Managing Consulting Finances

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  • View profile for Yvette Fitzhenry ACCA 🦋

    Your Business Finance BFF 💸 ▪️Giving financial insights to help you build your dream business▪️Fractional Finance Director

    19,198 followers

    There’s nothing more overwhelming than building a high-growth business… Especially when you’re completely uncertain about your finances. I see it all the time- Incredible business owners who are scaling their businesses without financial clarity. Which leads to anxiety about money. And numbers falling behind. If this is you, you’re not alone: → “I’m not sure if I can afford to hire” → “I don’t know where my money is going” → “I’ve been winging it and hoping for the best” Us business owners juggle a million plates. And so many of us were never taught how to manage money. And chances are, no one has ever taught you how to manage money. But here’s the truth: 💛You don’t need a finance degree to feel financially empowered 💛You just need simple systems that help you feel supported 💛You deserve to feel control, clarity and better equipped to grow These 5 simple changes can have a huge impact: 📊Align your budget with your goals: Focus your spend on the offers, systems and support that truly move the needle in your business. Tip: Check in monthly to make sure your money is backing your goals. 💸 Review your pricing regularly: Costs rise, and so does your value! Your pricing should reflect your expertise and support a sustainable business model. Tip: Factor in rising expenses, tax obligations, and the real cost of delivery. 💻 Track cash flow weekly: Know exactly when money’s coming in and when it’s due to go out. Tip: A 10-minute check-in every Friday is a tiny habit that can shift you from panic to peace. 📈 Create a financial buffer: A safety net reduces panic and gives you options when things feel uncertain. Tip: Set aside a % of your revenue for future growth or downturns. Even small amounts build safety over time. 🎯 Set financial KPIs: What gets measured gets managed. Track the numbers that actually matter to your growth! Tip: Focus on a few key metrics - like profit margin, revenue targets or client retention - to keep you on track. Your future self will thank you for taking control of your finances. Because that’s what gives you the mental space to breathe and build with intention. That’s when the real growth begins!  _____________ I help business owners gain the financial insights to build their dream business. If you’re ready to gain total clarity on your finances so you can make confident decisions about your business, I’d love to chat 🤍

  • View profile for Ellis Bennett FCCA
    Ellis Bennett FCCA Ellis Bennett FCCA is an Influencer

    The accountant for scaling UK agencies | FCCA | Profit margins, tax efficiency & strategic financial clarity that drives real growth | The Ellis Group 💸 👨🏼💻

    20,310 followers

    Can someone making £450K in revenue still struggle for profits? Recently, a marketing agency came to us frustrated and confused. 👉 They were making £450K a year, but profits weren’t reflecting the effort they were putting in. 👉 No matter how much they grew, profitability wasn’t improving. 👉 Cash flow felt tighter than it should be. The problem was that they were treating all revenue the same. When we dug into their accounts, we split their income into three core services: 1️⃣ Retainers (£250K revenue) – Reliable but low-margin work. 2️⃣ Project Work (£150K revenue) – Higher fees, but unpredictable. 3️⃣ Consulting (£50K revenue) – Time-intensive, but super profitable. Once we broke it down, the issues became obvious. Here’s what we found: ✅ Retainers were underpriced – Margins were just 30%, compared to 50%+ on other services. A small price increase would massively impact profit. ✅ Project work was eating up time – Tightening up processes could boost margins by 10% without extra effort. ✅ Consulting was a goldmine – It had 70% margins, but they weren’t selling it enough. So here’s what we changed: 📌 Increased retainer pricing by 10% – £25K extra annual revenue. 📌 Streamlined project delivery – Fixed inefficiencies to boost profit by £15K. 📌 Pushed consulting harder – More sales brought in £30K in high-margin revenue. 📌 Tweaked tax efficiencies – Saving them an extra £12K. Here’s the result: 💰 Net profit jumped from £90K to £110K → a 22% increase. 💰 More cash in the bank without working harder. Not all revenue is good revenue. Sometimes, the answer isn’t more work, it’s smarter work. Curious what’s hiding in your numbers? Drop me a DM.

