About this ebook
The book is not meant to be a tome to be read and retired, but an action manual of ideas and guidelines. Great value will be gained by readers that keep The Handbook of Small Business handy at all times and in all situations. Dedicated leaders that read the guidelines presented throughout the pages of this book will be rewarded by reminders and concepts that offer alternatives to humdrum management theories and principles.
The information presented is timeless in nature and urgent in utilization. The authors experience, education and business acumen intersect to provide help that has probably never before been presented in such a dynamic and condensed form. Men and women in businesses large and small can absorb and utilize ideas from this seminal manual.
Operating an enterprise in the fast-moving environment of todays topsy-turvy economy is challenging. Reading and utilizing the theories and practices bullet-pointed in this book will be rewarded with the euphoria of genuine success.
Dick Baynton
Dick was born in rural Oakland County, Michigan, and has lived in nine states, including his native Michigan. After graduation from Lake Orion High School, he entered Michigan State University, where studies were interrupted by service in the US Navy. Upon completing his studies with a BS degree, he worked in cabinet making and home construction with his father. Joining a prefabricated home builder in Dearborn, he was transferred to a branch factory in Port Jervis, New York. Leaving that company, he formed a home-building company in the area. Although the business was a successful operation, he joined the Federal Housing Administration and moved to Casper, Wyoming. After serving as cost examiner for the Pacific region in Honolulu, Hawaii, and chief architect in the Casper office, Dick joined a timber and building products firm in Minneapolis where he advanced to middle management. The company was acquired by an international firm where he progressed through several positions, becoming a division sales and marketing manager. Ready to test his mettle, Dick, with his late wife Elaine, formed a company in Virginia and sold the successful distributorship and countertop fabricator to a British firm. Retiring for three weeks, Dick became a business broker, earned an MBA at Radford University, and has since been deeply engaged in business consulting. Dick, daughter Penny, and sons Jim and Randy and their families live in Virginia.
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The Handbook of Small Business - Dick Baynton
Chapter 1
ACCIDENTS
Accidents are expensive and often long-lasting; teach safety, learn safety, live safety.
Be sure to report all lost time accidents to your insurance company and to authorities as required by law. Accidents involving bones, joints, muscles, internal organs, neck, and head injuries should be reported and treated by medical professionals. Do not try to save time and money by amateur diagnoses and treatments.
Treat all persons with respect, and make sure all injuries are attended to professionally and quickly. Review the reasons for the accident occurrence, and take steps to avoid recurrence of accidents by anyone in the company. Accident-prone workers should always be assigned to jobs that are extremely low risk. Careless high-risk workers should work elsewhere.
Make sure safety devices appropriate to your company are perpetually available for immediate use. Items such as safety goggles (glasses), ear protection, breathing apparatus, eye-wash founts, first-aid kits, and even heart defibrillators are useful items to have ready in case of emergency. It may be helpful to hold training classes for emergency heart failure (CPR).
Engage your insurance agent to conduct periodic safety classes or clinics.
Annual safety celebrations and recognition will help keep safety at the forefront with all employees.
Chapter 2
ACCOUNTANTS
Victories are achieved not by cleverness and wile but by focusing on the goal with unrelenting persistence until the objective is achieved.
Selection of an accountant to do tax calculations and filings for all your taxes is crucial. Here are some guidelines:
Make sure your outside accountant is highly qualified and experienced. There are many fine accountants that are not licensed CPAs, but recipients of this designation have completed several years of work and passed rigid tests of capability. Even when your accountant is not a licensed CPA, it is often a good idea to have a review by a CPA at year-end and engage either a CPA or enrolled agent to compute your tax liability.
Be sure your accountant/auditor has an almost perfect record of on-time performance meeting tax deadlines and other important dates. Likewise, make sure your in-house accountant or bookkeeper provides all necessary data to the outside firm in a timely manner.
Have fee schedules for the work you plan to have your accountant perform. This is needed for budgeting and control.
Get guidance from your accountant or taxing authorities on the rules for specific taxes and fees and due dates payable to city, county, state, and federal authorities.
Be honest to a fault with all discussions with your bookkeeper and accountant/auditor. Honesty and accuracy are the earmarks of a successful enterprise.
Produce balance sheets and profit and loss statements monthly. Count inventory frequently for accuracy.
Make sure all your taxes are paid on time and that all possible legal deductions have been taken.
