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Phil

Understanding Financial Statements

Understanding Financial Statements

By Phil Latz


Hi, welcome to the second blog in my finance series that I hope will help you become more successful in your business.

As a business owner myself for many years, I understand the challenges that you face.

Today I’ll be diving into financial statements in all their numerical glory.

I am not planning to give you a training course in book-keeping or accounting methods, or go into too much detail about these topics.

There are plenty of good software packages out there and plenty of specific training courses available.

As the business owner, you don’t need to do the books yourself, or even understand the finer details. But it’s vital that you understand the basics, so that’s what I’ll be covering today. More importantly, you need to not just understand the basics of financial statements, but to take the time to review them and then take action based upon that information.

This last step is both the most important and the most neglected by small business owners.

Imagine that you’ve just paid to go to a major sporting event, say a game of football. You walk inside the stadium and there’s no scoreboard. You can’t find the scores online either. No-one is even keeping score. The teams are just playing for the regulation time and then walking off.

How boring would that be for the spectators? And how de-motivating for the players?

Financial statements are the scoreboard of business. 

The scores are measured, not by runs, goals or points, but by dollars.

Without accurate, timely financial statements, you can’t tell if you’re winning or losing and that’s vitally important information. 

In sport, if you lose, you can just lick your wounds, cop a spray from the coach and front up for the next game.

But the discipline of business is bankruptcy. There are no safety nets or consolation finals.

Just as sports competitions have stages and strategies, there are three critical stages relating to financial statements.

Stage one is collecting data and using it to create your financial statements. 

May have heard of the expression ‘garbage in, garbage out’.

The data that goes into your financial statements needs to be as accurate as possible. 

Unless your business is at the small start-up phase, or you genuinely love doing the books and are very good at doing them, then I’d strongly recommend that you staff or contract out your bookkeeping.

Stage two is reading the data.

You can delegate 100% of the financial statements’ preparation, but you must learn to read them yourself.

To properly read and comprehend anything, you first need to learn how to read. I’m going to run through the briefest summaries in a moment, but for everything else, please get help.

It’s not enough just to know how to read and understand financial statements. You must read and review them regularly. I would suggest that for most businesses, monthly is ideal. Certainly at least quarterly.

I know that many small business owners only take a cursory look at their financials once a year after their accountant prepares their annual tax returns. Often this is six months or even more after the end of the financial year.

That’s like driving a car with your eyes closed, apart from glancing into your rear view mirror once every block. You won’t even know what hit you when you crash, because you won’t have seen it coming.

Now we’ll run through some key things you need to understand about using financial statements.

There are two main components of any set of financial statements, the Profit and Loss Statement and the Balance Sheet.

Your Profit and Loss, often called the P&L for short, shows you how you’ve gone for a particular period of time. 

Often this is for a financial year, which in Australia runs from 1st July to 30th June, but is different in other countries such as the USA and New Zealand.

It’s a good idea to have your book-keeper add extra columns to your P&L. I like to see four columns: current period (be it a financial year, quarter, month or whatever period you’re looking at), and comparison to the same period last year.

Then two columns of percentages, one for the current period and the other for the previous period.

P&L’s start with sales revenue at the top, sometimes called turnover. 

Then they deduct the cost of sales, sometimes called cost of goods sold or COGS.

This gives you your Gross profit.

Then they deduct expenses, sometimes called overheads

This gives you your net profit, which is literally the bottom line, upon which that widely used expression is based, ‘What’s the bottom line?’

Sometimes people have trouble understanding the difference between Cost of Goods Sold and Expenses, and where to allocate various payments.

A simple way to think of it is this: your expenses are relatively fixed. If you don’t sell anything today you still have to pay your rent, electricity, insurance and so on, so they’re all expenses.

But your cost of goods directly relate to the amount of stock you need to buy and other direct costs of sales, which should be closely linked to your sales. That’s why they’re also called ‘variables’.

Moving onto the Balance Sheet, unlike the P&L which is for a certain period of time, the Balance Sheet is always as at a certain date.

In Australia that typically means the last day of the financial year, 30th June.

