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finances

Article 01.26.2023 Dean Dorton

Well, I checked again today and normal is still missing from the dictionary for most of us. Post-COVID-19 pandemic has taken its place and in the space for definition, there’s a big, bold question mark! A lot is still in flux. Nonprofit organizations continue to deal with upheaval in staffing, accessibility, and resources. Federal and state funding assistance related to the pandemic has dried up and mandatory loan repayments are upon us. Economic uncertainty and rising costs seem to be significantly spooking the small to mid-sized donor pool.

The current economic situation is creating a cash crunch for many nonprofits, with the potential of a future cash crunch to impact many more. The time to prepare is now!

Gain control of the situation and better position your organization with the following action steps:

Secure a line of credit that will cover 2-3 months of payroll & benefits

Providing service is what you do, so providing employees with stability is essential to a speedy recovery from slumps in cash receipts. If you have an established and positive banking relationship, start by contacting your relationship manager to understand that institution’s application process and associated fees. All banks and financial institutions are not created equal when it comes to lines of credit for nonprofit organizations. Some require collateral or a personal guarantee. Some will charge an annual maintenance fee or a fee for failing to use the line periodically. Therefore, research options at other financial institutions even when you have a strong local relationship and consider the relationship as just one variable in your final decision. Leverage the influence of your board. Ask board members for referrals to their financial institutions. Reach out to state and national organizations that support nonprofits, like KNN, for referrals to resources known to be generous and fair to organizations your size. Established nonprofits can generally qualify for an unsecured line of credit that is sufficient to cover 2-3 months of payroll and benefit expenses. If denied in a first pass, ask why and continue to shop around while you work on eliminating the barriers to your success.AMA – 2023 Code changes and descriptors

Monitor working cash reserves each week

Determine what the monthly average total cash out is for the organization. This doesn’t need to be precise or require a sophisticated accounting system. If your payments are issued from one primary operating checkbook, just see how much went out of the checking account for the past year and divide it by 12. Apply common sense to the result. If it seems too high, make sure there wasn’t an unusual transaction or a bank transfer/adjustment that was mistakenly captured in your numerator and rework the math. If it seems too low, perhaps you have a second bank account used for payroll or other primary expense and the same exercise needs to be applied to that account to get a final result. Once you have confidence in the monthly average spend of the organization, determining working cash reserves is a quick calculation. Begin with cash in the bank. Add any investment that you can cash out within a week (in the event of an emergency) and subtract the bills you currently owe. Divide the result by monthly spend. If the organization has less than 3 months of working cash reserves, measures should be taken to move the needle.

Vet expenses before they occur

Budgeting is an important part of long-term sustainability. A cash crunch, however, is not the time to fall back on “it’s in the budget” as justification for incurring a cost. Each commitment should be laid up against the simple outcome of short-term mission sustainability. Invest in paying the bills that keep the organization open and aligned with its core commitment to the community it serves. Nonprofits depend on public trust. Breaking that trust by failing to deliver on the mission will only jeopardize future cash flow and could create a negative cycle that can’t be remedied. Now is the time though to delay expenditures that go above and beyond the core commitment and those that are intended to create organizational growth. The investment in those expenses will result in better returns when they can be initiated from a place of cash stability. Be patient and focused in expense management until the organization is beyond its cash crunch.

Become a master of timing

Know when bills are due and what the consequences are for late payment. Avoid incurring interest and late payment penalties but also don’t be tempted to pay anything early because it’s small or there is money in the bank at the time bills are being paid. Having the cash available right now is of greater value than a minimal discount or the slight goodwill gained by early payment. Take the time to know your recurring vendors and negotiate for better terms or payment plans whenever you can. If you cannot pay all your bills by their due date, pay in full those that cannot be delayed without penalty and then negotiate a plan to pay those that remain within a reasonable period of time. Try to avoid drawing on the line of credit for accounts payable so that you have confidence in the organization’s ability to manage payroll.

