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From accounts software to building a website and sending emails, your business will need IT. Discover how to buy the IT kit your start up needs.

There are many types of premises to buy, lease or licence from shops to warehouses. Discover how to find commercial premises for your business.

For a successful business, you need a viable business idea, the skills to make it work and the funding. Discover whether your idea has what it takes.

IT security for a start up does not need to be complicated or expensive. Here are the steps to follow to make your business safe.

Your cash, stock, equipment and data can be targeted by criminals. Insurance and robust security can help. Learn how to keep your premises secure.

Forming your business correctly is essential to ensure you are protected and you comply with the rules. Learn how to set up your business.

Learn why business planning is an essential exercise if your business is to start and grow successfully, attract funding or target new markets.

It is likely you will need funding to start your business unless you have your own money. Discover some of the main sources of start up funding.

Businesses and individuals must account for and pay various taxes. Understand your tax obligations and how to file, account and pay any taxes you owe.

Businesses are required to comply with a wide range of business laws. We introduce the main rules and regulations you must comply with.

Marketing matters. It drives sales and helps promote your brand and products. Discover how to market your business and reach your target customers.

Your employees can your biggest asset. They can also be your biggest challenge. We explain how to recruitment and manage staff successfully.

Few businesses manage the leap from start up to high-growth business. Learn what it takes to scale up and take your business to the next level.

Essential guide to key performance indicators

Identifying and monitoring key performance indicators (KPIs) helps you focus on the areas that really matter to your business.

Sales, cash flow and working capital are crucial for all businesses. You also need to understand the key drivers that have a major impact on the performance of your organisation.

Selecting key indicators

Sales

Costs

Working capital

The power of drivers

Identifying your key drivers

Presentation

Action

1. Selecting key indicators

There’s a multitude of internal and external factors that affect the performance of every business. The sheer volume of information available to management in the digital age can be a distraction.

You need to focus on a handful of key indicators

These should be indicators that:

  • reflect the performance and progress of your business
  • are measurable
  • can be compared to a standard, such as a budget or last year’s figures
  • can be acted upon

Most indicators are used to monitor and control profitability and cash flow

  • The three key areas are salescosts and working capital. Any trends towards cash flow problems or falling profitability will quickly show up in these figures.

Some indicators are used as part of a strategy to boost profitability and cash flow

  • These are the drivers of the business, and they can be used to powerful effect.

Compare the past, present and future

  • Figures for last year and last month provide hard facts and established patterns.
  • Figures in budgets and forecasts help you identify potential problems and opportunities early on.
  • The figures must be calculated on a consistent basis.

Compare yourself with other businesses if possible

  • Comparisons with competitors can be especially useful.
  • Limited company reports and online industry whitepapers are goldmines of competitor information.

2. Sales

Enquiry levels provide early signs of peaks or troughs in your sales

  • Monitor where the enquiries come from to establish which marketing campaigns are working.
  • If you have an established enquiry to sales ratio, and know the size of an average sale, you can use the enquiry level to forecast turnover.
  • The number of new leads, or quotes delivered, can be similarly useful KPIs.

Building up the order book is a key objective for most businesses

  • The ‘order book cover’ figure compares the total value of your order book to breakeven sales for one month. A six-month order book means that you could break even over the next six months without making another sale.

When reviewing sales, monitor the figures that show what is happening

  • Which categories of product are selling well?
  • How are your priority products (those with the best margins and the best payment terms) selling?
  • What has each salesperson achieved?
  • How have online sales performed?
  • Are your conversion rates (the ratio of leads to sales) changing?
  • Enquiries, order book and sales progress should be reviewed by the sales team every week. At board level, they should be reviewed monthly.

3. Costs

Just like sales, costs should ideally be tracked every week

  • Many retailers are able to track costs daily.
  • Identify the key variable costs (e.g. materials) and what causes them to increase or decrease in price.

Maintaining a healthy gross profit margin is critically important

  • Falling margins could result from any number of things. For example, higher input prices, a changed product mix, production inefficiencies and discounts.

Group different types of cost into separate cost centres

  • For example, a warehousing and delivery business could split its direct costs into warehousing and delivery. Matching the costs against the revenue for each half of the business would show how profitable each operation is.
  • Related overhead items (e.g. hardware fees, software costs and broadband charges) can probably be lumped together into one combined cost figure.

4. Working capital

Cash generation is a major priority for all businesses

  • You control cash by controlling working capital - debtors, creditors, stock and work-in-progress.
  • Establish how much extra working capital is required to fund each extra 10% increase in monthly sales. If sufficient finance is not available, you may need to delay (or reject) large orders.
  • Cash flow (and credit control) should be reviewed every week. If this is a problem area, the review should be daily.

Produce an 'aged' list of debtors and creditors, every week

  • This is an effective way to control debtors and creditors.
  • Any customer payments which are overdue, suspect, or simply large should be highlighted, tracked and addressed directly with the customer.

Good stock control lets you release cash while still having enough stock available

  • ‘Stock turn’ is the ratio of cost-of-sales to stock. If the figure decreases, find out why. For example, you may be purchasing stock which you cannot sell.
  • The more you break down the stock figure into separate product categories, the easier it is to identify where the problems lie.

The signs were there...

A sign manufacturer won a large order to make, deliver and install signs for a retail chain with branches throughout Europe.