The Balance Sheet also has a standard format:

At the top your assets are listed. Assets are usually broken up into current assets (such as cash) and non-current or fixed assets, such as property.

Next your liabilities are listed.

Finally your liabilities are deducted from your assets to give the bottom line, which is this case is called Equity, or sometimes called ‘Owner’s Equity’.

Your owner’s equity, which can sometimes be a negative number, plus your liabilities, should equal your assets. In other words, they balance, which is why it’s called a balance sheet.

Your Balance Sheet links to your P&L. 

Here’s how. Suppose your balance sheet as at 30th June 2019 shows equity of $100. 

For the financial year 2019/20 you then show a net profit of $10.

Then your balance sheet as at 30th June 2020 should now show equity of $110 being the original $100, plus the 10 dollar profit from the year of trading.

If you made a $10 loss then the equity go down to $90.

Of course this is a very simplified example, but it illustrates the link.

Finally, Stage three is making decisions and taking action based upon what your financial statements are telling you.

This is using your financials as a business management tool.

That’s what the smart, successful businesses do. Why don’t you join them?

Here’s a tip for free that consultants will charge you a fortune to do. It’s one of the quickest and easiest ways to grow your net profit.

Suppose you’re running at 5% net profit. If you can save a dollar from any expense, it will go straight to your bottom line. In other words, every dollar you save in expenses will be a dollar more on your net profit figure. 

But to get the same impact on your net profit by increasing sales, you’d have to sell $20 more, because $20 x 5% net profit rate equals $1.

So take a good close look at your expenses. Put a ring around the biggest ones, say the top five or 10, depending upon the size of your business and length of the list. If you have the % column switched on in your financials software, it will make it easier to pick them out.

Then consider each of these one by one. How long have you been with the same supplier on the same deal? 

How long since you’ve put each one out to tender? In other words, sought at least three competitive prices for that product or service?

If your answer is ‘Never’ or ‘Not for years’, then take action now! This is classic quadrant two work, it’s not urgent but it’s important! If you don’t know what I’m referring to, then please go back to video six from my first series about the four quadrants.

It’s worth repeating, every dollar you save will go straight to the bottom line. Going back to our example business that’s making a 5% profit, if they can save $10,000 that has the same bottom line effect as selling an extra $200,000 worth of products, with a lot less time, effort and headaches to go with it.

This is just one example of how you can use your financial statements as a tool to take positive action and improve your business. I could give you many more, but for now, we’ve run out of time.

In my next blog in this series I’m going to help you see the difference between turnover and profit and why the second of these two is so much more important to your business.

I believe that with passion, consistent effort and wise advice you can succeed in your business.

I wish you all the best and I’ll see you next time.


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Maximising Your Profit | Five Ways to Increase Profitability

How can you increase the profit in your business?

Business Coaching Videos: Five Ways to Increase Your Profitability

In this video, we’ll explore five key ways to increase the profitability of your business.

Thanks to the magic of exponential equations, if you can increase your profitability by even a small percentage for each of these five ways, the total effect upon your bottom line is surprisingly large!


Watch Video Six: Five Ways to Increase Profitability

Watch another video

Book an Obligation Free Consultation

If you are struggling with the topic in this video, or want to improve this area of your business with new strategies and a proven formula for success, then complete the form here now, to book an obligation free consultation with Phil Latz.

Phil will meet with you for one hour, free-of-charge, to listen to your current situation. He will help you to hone in upon the key issues and strategies that will make the most impact, no strings attached.

It will only take you 30 seconds to activate change! You have everything to gain and nothing to lose! 

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Introduction to Maximising Your Profit Series

Maximising Your Profit 1

by Phil Latz


Hi, welcome to the first blog in my finance series that I hope will help you become more successful in your business.

As a business owner myself for many years, I understand the challenges that you face.

Today I’ll be giving you an overview to series two, which is all about maximising your profit.

At last! You might be thinking if you worked through my first series on Personal Growth. Now you’re finally getting into the useful information!

Well… no. If you haven’t worked through my first series, I would recommend that you go back and start there first.

Sure, this new series on Maximising Your Profit contains a lot of useful knowledge. But if you only have knowledge, without the wisdom to apply it appropriately, you keep running up against the same limits. The first series is about wisdom. That’s why I put it first.