Examine your cycle of cash receipts. Are there any gifts, grants or sales that you can encourage an earlier payment on with prompt or accelerated reminders, invoices or phone calls? Take that action. If you need to draw on the line of credit, repay that balance as quickly as you can to maintain its availability and mitigate finance charges.

Do the deep thinking and act

Is this cash crunch a timing issue or a systematic one? Consider revenue sources and their sufficiency to generate the cash needed to cover cover investment in the expansion of your mission beyond current payroll and operating expenses. Expanding the mission may mean service to a wider base or diversification of services currently offered. It may mean developing the infrastructure to pivot more quickly to the changing needs of your specific community. Regardless of what it means to your organization, just enough isn’t a healthy long-term vision for cash management. Review receipts and expenses for the past several years and determine if your post-pandemic receipts can realistically outpace the organization’s basic cost of operations. If not, consider promptly engaging the board in strategic planning to sustainably reframe the organization.

If timing is the issue, take action to move further away from the cash crunch cliff. Make reserves part of the budget until you’ve reached a cushion equal to 6-12 months of monthly average spend. This reserve and the line of credit should give you the bumper you need to weather typical economic cycles and cost increases while you retool your revenue model. To get there faster, consider a special sustainability campaign or solicitation, a targeted grant or partnership that will displace unrestricted resources so they can be set aside for the future. Share resources with other organizations. Expenses like staffing, fixed assets, and marketing can often be leveraged by partnering with a complimentary organization or a for profit that is looking for a sponsorship opportunity. Engage in solid, legally vetted agreements with clear oversight to keep these relationships healthy and beneficial to both parties. Finally, recognize that every new initiative has an element of overhead and draws resources (time) from core operations. Be sure that new ideas can clearly advance your mission and be funded before going too far into the process of can become planning and implementation. In the absence of feasibility and measurement, great ideas leading drain on cash and are difficult to unwind in a cash crunch.

Remain optimistic

Colin Powell said, “Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier.” Don’t underestimate the power of that math.

A cash crunch is unfortunate, but it’s a risk of doing business. As they say “cash is king!” Pay attention to your organization’s spending. Be good stewards with the resources you control. Pay attention to your organization’s key revenue streams. Be hone st with your board about your organization’s cash situation. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. By managing resources and relationships well, you will be able to successfully outsmart a cash crunch.

Kaydee Ruppert | Associate Director & Nonprofit Industry Advisor
kruppert@deandortonstg.wpenginepowered.com
859.425.7730

Filed Under: Industries, Nonprofit & Government Tagged With: 2023, changes, finances, nonprofit, planning, strategy

Article 07.31.2018 Dean Dorton

If growth is raising hurdles at every turn in your financial processes, slowing productivity to a halt, you’re not alone.

Find out how forward-thinking businesses tackle their biggest financial hurdles quickly and efficiently.

1. Speed global consolidations: Adding on new entities can cause tedious and lengthy consolidations.

If you are working from an on-premises system, and it’s taking you hours, maybe even days, for global consolidations, it’s time to find a better fitting system.  Choose one that is uniquely designed to handle the issues that multi-entity companies face.

2. Get strong visibility into projects’ profitability with the cloud: Modern businesses work smarter in the cloud.  Because project management financials frequently change, your teams can benefit from the cloud.

When project teams operate from cloud-based systems, they are better equipped with current data to help them stay within project budget margins.  Teams can boost project movement and collaboration, and project managers can have key strategy details to at their fingertips with to-the-minute accurate reporting.

3. Integrate your solutions: When you work with software solutions that integrate well with each other, your teams can work faster, collaborate more effectively, and improve sales funnel fluidity and speed projects down the pipeline.

These days, best-in-class financial management solutions integrate well with other best-in-class solutions to improve data accuracy and collaboration between teams and clients.

4. Take advantage of automation: What once took your team a few minutes, now takes hours. Your on-premises system requires loads of workarounds to complete standard processes, and your teams are facing roadblocks and bottlenecks as a result of data re-entry and transfers, and complex reporting needs.