  • View profile for Nicolas Pinto

    LinkedIn Top Voice | FinTech | Marketing & Growth Expert | Thought Leader | Leadership

    37,736 followers

    The Payout Money Flow 💡 What if payouts transformed from a cumbersome process into a competitive advantage that delivers exceptional experiences for sellers while driving operational efficiency? By prioritizing streamlined compliance, fostering loyalty, and optimizing operations, marketplaces can unlock new growth opportunities 💳 Compliance is often viewed as a complex maze filled with acronyms like AML, KYC, KYB, PSD2, and the forthcoming PSD3. For many marketplaces, these regulations can feel overwhelming. However, they also present an opportunity for those willing to embrace them. The Payment Services Directive (PSD2) forces marketplaces to make a critical choice: should they be directly involved in the payment flow or not? To manage payment flows, marketplaces must obtain a financial services provider license. For example, EU-based marketplaces handling payments must acquire a Payment Institution (PI) or Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license, but this involves substantial regulatory and operational challenges. Imagine a marketplace navigating these regulatory waters with ease. Platforms can turn compliance from a burden into a streamlined process. With a unified integration layer that simplifies KYC and AML requirements, marketplaces can focus on what truly matters: fostering growth and supporting their sellers 🚀 For a marketplace to remain a preferred choice, payouts should be a cornerstone of your value proposition. Sellers, particularly those in the gig economy, often depend on real-time access to earnings. Delayed payments or hidden fees can disrupt their entire business and damage trust. Picture this: A seller eagerly awaiting payment for their latest sale only to find themselves caught in a web of delays and hidden fees. This scenario is all too common and can quickly lead to frustration and distrust. However, when marketplaces prioritize timely payouts and transparency in their processes, they create an environment where sellers feel valued. ➡️ Provide sellers with their preferred payout options. Sellers demand choice. Whether through cards, wallets, or bank transfers in local currencies, providing multiple payout methods is essential. ➡️ Ensure timely, predictable payouts. Delays in payouts can strain the seller-marketplace relationship. By integrating real-time, batch, and scheduled payout options, platforms can meet sellers’ demand for instant access to earnings. ➡️ Provide clear status reporting and commission breakdown. Transparency is invaluable. Sellers need clarity on what they are being paid, when they will receive it, and how much they will get after fees. Offering complete visibility into payouts builds trust and reassures sellers that they’ve chosen the right marketplace. Source: Payrails - https://lnkd.in/gNqd5eHu #Innovation #Fintech #Banking #Marketplace #PSD3 #FinancialServices #Payments #BNPL #PayOuts #Compliance #KYC #AML #Wallets 

  • View profile for Archana Venkat

    CMO I COO | Growth strategy leader I B2B scalable GTM, Sales, Ops | Advisor to Founders I Certified Independent Director

    6,597 followers

    I’ve started this week with overdue payments from two clients. At first glance, collections may sound like a finance team problem, but in reality, they have everything to do with growth. Why? Because cash flow discipline determines whether your business runs sustainably or stumbles despite great work. In India, delayed payments often have less to do with project scope or billing schedules and more to do with how clients prioritize their cash flow over yours. The question is: how do you safeguard your business without alienating relationships? A few lessons I’ve learnt the hard way: 1. Set expectations twice, not once Over a decade ago, a colleague and I went to collect a pending payment under ₹5 lakh. The client refused, claiming the service didn’t meet expectations. The real issue? The engagement letter had been signed by a Partner, who was absent until the deliverable was presented. The client assumed the Partner would be involved throughout. We eventually collected payment after three painful months. Lesson: confirm expectations when signing and again at project kickoff—don’t leave room for assumptions. 2. Contracts must be watertight—and reinforced Clients who overlook payment terms and insist you start projects “on goodwill” are often the ones who later argue over technicalities. Only strong contracts—and periodic reinforcement of those terms—work. Monthly billing can also de-risk project-based engagements. 3. Always know the escalation path In government and large enterprise contracts, relying on one single point of contact (SPOC) is risky. I’ve seen payments delayed by a year simply because the SPOC was evasive, and we didn’t know who else to approach. Mapping the escalation matrix upfront helps avoid these bottlenecks. And if, despite all this, a client still doesn’t pay? Then it’s not a client, it’s a liability. Pick clients who pay—even if the work is less glamorous. If you want “interesting work” at all costs, be ready for the possibility that it might also be unpaid work. Here’s the bigger truth: collections are also a strategy. The clients you choose, the terms you enforce, and the discipline you bring to cash flow management directly shape whether you grow sustainably or stumble despite great work. #BusinessGrowth #CashFlowManagement #ClientManagement #LeadershipInsights #GrowthIsDiscipline #CashFlowTruths

  • View profile for Tyler Martin, CPA

    CFO for Home Service Businesses | Helping Owners Achieve $1M+ Months Consistently | 2x Exit Entrepreneur | Grew Service Biz to $25M | Cash Flow & Growth Strategist

