Yes / No
A. The company has a clearly defined mission. ----- -----
1. There is a written mission statement. ----- -----
2. Company is carrying out the mission. ----- -----
3. Mission statement is modified when necessary. ----- -----
4. Employees understand and share in the mission. ----- -----
B. The company has a written sales plan. ----- -----
1. Market niche has been identified. ----- -----
2. New product lines are developed when appropriate. ----- -----
3. Targeted customers are being reached. ----- -----
4. Sales are increasing. ----- -----
C. The company has an annual budget. ----- -----
1. Budget is used as a flexible guide. ----- -----
2. Budget is used as a control device. ----- -----
3. Actual expenditures are compared against budgeted expenditures.
----- -----
4. Corrective action is taken when expenses are over budget. -----
-----
5. Owner prepares budget. ----- -----
6. The budget is realistic. ----- -----
D. The company has a pricing policy. ----- -----
1. Products or services are competitively priced. ----- -----
2. Business provides volume discounts. ----- -----
3. Prices are increased when warranted. ----- -----
4. There is a relationship between pricing changes and sales volume.
----- -----
5. New prices are placed on last-in goods when the price on old stock
gets changed. ----- -----
A. Company (Business) (Owner) has a clearly defined mission.
"What business are we in?" is a question that created a major problem
for many of the cases analyzed by the authors. Too often owners/ managers
cannot communicate their vision to customers, employees and/or bankers
because they don't have a vision. To make a profit or To provide myself
employment is not an operational answer to the question, although these
may be true statements and may be the reasons the owner(s) went into
business in the first place. A good mission statement tells why the
business exists and defines its market niche. The mission statement is the
foundation, upon which the business is built. Like a good foundation, it
need not be fancy, but it must be solid.
1. There is a written mission statement.
This is an essential element of a good loan application. Written
mission statements are also useful for communicating to customers,
employees and suppliers. They are the backbone of strong marketing and
promotion efforts.
2. Company is carrying out the mission.
If a company cannot execute its mission, it is probably losing money
and certainly not maximizing profits. If it is not accomplishing its
mission, the owner-manager must ask why. Maybe the mission is unrealistic.
Possibly the competition is doing a better job of accomplishing that same
mission.
3. Mission statement is modified when necessary.
Often a realistic change of mission can turn a losing business into a
profitable one. An example of this is a restaurant that redefined its
mission as that of a catering service, thereby accomplishing the owner's
personal goal of making a good living.
4.Employees understand and share in the mission.
Confused employees, pilferage and poor customer relations are the
result of employees who do not understand the mission of the business and
how they fit into it. A clear mission shared with employees results in
high employee morale and efficient operations.
B. Company has a written sales plan.
A written sales plan is essential for an effective marketing effort. It
provides specific direction for the business and it is inextricably linked
to marketing success. The plan should detail sales goals by month and
describe the specific efforts to be undertaken to ensure that those goals
are reached. Pricing policies should be a part of the plan, along with a
brief description of product distribution channels. The most compelling
reason for sales planning is that it is essential to sound cash-flow
management.
1. Market niche has been identified.
Very few business opportunities are new and original. Because of this,
it is essential for small businesses to find an appropriate, unique market
niche to be successful. The niche they fill may have to do with the
service provided, its quantity or quality, the personal attention to
customers' needs or simply the business location. Analysis of cases showed
that many of the more successful businesses had defined their market niche
by their location.
2. New product lines are developed when appropriate.
All products and services eventually become obsolete. Keeping in touch
with your customers' tastes and preferences and your changing market
characteristics is essential for survival. Obtaining feedback from current
customers often leads to new product or service ideas. Well placed
suggestion boxes or market surveys provide more systematic means of
gathering such information.
3. Targeted customers are being reached.
It is important to reach the intended customers. Quite often sales can
go up, but will not bring in extra profits. Not all customers are equal.
Some customers cost more to service than others because of their distance
from the primary place of business or because of their unique needs.
4. Sales are increasing.
If problems exist, they may be due to pricing structure, change in
market demands, new competition, poor quality of product or service, poor
or inadequate advertising or planning, problems with personnel or market
saturation.
