When you started your business, you probably dreamed about flexible hours and highly profitable, stimulating work.
Ideally, you would’ve adopted best practice and documented those dreams in a one-page Business Plan. The plan would specify how much cash you need from the business, your role, and the hours you’d be working. In other words, what the business was going to deliver to you personally as an owner.
But that was all before the world turned on its head and most plans went out the window. Whatever you previously dreamed of or planned for must be reconsidered in light of the ‘business unusual’ phase we’re in now. It’s likely that what you want personally from the business has not changed, however, it may take longer than expected.
Business unusual means reinventing your business to deliver what you want.
Trimming what you need personally from the business for the next year or so, will give your business a better chance of surviving the Covid-19 crisis. Consider the following:
The best way to reduce the cash flow strain on your business is to revise your personal budget. Your budget will identify potential savings you can make and provides a benchmark against which your actual spending can be tracked in the future. The Business Plan and budget can then be built around how the business can deliver the level of personal cashflow you need.
There are no shortcuts here. The discipline of personal budgeting with ongoing monitoring of your expenditure is essential. The good news is that the process is both empowering and enlightening at the same time. You’ll be amazed at where personal savings can be made and will feel much more in control of your business.
Contact us for our free personal budgeting template.
“You must gain control of your money or the lack of it will forever control you.” – Dave Ramsey
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