Everyone worked frantically to fulfil the order.

The directors didn’t notice the falling profit margins, which resulted from over-optimistic pricing of the delivery and installation elements of the contract (neither of which they had previous experience of).

Nor, until the crisis stage, did they properly think through the cash flow implications.

The business was used to being paid promptly, thirty days after a sign left the factory gate. Now they had to wait until each sign was delivered, installed and inspected before they could even invoice for it.

Had the company used effective management information systems, they could have anticipated the problems before they arose.

5. The power of drivers

Monitoring your sales will not necessarily help you improve your sales performance. By contrast, understanding the drivers behind the sales of your business will likely provide a breakthrough.

Different businesses will identify different drivers

For example:

  • a travel agency might find that staff turnover is a key driver, with experienced staff significantly outperforming new recruits (and without the extra costs of recruitment and training);
  • an ecommerce business may discover that delivery prices and turnarounds are key drivers, with expensive fees putting people off and long delivery times reducing customer retention;
  • an engineering company might find that the defect ratio is a key driver, with defects leading to goods being returned, extra work to rectify the faults, delays in payment, and lower prices being achieved.

Understanding the drivers helps you improve performance

For example:

  • the travel agency might introduce a long-term incentive plan to help reduce staff turnover, alongside quarterly performance reviews
  • the ecommerce business may source a better courier contract that enables them to offer free delivery tiers and faster turnaround times
  • the engineering company might reorganise the workforce into ‘quality cells’ and replace unreliable machinery

Drivers vary enormously

For example:

  • sales leads in a capital goods business;
  • sales per square foot in a retail business;
  • market share in a market where only the big will survive;
  • sales per click-through in ecommerce
  • machine downtime in a factory
  • ‘first time fix’ in a maintenance business
  • the morale of employees in a nursing home

Even direct competitors use different drivers to improve their performance

  • For example, for some a prime location is important, for others it isn’t even a consideration.

6. Identifying your key drivers

What are the key factors that enable your business to outperform the competition?

The questions you need to ask yourself are:

  • What drives the sales figures?
  • What drives the costs?
  • What drives the cash flow?

For most businesses, the key drivers include major cost-efficiency items

  • For example, two important drivers for an ecommerce business will be the cost of web hosting and the margins achieved through suppliers. Both will have a major impact on the gross margin.

Drivers often include ‘soft’ factors

  • For example, effective networking (to build critical business partnerships) has proved to be the key driver for many newer businesses.

The measurement of drivers is sometimes indirect

  • For example, if you have identified employee morale as a driver, you could monitor it by tracking voluntary overtime, absenteeism and sick days.

The drivers may change with time

  • The growth of your business, changes in your market or simply seasonal changes may cause this.

Eye on the ball

Always come back to what drives your business. Take the example of a house builder.

The profitability and cash flow of house builders is greatly affected by housing prices and sales activity levels in that market. These in turn are affected by local demand and supply and interest rates.

But it's all too easy for a house builder to ignore these key drivers. There will always be sites which are running over budget and other distractions.

Suddenly, the house builder may find that while they were busy building houses, the market for them has collapsed.

7. Presentation

Aim for management information that highlights the important trends

  • Restrict the number of figures you monitor.
  • The biggest breakthroughs are achieved by clever use of computer-generated graphs and charts. With such tools, the trends instantly become clear.

Specify which figures you wish to review and when

  • Some figures need to be reviewed only once a year, as part of the annual budgeting cycle. For example, premises costs.
  • Include ‘red light’ systems, to alert you to a particular danger or opportunity which could arise.
  • For some businesses, exception reporting (highlighting unusual variations) is a useful method.

Specify how you would like the information presented

  • A one-page summary sheet is advisable, backed up by detailed supporting information.
  • The summary sheet could list the KPIs, such as total sales and gross margin, plus the top five drivers you have identified. This forces you to concentrate on the issues which have the most impact on business performance.
  • The information can be ordered according to functions. For example sales, production and finance.
  • Always present the actual figures alongside the standard figures (e.g. the budget and prior year), so comparisons can be made.

Whoever prepares the information should include a written commentary

  • This explains any important changes since the previous period, including the reasons behind them. For example, sales might be low because a particular contract has been delayed.

Special attention needs to be given to any major projects or new areas of business

  • Problems often arise. Identify them early on and take action immediately.

8. Action

Select the most urgent problems

  • Identify the causes, and agree on the best solution for each.
  • Agree which individual will be responsible for each action item, together with timescales. Record this in the minutes of the meeting.
  • If the same problem keeps re-occurring, it’s often a sign that the person responsible is not capable of doing the job properly. Find out if there are training or mentoring requirements.

Avoid being distracted

  • Always come back to focus on the real drivers of the business.

Encourage your employees to sort out minor problems themselves

  • If your employees know you are closely monitoring the performance of the business, they’ll be more inclined to sort out the more minor problems immediately.
  • As a member of the senior management team, you should have more time and resources to focus on the more important issues.

Signpost

Expert quotes

"If, like a management consultancy, your revenue is based on hours billed, do not put consultants’ salaries in overheads. Put them in ‘cost of sales’, to show the true gross profit picture." - Paddy MccGwire, Silverpeak LLP

"The first step in closely managing a business is to provide yourself with a range of appropriate, accurate and timely information." - Steve Richards, Serial investor and chairman