How to skip through budget meetings

Schoolyard

Image copyright: geishaboy500 via Flickr

No. Na. Nope. Nya. Ummm … no. No siree. Not me. Oh, maybe, hang on a second, er, sorry, no.

I have no idea what should be in your budget and it’s a simple truth that no one else does either. They may have a first clue about what they want to be in there and what it should all add up to, but beyond that … they know nothing.

You do.

A play in three acts

In theory, budget setting is a simple play of three acts.

Act 1 — Setting — What happened last time, in words and numbers?

Act 2 — Thinking — What will change next time? Including anything that’s different inside the company, like targets and constraints, or outside the company, such as market conditions, competitor movements and new technologies making headway.

If you aren’t given objectives, set them yourself. If you don’t know what’s happening in the market, go find out.

The better you understand the variables the easier the planning will be (and the more robustly you can justify your choices during review meetings).

Act 3 — Planning — What do you plan to do, in words and numbers?

After discussion, comes decision. What will you spend in order to achieve the objectives? How is that different from last time? Why have you made those choices?

Give yourself a budget and a target. The budget is a promise, so don’t make promises you can’t keep. The target is a stretch motivator, something to shoot for, to achieve if … if … if, but not a fantasy. Pinning everything to a fantasy is the surest way to demotivate everyone and guarantee failure.

That’s the theory. What’s the reality?

Budget meetings can be bloody. Turn up with a low ball, last year +/- 10%, no thinking, generous pay rise, doubled marketing spend, steady state budget and you probably deserve to get juiced.

Budgets are all about numbers but like so much else, they’re really all about preparation. Get set, have a strong and reasoned argument for every change, be ready to walk through every penny — you’ll skip out of the meeting with a firm budget, a warm glow and a polished reputation.

Sadly, some review meetings are an ego trip for the finance team; they think it’s their job to beat you up. You owe it to your team to deal with them like any other bully — look ‘em in the eye and stand firm.

Ruined by game playing and phoney smiles, managing in the pursuit of skippiness means taking budget sessions as a brilliant opportunity to align your whole team behind a coherent plan.

Neatly filed under Keeping Promises,Making Promises
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Skippiness worth $900 million?

The Zappos shipping and receiving department

Image copyright: ericajoy via Flickr

Everything I’ve ever heard about Zappos has reinforced my belief that skippiness is good for business. Following this week’s news that Amazon.com has agreed to buy Zappos in a deal that tops $900 million, I’m surer than ever.

Feel-good employment

Under the heading of Success Stories, Inc magazine says,

Zappos, the online shoe retailer that has won renown for its stellar customer service and feel-good employment practices, announced that it was selling itself to Amazon.com.

The article goes on to reference a letter sent to employees by CEO Tony Hsieh, saying,

that although Zappos would be a part of a larger company, it would preserve its quirky culture that focuses on keeping workers happy.

Reading that, and being a little biased about this kind of thing, I see a simple skippiness formula:

(products people want)+(“stellar customer service”)+(“feel-good
employment practices” that “focuses on keeping workers happy”)
=very happy owners.

I don’t mistake a simple formula for an easy formula. Each part is hard work in itself and pulling the whole thing together, consistently, over enough time to build a significant business takes more focus, clarity, commitment and discipline than most leaders can muster. But when it does come together, the editors of Inc pay compliments and investors pay far more than just their attention.

The thing that bothers me is, why don’t more businesses try?

Glad to be involved

Is it because it’s not easy? Maybe, but it has to be worth the effort.

Owning/running/working in a place like Zappos must be better than the opposite – a business that offers products people don’t want, with grudging service and feel-bad employment practices that make workers unhappy. I don’t believe anyone goes in to business or takes a job intending to make it like that. It just kinda happens, especially when leaders are concerned with the pursuit of money as an end in itself.

Running a business in the pursuit of skippiness takes an alternative perspective. It’s the idea that businesses should be started and run with the explicit objective of making customers, staff and owners all glad of their involvement.

This week Zappos “powered by service” proved beyond doubt that if you do a good job, all kinds of money will flow.

Neatly filed under Skippiness
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How to build a financial model

Rutherford Atom

You see that picture of an atom with electrons flying around the nucleus on little monorails? Atoms don’t really look like that. Nor do they look like billiard balls, cherry buns or a tiny solar system. They may not look like any of those images but, in certain circumstances, each is a useful model of how atoms behave.

Models don’t capture the beautiful complexity of real life. That’s not their job. We use them – whether of atoms, Spitfires, organisations or anything else – to help us imagine, help us picture, help us think.

Two models in particular dominate go-to-market thinking: business and financial. Confusingly, different people use these terms to mean different things.

I use business model to mean a simple block diagram that shows the flow of goods and services in to and out of an organisation. Picture a whiteboard drawing – all boxes, labels and arrows – that explains to every new recruit, in two minutes flat, exactly where this business fits into the world and what it offers.

Show me the money

A financial model shows the flow of money inside an organisation. It shows the making and spending of money. It’s all numbers. It lives in a spreadsheet.

But just because everything is neat and tidy and all the columns add up doesn’t mean a financial model is any more real than the atom pictures or a plastic Airfix kit. Like all models, it’s a thinking tool.