So let’s get started on the journey to maximising your profit. Let’s lay some ground rules. Maximising profit is nothing to be ashamed about! 

I did not name this series Maximising Your Profit, just as a clickbait strategy.

I’ll never forget the day my favourite teacher, in my favourite subject at high school, said something simple but profound. You won’t be surprised to learn that the subject was economics.

The teacher’s name was Laurie Dennis. He liked a bit of fun and theatricality to make a point.

He started by going around the class and asking everyone, ‘What is the aim of a business?’ He then patiently listened to several minutes of idealistic answers about producing quality products and services, serving customers, providing jobs and whatever else a bunch of teenagers could think of.

After everyone had given their opinion, he stood front and centre and stated forcefully, “The aim of a business is to maximise profit! Full stop! 

“If it does not earn a sustainable profit, it won’t stay in business and none of the lovely other things you lot have all talked about will happen anyway!”

You can argue all you like about Silicon Valley start-ups where it seems to be all about growth and market share. And sure, the Americans in particular seem obsessed with growth. But even there, for every company there comes a day of reckoning. 

Maximising Your Profit 2

Sooner or later investors run out of patience. In business it’s profit or death.

So how do you maximise your profit? Before we even start to look at your product, marketing, staff and a host of other factors, we need to build a strong financial foundation.

You might find financial statements, spreadsheets, numbers and accounting boring.

I don’t care!

I’ve yet to meet a truly successful businessperson who at the doesn’t have a good feel for the numbers that drive their business. Even if there’s room for improvement in how they measure, record and use those numbers.

In this series we’re going to start with understanding the basics of financial statements, then move on to key performance indicators.

Then I’ll explain some of my favourite business sayings including: ‘Turnover is vanity, profit is sanity and cash is king.’ And.. ‘What gets measured gets improved.’

Next we’ll look at how to put your profit first, followed by five ways to increase your profitability.

Then we’ll dig into a huge profit killer, discounting and the true cost of discounting.

We’ll round of the series with six steps to massive results, how to begin with the end in mind and finally, understanding how to make debt your servant and not your master.

I hope that this blog has given you some useful insights into business and profit.

In the next two blogs in this series I’m going to dive into the scintillating world of financial statements!

I believe that with passion, consistent effort and wise advice you can succeed in your business.

I wish you all the best and I’ll see you next time.


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Maximising Your Profit | Put Your Profit First!

Should a business focus on profit or revenue first?

Business Coaching Videos: Put Your Profit First

Have you slogged away in your business (or your regular job) for years and wondered where all your hard-earned money goes?

Why don’t you ever seem to have much to show for your hard work after all of your bills have been paid?

In this video, we’ll explore the principles from the book Profit First, which recommends a new system that accepts and accommodates our human frailties, rather than attempting to deny them.

Traditional accounting says, ‘Sales minus expenses equal profit.’ Profit First says, ‘Sales minus profit equals expenses!’

How could such a small change make such a big difference? Watch the video to find out!


Watch Video Five: Put Your Profit First!

Watch another video

Book an Obligation Free Consultation

If you are struggling with the topic in this video, or want to improve this area of your business with new strategies and a proven formula for success, then complete the form here now, to book an obligation free consultation with Phil Latz.

Phil will meet with you for one hour, free-of-charge, to listen to your current situation. He will help you to hone in upon the key issues and strategies that will make the most impact, no strings attached.

It will only take you 30 seconds to activate change! You have everything to gain and nothing to lose! 

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

The True Cost of Discounting – Part 1

The True Cost of Discounting

by Phil Latz

Think of the times have you been a customer finalising the purchase of a large ticket item such as a car, household appliance or piece of furniture.

You have in your mind a figure of what you’re happy to pay. It may even be the full asking price. But without you even asking, the salesperson offers you a discount that brings the price to below the price you were fully prepared to pay.

Then of course you said to the salesperson, ‘No, wait! I was actually prepared to pay this much’ …and a pig flew across the sky.

