Showing posts with label cash flow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cash flow. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2013

10 Ways to Financially Improve Your Printing Organization


Financial performance is a major concern of all organizations, whether you’re a commercial, packaging, digital, large format, or in-plant printing operation. Here are 10 ways you can improve the financial performance of your organization.

1. Improve Administrative Processes
Implement lean principles in your administrative areas to eliminate unnecessary and redundant non-value-added activities, steps, and handoffs in your sales, estimating, order entry, purchasing, invoicing, and accounting workflow.  Put a team together to define the steps required to get jobs through your administrative processes and design a more efficient "Lean" workflow.

2. Implement Industry Best Practices
Best practices are proven methods in which printing organizations have achieved top performance and serve as goals for other companies that are striving for excellence. Why reinvent the wheel? Improve your financial performance by adapting these accepted best practices to your specific needs.

3. Speed Up Throughput And Delivery
Write up orders accurately and effectively, and then use the quickest means available to produce and deliver products to customers. Unnecessary delays can add days or weeks to customer payments. You must pay out considerable costs in paper, wages, and other expenses to produce orders, so you want to get reimbursed as soon as possible.

4. Leverage Technology
The proper use of technology will improve the synergy of your organization and help it run more efficiently and effectively. An integrated management information system (MIS) like Avanti, EFI Monarch, EPMS, ePace, Radius, or Printers Software is a critical tool for managing and operating a financially sound printing organization. A typical MIS incudes estimating, order entry, inventory management, shop floor data collection, scheduling, job costing, and accounting. Implementing an ecommerce solution can eliminate time and costs associated with processing orders, speed your order to cash cycle, minimize inventory, and enhance relationships among customers and suppliers.

5. Keep A Tight Control On Inventory
Paper accounts for approximately 1/3 of your costs, so less cash tied up in inventory generally means better cash flow. While some suppliers offer deeper discounts on volume purchases, if inventory sits on the floor too long, it ties up money that could be put to better use elsewhere. Implement Just-in-time (JIT) inventory practices to reduce in-process inventory. You should not have items sitting in your inventory if it can be replenished before a job goes to press.

6. Review and Reduce Expenses
Take a hard look at all of your expenses. Consider ways to decrease operating costs, but be careful not to cut costs that could impede performance or profits. Reduce production expenses by scheduling better, reconfiguring work shifts, improving job planning, and eliminating spoilage. If you haven't already done so, implement Lean Office and Lean Manufacturing principles.

7. Know Your True Costs
Having a clear understanding of your costs is essential for producing accurate estimates, pricing orders, measuring job costs and profitability, and generating accurate accounting reports. Good job costing and shop floor data collection software can help to make sure that all of your labor and material costs are fully accounted for and absorbed in your estimating cost rates and pricing.

8. Invoice Customers Promptly
A customer cannot pay an invoice until they received it, so the faster you get the invoice to the customer, the faster you’ll get paid. When possible, send an invoice within 1 to 2 days after the order has shipped. A best practice is to establish the invoice amount when the order arrives and as the customer requests changes. The only exception is billable overs and shipping charges. Many companies are expediting the invoicing process by sending PDF invoices to customers using email.

9. Measure Your Performance
If you don’t measure it, you can’t improve it. If you don’t measure it, you can’t manage it. Time after time studies have found a strong correlation between a company's financial performance and effective goal setting. There are various tools for measuring performance including Performance Benchmarks, Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s), Balance Score Cards (BSC), and dashboards. Metrics can assess the health of your organization’s financial, production, cost, quality, and customer service performance.

10. Utilize Your Employees  Better
The need to effectively leverage the skills of employees is critical to improving your financial performance. You may have some people that have evolved into the wrong position over time. Or employees that are overloaded with work while others do not have enough to keep them busy. Take a close look at the skill set and workloads of your staff. Make sure employees are in the position that is best leveraging their capabilities.

If you're interested in learning how Profectus Printing Industry Business Consultants can improve your organization, contact Profectus for a FREE phone consultation at 1-888-868-8662. Or visit our website: www.profectus.com



Cost Rates Advisor Budgeted Hourly Rates Software
Cost Rates Advisor Budgeted Hourly Rates Software







Wednesday, April 22, 2009

5 Ways to Improve Cash Flow In Your Printing Business


Given the current state of the printing industry and the economy, a healthy stream of cash is essential for a printing business is to succeed. Cash is the lifeblood of any printing business. In general, the key is to accelerate the flow of money coming in and delay the money that goes out. Here are 5 tips a printing business can use to improve cash flow.

1) Establish sound credit practices
Before dealing with a new customer, always get at least three trade references and a bank reference. Credit reports report on a company’s general financial health as well as how quickly (or slowly) it pays its bills. Never give credit until you are comfortable with a customer’s ability to pay.

Since many printers now provide email price quotes to their customers, a best practice is to incorporate your “Terms and Conditions of Sale” into your credit application.

2) Speed up throughput and delivery
Fill orders accurately and effectively, and then use the quickest means available to produce and deliver products to customers. Unnecessary delays can add days or weeks to customer payments. You must pay out considerable costs in paper, wages, and other expenses to produce orders, so you want to get reimbursed as soon as possible. Lean Office and Lean Manufacturing principles can help speedup your throughput.

3) Bill promptly and accurately
The faster you mail an invoice, the faster you can be paid. Where possible, send an invoice within 1 to 2 days after the order has shipped. A best practice is to establish the invoice amount at time of order or as the customer request changes. The only exception is billable overs and shipping charges. Many companies expediting the invoicing process by sending electronic invoices to customers using email, Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) or other means.

Check invoices for accuracy before mailing. All invoices should include a payment due date. An invoice without a payment due date may fall to the bottom of the customer’s pile of bills.

4) Offer discounts for prompt payment
Given an incentive, some customers will pay sooner rather than later. Trade discounts typically give 1% to 5% off the total amount due if customers pay in 10 to 15 days.

5) Aggressively follow up on past-due accounts
As soon as a bill becomes overdue, call the customer and ask when you can expect payment. Keep a record of the conversation and the customer’s response. Set a follow-up date in the event the promised payment is not received. Ask delinquent customers with legitimate financial problems to try and pay at least a small amount every week. Some accounting software packages functionality that automatically generates past due notices the day the invoice becomes past due.

When necessary, don’t hesitate to seek professional help from an attorney, debt collection agency, or the Printing Industry Financial Executive (PIFE) Credit & Collections Service.