Using dashboard reports. Selecting KPIs



Similar documents
Learning Objectives: Quick answer key: Question # Multiple Choice True/False Describe the important of accounting and financial information.

BUSINESS PERFORMANCE GUIDE

25% Amount of time small to medium-sized businesses spend on employmentrelated

Plan and Track Your Finances

Financial Statements LESSON 15. What are Financial Statements?

TEN COMMON AND HOW TO

An Introduction to Insperity Business Solutions. For BMRG GAP Members

Financial Ratios and Quality Indicators

Plan and Track Your Finances

ESSENTIALS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 6E

Guide to Financial Statements Study Guide

Workbook 1 Buying and Selling

Chapter 002 Financial Statements, Taxes and Cash Flow

Creating a Successful Financial Plan

What is a business plan?

BSM Connection elearning Course

Preparing Family Net Worth and Income Statements

STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS AND WORKING CAPITAL ANALYSIS

Inventory period: The length of time required to produce and sell the product.

Report Description. Business Counts. Top 10 States (by Business Counts) Page 1 of 16

Preparing Agricultural Financial Statements

Current liabilities - Obligations that are due within one year. Obligations due beyond that period of time are classified as long-term liabilities.

Your Guide to Profit Guard

Creating a Successful Financial Plan

State of Idaho - Public Works Contractor Licensing MULTI-PURPOSE BALANCE SHEET (For Class D and C Licenses Only)

Accounts Payable are the total amounts your business owes its suppliers for goods and services purchased.

Understanding Financial Statements. For Your Business

Financial Statements and Ratios: Notes

Financial Statements

Purchasing/Human Resources/Payment Process: Recording and Evaluating Expenditure Process Activities

BUSINESS PLAN TEMPLATE

BUSINESS PLAN TEMPLATE

ICAP GROUP S.A. FINANCIAL RATIOS EXPLANATION

Financial Plan. A) Estimated One-Time Financial Requirements. Part One

Chapter 6 Statement of Cash Flows

Business Planner. Your small business planning guide

Preparing Financial Statements

UNDERSTANDING WHERE YOU STAND. A Simple Guide to Your Company s Financial Statements

In this chapter, we build on the basic knowledge of how businesses

There are times when it s good to be a control freak like when you re watching your company s money.

Cash Flow Forecasting & Break-Even Analysis

Gross Sales (Gross Revenue): the total amount of money received from customers

Simply put, factoring is a transaction where a company sells its invoices at a discount in exchange for quick funds.

Understanding A Firm s Financial Statements

Investment Loan Program

CASH FLOW STATEMENT (AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT)

How to Use the Cash Flow Template

Product brochure. Investment Loan Program BANKING THAT WORKS FOR ADVISORS. For advisor information only

1. Planning - Establishing organizational goals and deciding how to accomplish them

SMALL BUSINESS OWNER S HANDBOOK

9. Short-Term Liquidity Analysis. Operating Cash Conversion Cycle

HOW TO IMPROVE THE WORKING CAPITAL OF A COMPANY

Understanding Financial Information for Bankruptcy Lawyers Understanding Financial Statements

3,000 3,000 2,910 2,910 3,000 3,000 2,940 2,940

Accounts payable Money which you owe to an individual or business for goods or services that have been received but not yet paid for.

Study Guide - Final Exam Accounting I

How To Measure Performance In The Accommodation Industry

Developing Financial Statements

The Balance Sheet, Unlock its power within your small business. By Jessica Reagan Salzman Professional Bookkeeper

KPI ENCYCLOPEDIA FINANCE. A Comprehensive Collection of KPI Definitions for. info@opsdog.com

Financial Statements Tutorial

BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE for Teachers and Students

Current Assets. Current Liabilities. Quick Assets or Liquid Assets. Current Liabilities. 1. Liquidity Ratios 1 Current Ratio Formula.

Capital Investment Analysis and Project Assessment

The Nature of Accounting Systems

A Simple Model. Introduction to Financial Statements

ABOUT FINANCIAL RATIO ANALYSIS

Ipx!up!hfu!uif Dsfeju!zpv!Eftfswf

Equity Value, Enterprise Value & Valuation Multiples: Why You Add and Subtract Different Items When Calculating Enterprise Value

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS SCORECARD. Your Small Business Scorecard. David Oetken, MBA CPM

Return on Equity has three ratio components. The three ratios that make up Return on Equity are:

BizScore Contractor Example

National Black Law Journal UCLA

CH 23 STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS SELF-STUDY QUESTIONS

Accounting Practice Questions

RENAISSANCE ENTREPRENEURSHIP CENTER First Finance Class (FIN-1)

How To Calculate Financial Leverage Ratio

FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT

г. OC = AAI + ACP

Entrepreneurship Chapter 10 1

Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth

Chapter 18 Working Capital Management

INTRODUCTION TO FARM AND RANCH ACCOUNTING USING QUICKEN

C&I LOAN EVALUATION UNDERWRITING GUIDELINES. A Whitepaper

2-8. Identify whether each of the following items increases or decreases cash flow:

TYPES OF FINANCIAL RATIOS

APPENDIX 1 The Statement of Financial Position

GVEP Workshop Finance 101

RISK ASSESSMENT FOR SMALL BUSINESS. Terry S. Campbell, Community Development Officer Department of Development & Technology

