Text A
Background Information
Business
expenses. Money expended or cost incurred in a firm’s efforts to generate
revenue, representing cost of doing business. Expenses may be in the form of
actual cash payments(such as wages and salaries), a computed "expired"
portion(depreciation)of an asset, or an amount taken out of the firm’s
earnings(such as bad debts). Expenses are summarized and charged in the firm’s
income statement as deductions from the income before assessing income tax.
Whereas all expenses are costs, not all costs(such as those incurred in
acquisition of income generating assets)are expenses.
List of
Typical Business Expenses
Following is a list of typical
business expense categories. Which ones will be applicable to your
business
Advertising expenses
Bank service
charges and fees
Business start-up costs
Business taxes, fees, licenses, dues, memberships, and
subscriptions
Computer, printer, software, telephone and
utilities
Delivery, freight and express
Education expenses for maintaining or improving required skills
Insurance expense
Legal and attorney fees
Maintenance and repairs
Meals and entertainment
Management and administration fees
Office
expenses
Salaries, wages and benefits
Travel
expenses
Learn
New Ways to Manage Business Expenses
Your products or
services might be in high demand, but generating revenue means little if your
company can’t retain it. Learn how to hold onto the profits you make by managing
expenses that you can control.
As a business owner, it is likely
that you have spent more than one sleepless night thinking about a challenge
that faces your company. After all, if you’re not constantly focused on how to
improve your business, who else will be Especially when it comes to managing
expenses, you probably have the sole responsibility of determining what are
acceptable and unacceptable costs.
But, what if you no longer
had the burden of being the sole big-picture person What if your employees
began thinking about ways to improve the business Your expenses would likely go
down—and you’d probably get a lot more sleep.
Get the Most Out
of the "Brains" You Hired
A major
flaw with today’s business world is that owners are bottlenecks for their
companies’ progress and improvement, says Lanny Goodman, CEO of Management
Technologies Inc., Albuquerque, N.M. If a company’s owner is the only one
bearing responsibility for improving operations, then progress is also limited
to the owner’s ideas, available time and order of priorities. The best way to
eliminate this ’bottleneck’ effect is by enlisting employees in the quest to
improve the company. But how can a business owner inspire workers to truly care
about things such as cost cutting Profit sharing—an agreement between a
business and its workers, by which employees share in some of the company’s
profits—is the ultimate motivational tool, according to Goodman.
Most people probably see profit sharing as a benefit better suited for
large corporations, but Goodman believes the benefits of profit sharing are
universal. Employees should be asked for expense management ideas on a weekly,
monthly or quarterly basis, he says. The incentive for employees is that once
profit has reached a certain amount, they would receive a certain percentage
above that amount. This type of profit sharing is based on the idea that
employees have contributed to the increased profits both in terms of generating
ideas on cost-cutting as well as working toward these cost-cutting
measures.
A secondary benefit of profit sharing is that
employees who receive additional financial incentives will be less likely to
leave—reducing the cost of turnover, Goodman says. In addition, everyone will
ensure that co-workers carry their weight because one person’s performance
affects everyone.
If profit sharing isn’t the right fit for your
company, there are other methods for motivating employees to reduce costs. For
instance, Aldonna Ambler, president of AMBLER Growth Strategy Consultants Inc.,
Hammonton, N.J., tells workers to "find yourself a raise." On a quarterly or
annual basis, give employees the task of finding $5 000 or $10 000 that is being
used for old and inefficient processes. Then redirect that money toward new
technology and innovations, Ambler says. Offer an incentive by directing some of
the money to workers who devised effective cost-cutting ideas.
Get Centered
Motivating your workers is a good start,
however, it will mean little if nobody knows how expenses impact your company.
According to Ambler, the primary causes of overspending are..
1.
Workers don’t know how much they should spend.
2. Workers
underestimate how much they can spend and end up having to throw more money at a
problem later on.
It follows that the remedy for overspending is
creating a better understanding of your budget. More clarity can be achieved by
grouping your profit and loss statement into easily understandable categories,
Ambler says.
Once you. have a clear grasp of your budget,
compare your gross profit to that of competitors. Use resources such as
association industry reports, such as Dun & Bradstreet reports, to determine
what your competitors’ books look like. Be sure to compare your company’s cash
flow with others in the industry, says Jerome Katz, Coleman Foundation Chair in
Entrepreneurship at the John Cook School of Business at Saint Louis University
in St. Louis. Then, use these comparisons as a gage for expense
management.
Don’t Let Bad Debt Go Too Long
Your
company’s success doesn’t just depend on attracting new customers, it depends on
the ones you retain. For this reason, it can be hard to take a firm stance with
customers who have outstanding debt. Unfortunately, it’s hard to manage expenses
if you can’t count on the money that’s suppose to come in.
Business owners tolerate bad debt too long and wait too long before going
to collection agencies, according to Katz. "You’re just trying to keep from
being stretched so tight that you break," he says. While payment periods differ
by industry—from 30,60, 90 to 120 days—more than 120 days is rarely acceptable
for any kind of business. If you’re concerned that shortening payment periods
will offend clients, tell customers right off the bat that someone else—your
attorney, your accountant or consultant—is the one pushing you to tighten up
payment periods. Another strategy is to offer early payment discounts, such as a
2 percent discount for paying within 10 days instead of paying the full amount
in 30 days. By reigning in your customers’ debt period, you create more
flexibility to manage your business’s expenses.
Merge Two
Industries
Your company may fit into an easily definable
category—clothing retailer, box maker, auto-parts manufacturer—but you may
benefit from blurring the lines a bit. Merging two distinct industries can allow
you to eliminate extra costs while directing resources toward key components,
Ambler says. For instance, the immensely popular Cirque du Soleil shows combined
theaters and the circus. By creating something that is "halfway" between two
industries, Cirque has eliminated the need for expenses such as exotic animals
on the circus side, and paying big-name actors on the theater
side.
Exercises I. Match the word with the appropriate meaning.