    14,030 followers

    The Power of Systems: Insights from My Discussion with Phil Risher Imagine this: your business runs like a well-oiled machine—clear cash flow, efficient processes, and a team aligned with your goals. Sounds ideal, right? That’s exactly what my guest, Phil Risher, founder of Phlash Consulting, helps businesses achieve. In this week’s Think Business with Tyler podcast, we dived deep into: ✅ Cash Flow Management: Phil shared his method of using multiple accounts to allocate funds for taxes, payroll, expenses, and profit. This structured approach prevents financial uncertainty and keeps businesses in control. ✅ Knowing When to Hire: By meticulously tracking his work hours in a simple Google Sheet, Phil identifies when the workload justifies hiring. This prevents burnout and ensures strategic growth. ✅ The Importance of Sales Skills: Whether you’re selling services or simply building relationships, sales skills are non-negotiable for success. Phil’s tips on understanding return on ad spend and lead management were game-changing. ✅ The Profit First System: Phil’s adoption of this financial model transformed how he managed his business. By allocating income into separate accounts, he gained clarity and control over financial decisions, ensuring every dollar worked for him. ✅ Communication Made Simple: One of my favorite takeaways? Phil uses tools like Loom for video communication. It’s not just efficient—it also strengthens client relationships by making complex ideas easy to understand. Phil’s journey from corporate sales to building a thriving consulting firm is proof that structured systems and clear priorities can drive incredible results. Whether it’s managing finances, leveraging tools like EOS, or simplifying marketing strategies, his approach is packed with actionable insights. 🎧 If you’ve ever struggled with cash flow, hiring, or scaling your business, this episode is a must-listen. Listen in to learn how to streamline your processes and achieve sustainable growth with Phil’s expert guidance. 👉Link to the full episode in the comments.

  • View profile for Jason Andrew

    I acquire exceptional SMEs. Follow me to learn more.

    32,659 followers

    One of the biggest mistakes I see business owners make during tougher periods is waiting too long to look at cash flow. By the time cash becomes a problem, the warning signs have usually been there for weeks. A slow paying customer. A supplier increase. A drop in sales. A tax bill that was not planned for. On their own, none of these are usually enough to hurt the business. Combined, they can create real pressure very quickly. That is why I always tell clients to move from monthly reporting to weekly cash flow forecasting. A simple 13 week cash flow forecast gives you visibility over what is coming, where the gaps are and what decisions need to be made before cash becomes an issue. In my experience, the businesses that come through tougher periods best are usually not the ones with the biggest revenue. They are the ones with the best visibility and the fastest decision making. I put together a breakdown on how to manage cash flow in a crisis, including practical ways to improve cash coming in, defer liabilities and review finance options. Link in the comments.

  • View profile for Maj Ravindra Bhatnagar

    Debt Strategist I Loan Restructuring I Wealth Management I120+ Banks/NBFCs! helping MSMEs I FinTech I MSME Loan Expert I Sahaja Yoga - knowledge of roots I

    26,639 followers

    Struggling with cash flow despite steady revenue? Read this. Most businesses focus on revenue growth, but forget that timing matters more than total numbers. Your debt structure might be strangling your operations. During my years restructuring finances for MSMEs, I've seen countless profitable businesses gasping for air simply because their loan repayments peaked when their cash reserves ebbed. Remember when I helped that manufacturing client switch from monthly fixed payments to a seasonal repayment schedule? Their stress vanished overnight. Their revenue always spiked in Q4, yet their heaviest loan payments fell in Q2. We realigned their amortization schedule to match their natural business cycle. Smart debt structuring considers your unique operational rhythm. Consider bullet loans that allow interest-only payments until you can handle the principal. Explore graduated payment structures that start small and grow with your business. Investigate seasonal amortization that mirrors your cash flow patterns. Your business deserves a repayment schedule that respects its natural ebb and flow. The right structure preserves working capital during lean periods while capitalizing on abundance during peak seasons. Think beyond interest rates. The structure of how and when you repay matters just as much. After restructuring debt for hundreds of businesses, I can tell you with certainty: cash flow preservation through thoughtful amortization scheduling might be the most underutilized financial strategy. What financial structure is holding your business back today? Share your challenge below, and perhaps we can uncover a solution together. #CashFlowManagement #AmortizationSchedule #FinancialPlanning #BusinessFinance

  • View profile for Vaibhav Sharma

    Co-founder, Centraligence | Building the System of Intelligence for lean companies