There have been whole books written about negotiating, probing for customer objections and closing the deal. That’s all beyond the scope of this article, in which I’m going to show you the true cost of discounting by focusing upon your favourite subject, maths!

As someone who ceremonially burned all his schoolbooks the day school was finally over (home incinerators were still legal in those days) I sympathise if this is not the most exciting subject, but if you want to increase your profitability, it’s important to understand the key principles.

Suppose you have some bikes on your shop floor that you decide to discount by 20%. How many more bikes will you have to sell to achieve the same total dollar amount of gross profit as you would have if you sold them for full retail price?

A common instinctive answer is, ‘I’d have to sell 20% more.’ But that answer is not just a little bit wrong, it’s way out! How much? That depends upon the starting gross margin you’re discounting from.

Time for definitions of two key terms that get used a lot by bike businesses, mark up and margin (often called gross margin).

As an example, if you buy a bike for $1,000 and sell it for $1,500 your mark up is $500 or 50% but your margin is only 33.3%. The margin is always lower than the mark up.

That’s because margin is calculated by taking the mark up amount, $500 and dividing it by the retail price $1,500, which gives you 0.33 (rounded) or 33%. 

If you were to buy a product for $1,000 and sell it for $2,000 your mark up would be $1,000 or 100% and your margin would be $1,000 divided by $2,000 which equals 0.5 or 50%.

If you look at the table (‘Discounting Your Prices’) you’ll see that if you were to discount your bikes by 20% and the starting margin was 35%, a not uncommon mid-range margin on complete bicycles, then you’d actually have to sell 133% more bicycles to make the same dollar value gross margin. So for example, if you were likely to sell 10 bikes at full price, you’d now have to sell 23 bikes. (ie 10 + 133% x 10 = 23 (rounded)).

‘But I had to clear those bikes!’ I hear you say. Followed by a reason such as:

  • If I lose the sale, my competitor down the road will get it.
  • I need the cash to pay bills.
  • It’s the end of model year and the bike will be worth even less next month.
  • If I get that customer on board, they’ll spend a lot more with me over the years on P&A, servicing, bike upgrades etc.
  • I can get a volume discount from my wholesaler if I can just push through a few more sales.

All of these reasons may be valid to various degrees, at certain times. But unfortunately, there’s a further piece to the equation.

The discounting table is only referring to gross margin. After that you need to deduct your overheads (also called expenses) to get to your net profit. Net profit is truly the bottom line. It’s the only money that you get to keep.

If you sold 23 discounted bikes for the same total gross margin as 10 full price bikes, chances are your expenses will increase. You could even be worse off in terms of net profit percentage.

Why? Do you have enough warehouse space or retail floor space for those extra 13 bikes, or will you need to rent some more? How much will it cost to assemble the extra bikes? How much time will it take sell them? How will you finance the extra stock and at what interest cost?

Turnover is vanity, profit is sanity. It’s a nice feeling when the shop is busy and bikes are rolling out the door, but how much net profit have they made you? It’s easy to become focused upon growing your business at all costs, but that’s the point… there are a lot of costs that come with growth.

On the other hand, suppose you decide to put your prices up. As you can see from the table (Increasing Your Prices), once again, depending upon the margin for that product, you’d have to lose a lot of sales before your gross profit is reduced.

In this example the net profit effect is reversed. Fewer bikes to assemble and sell might mean lower wages, less space required might mean less rent, which could well lead to a higher percentage of net profit. And when it comes to business, net profit is literally the bottom line. I know of many bike shops barely making any profit at all, but other bike shops making net profit within the 15% to 20% range. That’s a vast difference.

In summary, although it may seem counter intuitive, when you drill down into the maths, the cost of discounting is higher than you might think. In the real world you’ll always have reasons to discount, like the ones listed above and more. But if you have a better understanding of the true cost you’ll make better informed decisions.

Footnote: How to calculate discounting and price increasing samples for yourself. If you look at the two enclosed tables and can’t see the actual percentages relevant to your products, then here are the two formulae that they’re based upon.
For the discount table, sales must increase by discount / (margin-discount).
For the price increase table, sales can decrease by increase / (margin+increase).

The following two tables are resources from Action Coach, the world’s first specialist business coaching service.


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