Getting a handle on the financial data that your business produces is a monumental task, but once done, decisions with financial implications can be made with confidence and understanding. Making sense of your financial data is a long journey that requires diligence, patience, and persistence. When engaged successfully, your financial data can help you make more money, work less, and please customers in new ways.
Data is a mess of quantitative and qualitative inputs, which is overwhelming and often scary. Sifting through and making sense of all of it takes an enormous amount of time and energy. The light at the end of the tunnel, once reached, is the haloed ground of information salvation. The only problem is... who has the time to pull apart all that financial data, ensure its integrity, and then present the information coherently and understandably?
Managing and understanding your financial data requires a multi-staged approach, with constant process improvement at its heart. The first step is: seeing your data.
The first step in using your financial data to make informed decisions is to see it completely and unabashedly as it is. Its scope and sources. It's blemishes and imperfections. It's tempting allure. Just breathe it in deeply and appreciate what it is. A tool to help you make informed decisions. Financial data is a cruel mistress that will scorn you if you don't respectfully question it at all times.
First, you must understand where the financial data comes from and, just as importantly, what it covers. Nothing is worse than not understanding that a significant business component isn't represented in the data. Understanding its sources will help you effectively and efficiently collect it so that it can be analyzed.
Financial data is never fully complete. Errors. Misinformation. Missing pieces. These are just a few things that will take your well-intentioned analysis into a land of fog and confusion. Taking a cold hard look at what your financial data is, and isn't, will save you from frustration and misunderstanding. Once you understand where your holes are, you can use your qualitative understanding of the information to fill in any holes you know about.
"Use your data" is an anecdote often thrown around in business, like a football at a pre-game party. It is often dropped and fumbled or spiked into the ground after a lack of luster bumbled catch. Sometimes though, a long tight spiral is thrown to a good friend, who, after summoning his greatest boyhood aspirations, reaches out with a long outstretched arm and executes a perfect catch, diving headlong onto the green grass.
Proper execution is key to using your financial data. It must always be remembered that your data is to be used alongside your understanding and management processes. Use it as a way to help you make informed decisions. Do not wield it like a broadsword slashing at the tall grass.
The first step, seeing your data, is one of the most integral. It helps you to fully understand your financial data and what its potential is. Never forget that financial data is just numbers and inputs. Your processes and management (which are being aided by careful analysis of said data) are the keys to making sure you are putting dollars on the bottom line and adding customers along the way.
Don't have a good handle on your numbers? Download our cash-flow template. By using a cash flow template, you can proactively manage potential issues and prevent them from becoming major obstacles. It also allows you to make informed financial decisions that drive business growth, ensuring you have the necessary funds to keep your business operating smoothly.
You can also speak with us to see if we can help get your numbers right with our fractional accounting and finance services.