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Budgets
Budgets allow you to set targets for your income
and your expenditure as well as for the acquisition of assets or
liabilities. Reports can then be printed that allow you to compare
and evaluate your performance against your estimates.
Many financial advisers strongly advocate the
establishment of a
sales budget. A sales budget allows you to estimate your income and
this allows expenditure allocations for advertising, rent, phone
and other overheads to be carefully monitored. Runaway expenses
can, of course, cripple a business, but a real concern is that
there is often no clear way to distinguish between overheads that
will destroy a business and overheads that are leading to break-even operations or a profit. A
profit and loss statement will tell you what has occurred. A budget
will help you make proactive decisions and put your mind set in
"strategy" mode rather than let you react to problems and end up in
"defensive" mode.
One of the major difficulties in planning any
budget, but especially a sales budget, is that small business
seldom has a guaranteed supply of sales, or even a very predictable
monthly income. This is why entering a budget will achieve nothing
unless the budget is constantly compared and adjusted to take into
account changing market conditions. As Allen Hulls and William
Yeadon write in Understanding Business Ratios and Finances, a
"budget requires a clear strategy, firm objectives, strict
monitoring and fast corrective action."
Budget
Calculators
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