Many small business owners pay too little attention
to their financial statements. This is due in part to not understanding just
what the statements have to offer. In fact, many may not be able to tell you
the difference between a Balance Sheet and an Income Statement.
Think of them this way. The Balance Sheet is like a
still picture. It shows where your company is at on a specific date, at month-end,
or at year-end. It is a listing of your assets and debts on a given date. So
Balance Sheets that are a year apart show your financial position at the end of
year one versus the end of year two. Showing how you got from position one to
position two is the job of the Income Statement.
Suppose I took a photo of you sitting behind your
desk on December 31, 2013. And on December 31, 2014, I took a photo of you
sitting on the other side of your desk. We know for a fact that you have moved
from one side to the other. What we don't know is how you got there. Did you
just jump over the desk or did you run all the way around the building to do
it? The Income Statement tells us how you did it. It shows how many sales and
how much expense was involved to accomplish the move.
To see why a third kind of financial statement
called a Funds Flow Statement is useful, follow this case. A printer has
started a new printing business. He invested $20,000 of his own cash and
borrowed $50,000 from the bank to buy new equipment. After a year of operation,
he has managed to pay off the bank loan. He now owns the equipment free and
clear. When he is told his net profit is $50,000, he can't believe it. He might
tell you that he took nothing out of the business and lived off his wife's
wages for the year. And since there is no cash in the bank, just where is the
profit? The Funds Flow Statement will show the income as a "source of
funds" and the increase in equipment is an "application of
funds." The Funds Statement is even more useful when you have several
assets to which funds can be applied and several sources of funds such as bank
loans, vendor payable s, and business profit or loss.
Don't be afraid to ask your accountant questions
about your financial statements. The more questions you get answered, the more
useful you will find your financial statements. Accounting is sort of a foreign
language. Learn to speak a little of it.
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