In most circumstances, short-term cash flows for recruitment businesses are straightforward and predictable. As a result, a short-term cash flow projection may be a reliable and helpful tool for assuring adequate headroom or providing early warning of impending financial strain.
A 13-week weekly prediction is usually required for effective short-term cash flow management. Invoice discounting facilities should be adequately simulated considering excluded sales and facility constraints. The prediction should be revised weekly to ensure all revenues and payments are captured and the beginning bank balance correctly entered.
Although this is misleading, "uncertainty" is sometimes used as a reason for not predicting in the medium term. Scenario planning and sensitivity analysis can assist management in preparing for a wide range of possibilities and providing appropriate headroom. For example, take a look at the following:
Avoid the temptation to concentrate on current sales figures. Instead, consider indicators such as pipeline, conversion rate, and trends in major client accounts. The depth and quality of client contacts, focusing on customer feedback and complaints, are more significant qualitative factors to monitor regularly.
Profit margin management is critical in an inflationary environment. It's also difficult in a highly competitive industry like recruitment. Avoid focusing your efforts and resources on industries with more mass-market supply and low switching costs. Long-term customer relationships based on reliable service and a consistent supply of employees across many business centres/departments will help you keep and increase profitability.
Manage your overheads carefully and act as soon as obvious danger areas are identified. Consider the full breadth of the proposed cost-cutting measures.
Ensure management accounts are created and reviewed on time, preferably within two to three weeks after the month's end. Results should be tracked against budget, and corrective action should be done as soon as underperformance or a change is recognised.
Consider what information you may disclose to your stakeholders in light of commercial sensitivity. Information may reduce stakeholder worries but must be robust, internally consistent, and avoid generating new ones.
Customer accounts in the recruiting sector may grow swiftly. However, relative importance can also alter if other client accounts decline in size or seasonal factors expose a recruiting firm, however momentarily, to a specific customer.
Invoice discounters frequently limit funding 20% to 30% of the ledger against specific clients for a good cause. The failure of a significant customer has an immediate financial impact owing to bad debt and a long-term P&L impact due to missed future revenues. As a result, failing to notice increased concentration may lead to the omission of a financing gap.
Communicate often with your key clientele to better grasp their future requirements. Try targeting sales efforts and resources towards a diversified client base to decrease the risk of concentration. Ideally, this involves limiting exposure to a particular industry and decreasing the risk of disputes, contract loss, seasonal financial pressure, or customer failure.
Ensure you have a good system for negotiating credit limits with customers. Examine your company's bad debt risk regularly, and verify good credit control, with straightforward remedies in place if debtor days are drifting on accounts. Consider using credit insurance or credit score firms to protect yourself from poor debt danger.
Your finance department must be purpose-driven from the top down. Smaller recruitment businesses may find it more challenging to have a balanced skill set at the board level.
Examine your employees, technology, and processes to ensure they are all up to the task. Your systems can quickly become old (or outdated). Prompt and accurate invoicing is critical to avoid tying up your working capital, which can occur when invoices are late, lack proof, or are incorrect.
The finance team's key areas of focus are as follows:
Seek advice on your financial procedures, and consider outsourcing sections that are too small or expensive to manage. It may be more cost-effective and efficient than performing these tasks wrong. Speak with one of our experts today. Call 01594 888518 or send an email to sales@simplicityinbusiness.com.
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