How To Grade Your Business

Financial Statement Analysis: An Introduction

Financial Ratio Analysis A GUIDE TO USEFUL RATIOS FOR UNDERSTANDING YOUR SOCIAL ENTERPRISE S FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE

Transcription:

WHITE PAPER

When you have accurate, timely and actionable financial information, you re able to make smarter business decisions. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) can provide a clear picture of your company s current financial situation and allow you to make those decisions with confidence. To be of value, however, KPIs must be quantifiable. You can only manage what you can measure. KPIs will differ by industry. Those relevant to the retail environment will be different from those for a manufacturing or financial environment. Regardless of your industry, however, successful KPIs must be: Specific to the goals of your organization Measurable to enable you to assess progress Achievable and realistic Relevant to your business metrics Time-bound to place achievement in a determined time frame Selecting KPIs Businesses should develop KPIs that provide a balanced scorecard. To do that, KPIs need to look at key business metrics related to customer satisfaction, sales pipeline, employee productivity and cash flow. Combined, these KPIs measure the health of the company from the perspectives of finances, customers, internal processes and human resources components. For most businesses, only a few decisions will typically make or break the company, including: Pricing: Are you charging enough for your services? Staffing: Who are your best performers, and how do you reward them? When should you hire new staff, and should anyone be let go? Cash Flow: What are your Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)? Is your company doing a good job billing and collecting? Using dashboard reports The Insperity Reveal software solution provides dashboard snapshots of 12 critical financial KPIs that let you analyze today s data, evaluate your transactions over the past year and offer suggestions for improving the financial health of your business. Dashboard reports should be a part of every company s regular financial reports, according to Stephen King, president and CEO of GrowthForce. They provide KPIs with actionable information that businesses can use to make critical decisions to increase margins or invest in a surplus, King says. And it s much easier for business owners to quickly digest financial results graphically, rather than as small type on printed financial reports. Your financial information is the foundation of your business. It s critical that your records are accurate and up-to-date and that you have real-time access to your financial information. Stephen King, president and CEO of GrowthForce. 2

The 12 KPI dashboard reports provided by Insperity Reveal software include: Days of cash This is how much cash you have today and the number of days of expenses you can cover with this cash. The number one reason businesses fail is they run out of cash, but monitoring this indicator will tell you in advance if you re headed for a problem. Cash on hand This is the total amount of cash you have today, calculated as the sum of all balance sheet accounts. Companies that stay on top of their cash positions are the ones that survive. Receivables This is the amount of money your clients or customers owe your company today. The ability for a business to survive is often based on how quickly it s able to convert receivables into cash. Payables This is the amount of money your company owes to vendors, including amounts due to suppliers, utilities, credit card balances and more. Vendor terms are important, because delaying payment when appropriate increases cash. Credit card debt This is the amount of unsecured liability incurred through a short-term revolving loan facility. Users must remain alert and vigilant. Even small balances can quickly balloon out of control due to interest charges. Working capital This measures your company efficiency and short-term financial health. Key components are inventory, accounts receivable and accounts payable. Your working capital equals current assets minus current liabilities. Positive working capital means you have the ability to pay off short-term liabilities. Income This is remaining revenue after all your company expenses and taxes have been paid. The financial statement that reflects the resulting net income or loss is your income statement. Stockholders and lenders want to know how your company is performing financially. Cost of goods sold This measures all costs directly associated with making a product or delivering a service, including purchase price and any freight charges, storage of goods and goods returned. 3

Gross profit This is the amount of money left after your company has paid all direct costs incurred in making a product or delivering a service. It tells you the basic profitability of your product or service. Expenses This is all costs incurred to produce revenues. Expenses are measured by the assets surrendered or consumed in serving customers. If your expenses exceed your revenues, your company is in trouble. Net income This is your company earnings, the money left after the company expenses have been subtracted from the revenues. It is the single most important measure of your profitability, and net income makes it easier for regulating authorities to understand the financial health of your company. Equity This is your net worth. It is the residual interest in the assets you have remaining after deducting liabilities. This is the book value of your company, and it records your claim to funds that you have invested. Insperity Reveal can help you manage your financial operations and drive productivity and profits. 4

About Insperity Insperity, a trusted advisor to America s best businesses for more than 27 years, provides an array of human resources and business solutions designed to help improve business performance. Insperity Business Performance Advisors offer the most comprehensive suite of products and services available in the marketplace. Insperity delivers administrative relief, better benefits, reduced liabilities and a systematic way to improve productivity through its premier Workforce Optimization solution. Additional company offerings include Human Capital Management, Payroll Services, Time and Attendance, Performance Management, Organizational Planning, Recruiting Services, Employment Screening, Financial Services, Expense Management, Retirement Services and Insurance Services. Insperity business performance solutions support more than 100,000 businesses with over 2 million employees. With 2012 revenues of $2.2 billion, Insperity operates in 57 offices throughout the United States. To learn more about GrowthForce, an Insperity alliance company, call us at 888-808-8842. Visit us at insperity.com The information contained in this document is for general, informational purposes only and is not intended to be legal advice. This information is not a substitute for the guidance of a professional and should not be relied upon in reference to any specific situation without first seeking the advice of a qualified HR professional and/or legal counsel regarding applicable federal, state or local laws. Insperity and its respective employees make no warranties, express or implied, and make no judgments regarding the accuracy of this content and/or its applicability to a specific situation. A reference or link to another website is not an endorsement of that site or service. 5 FS -P13-620