C. Company has an annual budget.
The annual budget is the simplest means of directing and controlling a
small business. It is the one planning tool essential for effective
operation. The annual budget links the business plan to business reality
because it not only projects the business's direction, but is a means of
tracing the flow of money into, through and out of the business and helps
the owner determine how to use scarce resources. By comparing actual
results with projections, the owner is able to evaluate the effectiveness
of various business activities. Not having and not using a budget is a
common reason for cash flow problems and subsequent business failures.
1. Budget is used as a flexible guide.
The budget does not represent business reality-it is merely a map
describing where the business is going. A major mistake that often occurs
with the budgeting process is thinking that money allocated to a certain
expenditure actually exists in the bank. Effective business owners
constantly check the budget against operational reality and make changes
in the budget as needed. Flexible budgeting in response to actual business
performance is the mark of a shrewd businessperson. Too rigid adherence to
the budget often leads to poor profit performance and even bankruptcy.
2. Budget is used as a control device.
Controlling expenditures is essential if a profit is to be realized.
The budget is the single most important device available for monitoring
and controlling expenditures. Any business will eat up resources.
3. Actual expenditures are compared against budgeted expenditures.
Monthly and annual expenditure comparisons must be made for both
control and flexibility purposes. It is the only way critical decisions
and corrective actions can be planned and then taken. If the owner-manager
is constantly putting out fires, monthly comparisons are not being made
nor are timely corrective actions being taken.
4. Corrective action is taken when expenses are over budget.
Most small businesses get into financial trouble because they do the
right thing too late. Taking timely corrective action is the mark of an
effective business owner-manager.
5. Owner prepares budget.
An excellent budget prepared by an employee or accountant is virtually
useless if the owner is not committed to it. Budget preparation educates
the owner to the realities of the business. Looking at a budget prepared
by another does not educate the viewer. When the owner has someone else
prepare the budget, the control of the business has been delegated to that
person.
6. The budget is realistic.
The budget must be based on a realistic appraisal of the business
environment. Not taking the budgeting process seriously and dreaming about
what one wants to see is a sure sign of business failure. Realistic
budgeting is a time-consuming and demanding process, but it is the most
effective tool at the owner's disposal for accomplishing financial
objectives.
D. Company has a pricing policy.
Pricing goods and services is one of the most difficult problems
confronting the small businessperson. Much has been written on break-even
analysis as a rational means of determining prices and pricing policy. Too
often the owner-manager looks at his or her competitors and charges a
fraction more or fraction less than they do. This haphazard approach to
pricing has been the ruin of many small business operations. A
well-written mission statement, a unique market niche and a detailed
budget will help guide the owner-manager through the pricing jungle. An
effective pricing policy can be determined only after the owner has
decided specifically what the business is, how it differs from the
competition and what the cash flow needs are. Pricing should be determined
through history and mission, not by accident.
1. Products or services are competitively priced.
Who is the competition? What is competitive? On the surface these
queries look easy, but analysis of the cases demonstrated that few
owners/managers knew who they were competing against. For example, a small
hardware store is not competing with the chains, but with other small
hardware stores that offer the same products and services. Services are
harder to price than goods. It is difficult for the buying public to
determine the fair price for services, and comparative shopping has much
less effect in service industries than it does in hard goods industries. A
close look at pricing policies can often move a business from red ink to
black, but this is a time-consuming activity area for the owner-manager.
2. Business provides volume discounts.
Volume discounts are essential for large volume purchasers of goods and
services. Clear volume discount policies save valuable time when dealing
with customers and can even give the small business a competitive
advantage.
3. Prices are increased when warranted.
Random price increases can drive away business and destroy goodwill.
However, when the budget projections warrant, it is essential to make the
increases. Waiting too long to increase prices can literally destroy a
small business. This is another reason monitoring the budget is essential.
4. There is a relationship between pricing changes and sales volume.
If there is no direct relationship between pricing changes and sales
volume, the sale of a product or service is relatively independent of its
cost. When this is the case, either the market is saturated or the
owner-manager should put a major effort into advertising and promotion.
5. New prices are placed on last-in goods when the price on old stock
gets changed.
This should be obvious. When this is not being done, it is usually an
indication that good general business practices are not being followed.
Other than planning, poor general accounting and bookkeeping practices
were found to be the major cause of financial problems for the small
business cases studied.