and its costs. When you evaluate whether a specific project was profitable, you typically look at gross profit. This is the project's revenue minus all of the direct costs related to it, such as personnel costs or any equipment that was required.
However, there are other items that fall into the cost or expense category, which should be included to get a clearer picture of your profitability.
These fixed or indirect costs are the costs associated with doing business and are also known as overhead. They might include rent, utilities, phone, equipment, interest on bank loans, taxes, employee salaries that are not billed to a specific project and staff training.
To determine profit, you must subtract all of your fixed or indirect cost from gross profit.

Cash Flow

Cash flow refers to both the revenue and expenses that flow into and out of a company's cash account. Cash may flow into your business through sales or operations, financing or investing. It may flow out to pay expenses or make investments.

Cash flow is crucial to a business' survival. To be successful, companies must have sufficeient cash on hand to pay employees, vendors and others in a timely manner. They should also have adequate cash available to put back into the business.

To manage your cash flow, you must shorten the length of time it takes to turn your services or product into receivables into cash, while delaying outlays of cash as much as possible.

Overhead

Overhead refers to any business expenses that are necessary for running the business, but do not directly generate revenue. Overhead may include expenses for accounting, advertising, depreciation, insurance, interest, legal fees, labor not directly related to generating income (such as clerical support), rent, supplies, taxes, telephone and utilites.

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