Growth means your teams need automation help to handle the higher volume of data they’re now managing.

5. Choose a scalable financial management solution: As you grow, your financial management solution will need to grow too. If you are working from an on-premises system now, and are facing rapid growth, it pays to switch to a flexible solution that can handle growth and make complex data easier to manage.

Sage Intacct, a best-in-class financial management solution eliminates the most common financial management hurdles of growing businesses with:

  • Fast multi-entity set-up options, multi-currency conversions, and one-click global consolidations.
  • Deep visibility from continually updated dashboards working from the cloud to showcase your highly customizable KPI’s for fast decision-making and growth strategies.
  • Strong integrations with other popular solutions like Salesforce, to bridge gaps between your financials and the systems your teams already rely on.
  • A high level of automation to reduce errors, provide cleaner audits, simplify your chart of accounts, and speed reporting.
  • A unique level of customization so Sage Intacct will grow and change as much or as little as you need it to.

Tired of struggling through financial hurdles? Reach out to us today to find a solution that fits your unique business.  We are here to help!

Considering cloud-based financial management?

Check out “11 Reasons Companies are Moving to the Cloud This Year”

download our whitepaper

Filed Under: Accounting Software Tagged With: Accounting, automation, finances, financial management, Reporting, Sage Intacct

Article 04.26.2018 Dean Dorton

When your SaaS business is trying to stay on top of all that added work that comes with rapid growth, along with staying compliant with the new ASC 606 regulations, the right financial management software can make all the difference. If you’re still using an on-premises system, limited in its capabilities to handle your financials, you’ll want to read on.

Sage Intacct, a cloud-based financial management solution, offers automation, generous options, customizations, and the snapshot reporting that SaaS companies need, in all the right places. It delivers what SaaS businesses need most for complex revenue recognition, reallocation, billing, renewals and performance metrics.

Contract and Subscription Billing

Sage Intacct’s built-in usage-based and tiered pricing features within their billing module, is ideal for SaaS. Whether your billing is over regularly-timed periods or nonlinear, you control your billing options in the way that fits your unique business.

  • Sage Intacct has an automatic renewals feature that is designed to trigger contracts approaching their end dates, which means renewal processes require less manual labor and run more smoothly.
  • Automated billing schedule options can be set up to fit a wide range of unique contracts, whether billing happens monthly, yearly, or in a non-linear way with milestones.

Contract Revenue Management

Sage Intacct’s Contract Revenue Management module is the first to offer automated solutions to the ASC 606 and IFRS 15 guidelines. SaaS companies can experience faster, more accurate revenue recognition, even with the new revenue reallocation regulations:

  • Sage Intacct handles revenue reallocation automatically– even for closed periods, so compliance is faster, easier and more accurate.
  • View revenue details right in the contract, with side-by-side comparisons of revenues and expenses under the old and new guidelines for at-a-glance comparisons.

Reporting and Dashboards

Because SaaS growth happens fast, growth strategy needs to happen even faster. Sage Intacct’s reporting features are designed for stakeholders and decision-makers who need to see current numbers, in a readily accessible way:

  • Stakeholders and decision-makers see real-time accurate views into profitability and performance with customized reporting options on-screen and in print.
  • Get cloud-accurate KPIs for SaaS metrics on Sage Intacct’s Digital Board Book, like churn, customer lifetime values, annual or monthly recurring revenue, and customer acquisition costs – all the metrics you need, when you need them.

Whether you’re just noticing your financials becoming harder to manage lately, or you’ve been thinking about making the move to the cloud as a logical next step in your growth, contact us.

Why are SaaS companies moving off legacy systems?

view our on-demand webinar

Filed Under: Accounting Software, Industries, SaaS, Sage Intacct, Services Tagged With: ASC 606, automation, cloud financial management, Compliance, Contract Revenue Management, dashboards, finances, financial reporting, revenue recognition, SaaS, SaaS metrics, Sage Intacct, subscription-based accounting

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