Financial management glossary
Contents |
[edit] Working capital
- Working capital is the everyday working money available to run the business.
- Current assets - current liabilities = working capital.
- The amount of working capital required can be reduced by accelerating the rate at which money circulates through the business (for example prompt billing).
For more information see: Working capital
[edit] Working capital turnover rate
- Total annual fee income / average value working capital = working capital turnover rate.
[edit] Profit and loss account
- Annual statement of income and expenditure that shows if a company has made an overall gain on trading performance.
For more information see:Profit and loss account
[edit] Balance sheet
- A picture of the business as it stands, providing a statement of total assets and liabilities at a given point in time (usually the year end).
For more information see: Balance sheet
[edit] Monthly 'flash' profit & loss report
Actual vs budget information based on:
- Net Income (after paying others) (work in progress not included).
- Resources.
- Overheads.
- Gives an indication which area might be responsible for a loss or profit.
- Useful over a longer period of time to spot trends and blips.
[edit] Key performance indicators (KPI's)
Liquidity KPI's (liquid assets=cash):
- Analyses ability to pay bills as they become due.
- Current ratio = current assets (including work in progress) / current liabilities.
- Quick ratio (acid test) - quick assets (cash+bank balance+debts) / current liabilities'
- Ratios over 1 are deemed satisfactory. The higher the better.
Financial Performance plan:
For more information see: Key performance indicators
[edit] Project resource plan
- Shows hours of each grade of person required monthly.
- Hours translated into cost x by rate per hour of each grade.
- Projected fees vs projected cost - plotted on graph.
- Compare projected with actual to monitor performance.
- Share information to give a sense of involvement and responsibility. This will allow them to align their actions with the best interests of the company.
[edit] Fee forecasting
Fee forecasting is crucial to running a business as it allows the future financial position to be assessed and ensures that records of potential fees are maintained.
Captive fee forecasting:
- Fees are agreed, fully documented, contractually binding and scheduled for current projects.
- An indicator of how busy a company is likely to be in short to medium term.
- Avoid the cliff edge - when a project is delivered fees reduce so it is important to win more work to maintain cash-flow through fees.
Future possible fee forecasting:
- All possible fees hoped to be earned. Anything but certain.
- Quantify probability of winning them with a success probability factor %.
- The aim is to attempt to predict the medium to long term.
Resources forecast:
- Establish whether the right number of people are available to deliver the work lined up in the captive fees forecast.
- Keep a rolling weekly forecast of people required vs people available.
- Plan for flexibility so there is always some resource available for general work.
- It is most efficient to use those with recent experience on similar projects to achieve good results quickly.
For more information see: Fee forecasting.
[edit] Cashflow forecasting
- Cashflow = total money in and out of a business affecting liquidity.
- The most accurate way of predicting the financial health of a company in the short - medium term.
- Gives an idea of when cash shortage problems may be approaching.
- Rolling 6 monthly.
- If seeking a loan / overdraft, a 2/3 year forecast may be needed.
[edit] Credit Control
- Good organisation is the key to good credit control.
- Invoice for fees in a regular and determined way.
- Chase up when they are not paid on time.
- Agree payment terms.
- Keep a record of all correspondence regarding fees.
- Logged in aged debtor report - all outstanding payments and for how long.
- Understand clients payment systems.
- Outstanding invoices should be chased
- Remind them of agreed terms in invoices.
- If over due send reminder email with copy of invoice.
- Further 1 or 2 weeks… phone call.
- Last resort: Dispute resolution.
Featured articles and news
Ministers to unleash biggest building boom in half a century
50 major infrastructure projects, 5 billion for housing and 1.5 million homes.
RIBA Principal Designer Practice Note published
With key descriptions, best practice examples and FAQs, with supporting template resources.
Electrical businesses brace for project delays in 2025
BEB survey reveals over half worried about impact of delays.
Accelerating the remediation of buildings with unsafe cladding in England
The government publishes its Remediation Acceleration Plan.
Airtightness in raised access plenum floors
New testing guidance from BSRIA out now.
Picking up the hard hat on site or not
Common factors preventing workers using head protection and how to solve them.
Building trust with customers through endorsed trades
Commitment to quality demonstrated through government endorsed scheme.
New guidance for preparing structural submissions for Gateways 2 and 3
Published by the The Institution of Structural Engineers.
CIOB launches global mental health survey
To address the silent mental health crisis in construction.
New categories in sustainability, health and safety, and emerging talent.
Key takeaways from the BSRIA Briefing 2024
Not just waiting for Net Zero, but driving it.
The ISO answer to what is a digital twin
Talking about digital twins in a more consistent manner.
Top tips and risks to look out for.
New Code of Practice for fire and escape door hardware
Published by GAI and DHF.
Retrofit of Buildings, a CIOB Technical Publication
Pertinent technical issues, retrofit measures and the roles involved.
New alliance will tackle skills shortage in greater Manchester
The pioneering Electrotechnical Training and Careers Alliance.