Like most plans, the benefit of a financial model is in the modelling. A collective understanding of how your business works is vital to good management and a short cut to a cohesive strategy. But there are other benefits too. A good model builds confidence, shows everyone what you’re talking about, and makes it easier to raise funding – whether you’re inside a company, looking to external funders, or trying to win over a sceptical spouse, when it comes to crunch time, numbers are much more powerful than Powerpoint.

How to build a financial model

The process of building a financial model starts with defining your assumptions and I’m going to start with laying out a few of mine for this post: you know that a financial model is necessary; that it’s a tool to help you think about, experiment with, and understand what might happen in your company; and that you want to avoid tying yourself in knots trying to come up with an exact map of real life with as many special cases as there are stars in your salesman’s eye.

Ok. Although models live in spreadsheets, they get born on paper. The first thing to do is close your laptop, take out a pen and settle down with a few colleagues to answer three questions:

1. How do we make money?
This is a prompt to get complete clarity within the team about all the types of revenue you have and when they’ll come on line? This can be more difficult than it seems, especially if you have a complex proposition. There’s often a range of views on what the product actually is, when it will launch, how long it will take to hit its stride and how much to charge. Don’t try to kill differences of opinion, but use them to mine for every assumption and get the ranges down on paper.

2. How do we spend money?
This should be easy. The major categories to consider are usually people, things, marketing, running expenses, and all the extra things you have to do to complete a sale.

3. How are the two related?
The real magic in a model is in the relationship between the answers to question one and two. The weakest models I’ve seen are all lacking on this point with no explicit link between marketing activity and sales, for instance, or with an increase in subscribers to an online service having no impact on hosting costs. Almost everything is related – dig for the links and work them into the model.

Avoid “top down thinking” – the market is worth $500 million, we aim to get 2% share in three years. It may catch headlines but it’s no way to plan for success. Instead, build from the “bottom up” – we’ll have three sales people (assumption) who will each make four calls a day (assumption) with a 15% conversion rate (assumption) and an average order value of £12,000 (assumption).

Take out your spreadsheets

When you’ve got a good grasp of how the business works, close the meeting and open your spreadsheet. Get some help on the cleverness of Excel if you need it, but do as much of the work as you can yourself. The more you’re involved, the more ownership you’ll feel.

Design

When building the model itself take the trouble to come up with a decent design. This isn’t just about making it look pretty – don’t underestimate this point though; you’d be surprised how people are more willing to get interactive with a reasonable looking spreadsheet – but good design will make it easy to use too.

Easy to use means easy to read and easy to flex. To do this:

Make it clear what you’re looking at. In particular, separate as much as possible the three main kinds of worksheet:

  • Inputs/assumptions – everything you found during the discussion should be identified clearly as an assumption by colour coding them, I like to highlight these cells in yellow.
  • Calculations – avoid “programming”, use human readable cell and range names, colour code whenever it helps, show your workings out (most people will never look at them but those that do should be able easily to follow what you’ve done).
  • Outputs – make sure the output sheets are easy to print or copy to other documents. For example, a minus sign is easy to miss on a printed sheet so use brackets around red negative numbers which are much easier to see on a page.

Group things together – it may seem a bit basic but make sure to put everything about staff on one sheet. For example, if your assumptions tell you that you’ll spend £500 on equipment per new member of staff, don’t calculate the new number of staff on the equipment sheet, calculate ‘new staff’ on the people sheet and then use the result on the equipment sheet.

Work it

Use real numbers wherever you can but don’t be afraid to put dummy numbers in as talking points. The cost of office space should be pretty easy to work out, for example, but many assumptions are difficult to pin down in a low-data environment like a new product or new company startup – use extreme numbers to start the discussion. And discuss you must. Is this how our business works? What about that 15% conversion rate? Can we really collect our payment in the second month after shipping?

Iron it out with the team – it’s likely to be an iterative process, and it’s likely to need quite a bit of metal bashing. Don’t expect to get any useful feedback if you send drafts by email; pull the team back together as often as necessary, walk them through the model, hammer it out.

Eventually, you’ll have a model that reflects the collective view of how this business works. Still full of assumptions, but they’ll be shared assumptions, something to manage.

Now what?

A robust model is not an end point. Use it to play scenarios, agree a plan and build your budgets. But don’t abandon it.

Keep an eye on those assumptions, they’re likely to be wrong, and in a startup of any kind, they can whip around and bite you.

Every time you get new data, check back. Try to eliminate them as quickly as possible, or at least set yourself a schedule to review and adjust them. For example, that 15% conversion rate, now you’ve been in business three months, does it still look good or should we adjust it down to 10%? Does that mean we need more salespeople? Better salespeople? More funding? Or is it our lead time that’s out? Does it come back to 15% after five months, not three?

A financial model lives on a spreadsheet – don’t bury it in an archive, keep it fresh.

All financial models are more complex than you’d like and too simple to reflect reality, but they’re a primary source of strategic thinking and make for good general management. They may not be as tasty as a cherry bun, but if they’re good, all human life is there: your own private solar system.

The picture of the atom comes from Wikipaedia.

Neatly filed under Models
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