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Stage Your Own Economic Recovery

By Michael Baker

It’s been four years since the start of the great recession (or “lesser depression”) and business owners are acknowledging that recovery is going to be a long, slow process. With no springboard in sight, some economists are calling for another dip. Regardless, good business leaders have wisely right-sized and restructured their operations and, by so doing, improved results. Yet uncertainty and apprehension abound.

What can you do to jump-start things in your firm in view of a still uncertain economic environment? Plenty.

Scrutiny Makes a Difference

The old self-help adage goes something like this: Forget about changing others and start with yourself. There are most certainly still some nooks and crannies of your operation that could benefit from close scrutiny. Here are some ideas.

  • Conduct regular financial reviews. I am amazed at the number of firms that fail to regularly review financial data. Looking only at the final year-end numbers in February or March of the next year precludes you from taking any meaningful action along the way. Rather, you’re stuck in a reactive mode, responding to a historical year-end statement rather than real-time data. Keeping up with your cash is great, but you need the whole picture to get an accurate view and make decisions. Set a manageable date every month to conduct a detailed review of financials. If you can’t easily generate timely information, find out why and make changes.
  • Sharpen your billing and collection skills. Review your invoices and make certain they communicate terms and due dates clearly. On new business, consider alternative strategies to get paid more promptly. One client has become a rock star at collecting. His secret is to quickly send and follow up on invoices. Everyone in the firm knows the system, and one individual owns the process.
  • Actively manage expenses. Selling more of what you produce is satisfying and feels like progress, but expenses also have a huge impact. If your net profit (bottom line) is 20 percent of billables, then selling $100 produces a $20 profit. Cutting expenses by $100 increases the profit $100. While you can’t slash your way to prosperity, it is a good place to start.
  • Don’t push personnel problems under the rug. According to management consultant Bob Denney of Robert Denney Associates, “It isn’t the people you fire who hurt you. It’s the people you don’t.” No one likes to deal with HR issues, but the unproductive or disruptive $40,000 employee is probably costing $46,000 or more with taxes and benefits. The following question is a valuable assessment tool: Knowing what you know now, would you hire this person again?
  • Set fees to make a profit. There appears to be a proliferation of people undercutting the competition and accepting engagements with little or no profit just to stay busy. A wise person once said, “Better to go broke drinking beer and fishing than taking work with no profit.”
Bull by the Horns

Even a cautious CPA would be tempted to say that prospects for economic recovery are much improved over conditions a year ago. Many business owners I talk with are experiencing increased demand for their products and services. When I ask what’s fueling the increase, they explain that their competitors have gone under, which results in a larger potential market.

But I believe something else is at work, and that’s people taking a proactive approach to staging their own recovery. Businesses that have used this period productively will be the first to recover when brighter days arrive.

Michael Baker is Managing Partner at Dent, Baker & Company, LLP, an accounting consultancy based in Birmingham, Alabama. A CPA and Certified Financial Planner, Michael’s practice is concentrated in the area of taxation and general business consulting. He is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Financial Planning Association. He is also Chairman of the University of Alabama Birmingham Accounting and Finance Advisory Board and the Brock School of Business Dean’s Advisory Board at Samford University.

Categories: Daily Dispatch, Law Firm Billing
Originally published November 20, 2012
Last updated April 27, 2018
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Michael Baker

Michael Baker is Managing Partner at Dent Moses, a national accounting consultancy based in Birmingham, Alabama. A CPA and Certified Financial Planner, Michael’s practice is concentrated in the area of taxation and general business consulting. He is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Alabama Society of Certified Public Accountants and the Financial Planning Association. Additionally, he serves as Chairman of the UAB Accounting Advisory Board and is involved with Samford University’s Brock School of Business.

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