If you feel you and your company are not receiving fair treatment from any taxing authority, speak to a supervisor. Keep talking to supervisors until you get the person who can and does provide appropriate responses. If you never get to that supervisor, you may need an attorney or professional specialist.
Chapter 3
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
Take care of suppliers, and they will take care of you.
Accounts payable are a total of all purchases payable within the vendors’ policies of their current receivables, terms of payment, and receipt and delinquency. Many suppliers offer cash discounts for payment within certain time spans between invoicing or delivery and customer payment. Great savings can be made by keeping supplier accounts current. For example, a company that purchases $1,000 per month or $12,000 per year can save $20 per month or $240 each year by discounting
their purchases if the supplier offers a 2 percent discount when payment is made within terms, usually from ten to thirty days.
On the other hand, if payment is not made within terms, the savings lost (lost opportunity) is $240. Consider that by not taking discounts, you forego payments to other suppliers or liquidation of short-term or long-term debt.
Cost savings can also accrue by quantity purchasing where a discount of 5 percent might be available for buying one thousand units of a needed product instead of five hundred. As your company grows, the opportunity for savings by taking purchase discounts in quantity and timely payments adds up to substantial amounts that can be used for important alternative uses.
At the end of each month, it is a good idea to compare receivables and payables. If payables are greater than receivables, that reflects negative cash flow. When receivables are greater than payables, positive cash flow is indicated. Accounts receivable should be 5 percent to 25 percent greater than accounts payable on a monthly comparable basis, depending on margins.
Be sure to audit all supplier invoices for accuracy in unit pricing, quantity (count), and specification. Check all deliveries for damage before signing the manifest or delivery receipt.
Chapter 4
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
It is equally blessed to receive as it is to pay.
Accounts receivable is all about managing credit, having sensible invoicing and collection policies, and enforcing incoming cash flow at maximum levels. This means that someone in your company needs to be assigned to communicating with all customers, whether or not they are delinquent.
Accounts receivable are the lifeblood of the company in the form of cash flow. Cash flow of most companies is thought to be in good shape if it is between twenty-five and thirty-five days (DSO or day sales outstanding), depending on your company’s credit terms. In many retail companies, DSO does not apply when sales are for cash or credit card.
Terms will vary regarding whether your company is retail, wholesale, manufacturing, or service-oriented. Margins, inventory turns, fixed and variable expenses, and other considerations also affect terms of sale.
Credit managers should maintain a sequence of contacts including letters (often called dun letters), phone calls, personal calls, and negotiations. The credit manager should be empowered to make deals
with delinquent customers such as portions of past-due invoices that must be collected for each shipment delivery and other techniques for receiving payment. The imposition of late fees may be of assistance in collections, but these fees should be negotiable as long as the risk of receiving payment does not increase.
Some marginal customers will max out their credit limit with one supplier and then turn to another supplier for purchases. This type of customer bounces back and forth from supplier to supplier with little hope of catching up their payables. When this happens (or may be happening), the credit manager should feel free to check with other suppliers regarding their transactions with the customer in question. Be warned that calls or communications of this sort cannot be conspiratorial, for that is unlawful. It is legal to give and receive information about credit, sales, and other data, but agreements of how customers will be dealt with must not be made. Agreement between competing companies regarding price and terms of sale to customers are absolutely prohibited.
Chapter 5
ADVERTISING
Optimism must be tempered with reality.
Advertising is a universal need for businesses of all sizes. There are many ways advertising can benefit a business and their products or services. Remember that advertising is an expense. The only reason to spend money is to generate profit; thus, money spent on advertising should always pass the test of producing more profit than it costs. That simply means that for each dollar spent on advertising, you should expect a return of more than one dollar in profit. Generally, you should expect to get many times the advertising expense in net profit.
When you commit company financial resources to advertising agencies or direct to media, be sure to have a system in place that will tell you about your return on investment (ROI). There are many ways to evaluate the effectiveness of advertising spending by making sure you always ask prospects and customers how they heard about your company and/or its products and services. Insist on participation in evaluating the effectiveness by the agency or the media being used (newspaper, magazine, TV, radio, Internet, other).
Be very careful about the formal agreement or contract for advertising services. Let’s say that you sign a one-year agreement for a specific level of advertising with your local TV station for $18,000. But let’s say that only a single sale amounting to $350 can be traced to this advertising agreement during the first six months. You believe your advertising dollars are being wasted, and you want to exit the agreement before the year is over. Make sure you