Is Your Business Profitable?
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to pam@rppc.net.
Title: Is Your Business Profitable?
Word Count: 796
Author: Pam Newman
Email: pam@rppc.net
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=2371
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
Is Your Business Profitable?
Copyright 2005 Pam Newman
What’s your job profitability? Do you know?
Many business owners are unsure of their profitability at a
company or job level. They “think” they are making money
because they have a few dollars in their checking account.
Having money in your checking account doesn’t mean you are
profitable. It might simply mean you haven’t paid all the
bills yet, so you have a little cash. Cash and profit are
two different concepts. If you don’t know your exact income
and expenses for each job and your overall business, then
how can you know whether you are making a profit? And, if
you aren’t profitable, your business won’t last long.
Analyze Each Job
Regardless of the size of your business or your industry,
profitability is something you should be monitoring on a
monthly basis. To determine your profit, you must know how
much you make and spend on each job. Expenditures should be
tracked for direct labor and material costs on each job. In
addition, you should also be tracking overhead costs and
allocating them to your various jobs as applicable. There
is always going to be some general overhead, but too often
dollars are thrown into general overhead, when those
dollars could easily be attached to specific jobs.
Intuit’s QuickBooks software program has easy-to-use
features that allow you to do job-costing for time and
materials, so you don’t have to worry about having to track
it all manually. Rely on tools to help you run your
business more efficiently and effectively.
Are you curious how you are doing with job costing
measurements? Here are some quick and easy questions to
gauge your job costing performance:
1. Do I track each customer’s revenue information through a
detailed invoice?
2. Do I have a way of breaking down my direct job materials
cost by customer?
3. Do I associate all time spent to each job accurately
with actual dollar amounts?
4. Do I have access to reports to monitor profitability on
each job in a timely manner?
5. Do I have a way to trend the fluctuations in job
profitability from job to job, month to month, etc?
If you answered “no” to any of these, then it’s time for
you to take an objective look at your financial goals. It’s
time for you to implement a job costing mechanism to help
you answer “yes” to all these questions. How can you track
your profitability and long-term growth plans if you don’t
have detail at a job level?
QuickBooks Can Help
Here are some easy ways to utilize QuickBooks effectively
to help you with your job-costing process:
1. Set up the QuickBooks Item list so that you’ll have both
an expense and an income aspect to each of the items. This
will allow you to track your costs and your income, and
will provide you profit by item.
2. Record your sales through the invoicing or sales receipt
process. This will record the income aspects of the items.
3. As you purchase the product or service items, make sure
that you utilize the Items tab so that it will record the
cost to the appropriate item. In addition, make sure to
assign your customer/job information to each line item so
that you’ll have the costs associated to the appropriate
customer/job for job-costing.
4. Utilize the time-tracking mechanism in QuickBooks so
that you and your employees can track time by item and
customer/job. No dollar value is associated with this time
until you actually pay the employees within QuickBooks.
5. QuickBooks has preformatted reports that you can access
to have job-costing information right at your fingertips.
These are found under the Reporting menu and the
Jobs/Time/Mileage option.
6. QuickBooks has the ability to provide reports for any
time period you select. This will allow you to have a
variety of detail over the growth of your business and to
produce trending reports. You can modify the report as
needed to meet your needs.
A good accounting professional can help you understand what
these reports are telling you, in terms that you can use.
Reports alone don’t provide value if you don’t understand
them. So it is key that you understand the reporting
information and how you can use that information to assist
you in decision-making as you grow your business
profitably.
Job-costing is easier when you set-up your
accounting/bookkeeping software package and know how to use
it. So, challenge yourself today to become more adept at
running a financially savvy business through job-costing.
Then, you’ll know, without a doubt, whether your company is
profitable.
About the Author:
Pam helps business owners keep money from slipping through
their fingers. She is a Certified Management Accountant,
Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor, and Author of Out of the
Red and Unlocking the Secrets of QuickBooks. For more
information, you can visit our website at
www.quickbooksinformation.com
|