    8,556 followers

    Cash flow isn’t just a finance function—it’s a survival metric. Many promising startups run out of money not because they weren’t growing, but because they weren’t managing cash well. Here are 7 strategies to help you stay in control of your cash flow as a founder: 1. Understand Cash In vs. Cash Out Revenue is not cash flow. Get clear on when money actually enters and exits your bank account. Delay in receivables or unexpected costs can kill momentum fast.     2. Forecast Monthly, Not Annually A 12-month projection is useful—but cash flow should be monitored monthly, even weekly. Build a simple forecast that shows burn rate, runway, and inflow trends.     3. Extend Runway Without Killing Growth Before cutting blindly, identify what actually drives growth. Trim the fat, not the muscle. Cut vanity expenses, not essentials.     4. Negotiate Payment Terms Both Ways Ask vendors for net-30 or net-60. Meanwhile, try to shorten payment cycles with customers. Cash in sooner, cash out later.     5. Avoid Scaling Before the Math Works Don’t ramp ad spend, headcount, or inventory unless your customer acquisition cost (CAC) and lifetime value (LTV) make sense. Growth without margins = cash burn.     6. Track Collections Relentlessly Unpaid invoices? Follow up. Automate reminders. Don’t let receivables age silently. You’re not a bank—get paid on time.     7. Plan for Dry Months Every startup hits a rough patch. Build a buffer. Always know how many months of runway you have. If it's under 6, you're already in the red zone.     Cash is the oxygen of your startup. Manage it with discipline, not drama. What’s one cash flow habit that’s helped your startup stay healthy? #CashFlow #StartupFinance #FounderTips #StartupSurvival #FinancialDiscipline #FounderFragments *** Enjoy this? Share it with your network and follow me Vaibhav Sharma for more in future! Join my inner circle of Founders and Entrepreneurs here: https://lnkd.in/gZKZ_Zdb

  • View profile for Swati Mathur

    100K+ Personal branding Strategist | MBA Gold medalist 🥇| Featured on LinkedIn News India🏆 |Sharing insights on Personal development, Content creation & Personal branding

    103,398 followers

    I used to be the girl who would hesitate to ask for her own money. If someone delayed a payment, I would overthink: “Maybe they’re busy.” “Maybe it’s rude to remind them.” “Maybe I should wait a little more.” But then I entered freelancing. And I realized something many freelancers quietly struggle with: Doing the work is hard. Asking for your own payment feels harder. If you relate to this, read this slowly : you’re not “bad with money.” You were just never taught how to ask for it confidently. Here’s what helped me: 1️⃣ Decide your payment terms before starting Don’t wait till the work is done. Before you begin: ✔️ Share your fees clearly. ✔️ Decide payment timelines. ✔️ Take advance (even 30–50% helps). Clarity at the beginning prevents awkwardness at the end. 2️⃣ Stop making it emotional You’re not “asking for money.” You’re following up on a professional agreement. Money is not a favor. It’s an exchange. When you detach emotionally, it becomes easier. 3️⃣ Send reminders without guilt Most delays are not personal. People forget. Invoices get buried. A reminder is professionalism, not desperation. Set a system: 🔔 Reminder 1: On due date 🔔 Reminder 2: 3–4 days later 🔔 Reminder 3: Clear final reminder with deadline No anger. Just clarity. 4️⃣ Use written communication Avoid vague WhatsApp voice notes. Send: - A proper invoice - Due date mention - Payment details - Written follow-ups Written words feel structured and serious. 5️⃣ Respect your own work If you don’t value your time, others won’t. The moment I stopped apologizing for asking for my own money… People started taking me more seriously. Confidence changes tone even in text. 📌 Simple Follow-Up Template You Can Use: 1. First Reminder (Polite): Hi [Name], Just a quick reminder that the payment of ₹____ for [project name] was due on [date]. Please let me know once it’s processed. Thank you! I’ve shared the second reminder and final reminder templates in the comments 👇 Go read them and save them, you’ll need them at some point. If you’re a freelancer struggling with this, remember: You’re not being rude. You’re being professional. And professionals get paid. Follow Swati Mathur for more. #freelancing #personalbranding

  • View profile for David Safeer

    I help accountants become trusted advisors by teaching them to diagnose and apply the right strategies at the right time, so clients always have cash, grow profits, and advisors build thriving, high-fee practices.

    20,671 followers

    Your client's P&L shows $500K profit, but they can't make payroll next week – sound familiar? You see the numbers. Profit looks strong. But the bank account tells a different story. • Bills due. • Payroll looming. • Not enough cash to cover it. This is not rare. I see it with businesses of every size. Here’s why: Profit on the P&L is not the same as cash in the bank. Accounting rules create a gap. Revenue and expenses hit the books, but cash moves on its own schedule. Customers pay late. Inventory sits on shelves. Vendors want their money now. The result? You look profitable, but you are cash poor. 82% of business failures come down to poor cash flow. Not bad ideas. Not bad products. Cash flow is the oxygen for business. When you run out, nothing else matters. I’ve worked with businesses in crisis. Profit was not the issue. Cash was. Here is what I tell every financial professional: • Get skilled at understanding where the cash moves, not just what the P&L says. • Teach your clients where the money actually goes. • Build systems that show cash reality, not just accounting profit. Cash flow advisory is not a “nice to have.” It is survival. If you want to be the advisor your clients trust when the numbers do not add up, step up your cash flow game. Have you seen this gap between profit and cash in your work? What helped you close it? Cash is Clear® #financialmodeling

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