Thursday, 16 August 2007

Too much thought? Maybe not

The best thing about what I do is the characters I get to meet and the stories behind them. I recently had the pleasure of meeting one of the two founders of a £20 million business that had been referred to myFD. Excellent stuff.

These chaps are very successful, with a million pounds in the bank and a rosy future. Why were they referred to myFD?

Well they have never had any management accounts, nor do they have any in-house financial expertise. They find out how much money they made when their auditor does a Poirot-style "reveal" about six months after the year end. It was very interesting talking to them because that is how they have operated the business from the start and so that is their normality.

You might ask why they would need myFD if everything is OK and it's a good question. In order for someone to buy, there has to be a need. In this case the co-founder neatly summed up the need by saying "we make less money now than when we were half the size." And suddenly a whole new world of regular information, forecasts, corrective action and progress opens up to them through myFD.

So whilst I think it is possible to think about things too much, there comes a time when you have to think a little further ahead. £20 million is pretty good going though!


Useful links:

see the myFD take on growth

Time, the Silent Killer of Businesses

In life, time is said to be a great healer. For small businesses it can be a silent killer.

The recent floods gave this an interesting perspective. My house is by the Thames and we were informed by news broadcasts that a huge volume of water was making its way downstream towards us – “could be as bad as 1947”, “expected peak is Tuesday morning”, “Joe has moved his car to Bill’s house” and all sorts of other, sometimes conflicting information, was available to us.

It occurred to me that, in waiting for the flood to arrive, my sense of anticipation mixed with adrenaline was exactly like getting a business going. You have a small amount of time to get your plan in order then you have to execute it brilliantly. You don’t know exactly what is going to happen, or when. For many would-be entrepreneurs the temptation is to weigh up the odds (“it’ll never be as bad as 1947” or “that big order is bound to turn up”) and do too little too late. Moreover the consequences of doing nothing can be catastrophic, whereas over-reacting has no downside other than a bit of time and effort, and means that you are better prepared for the next time.

In the period before the flood strikes, there is a strange calm – nothing you do has an immediate consequence – the water doesn’t appear immediately after you got the sandbags in place – so the sense of urgency is very difficult to maintain. As a result, time can tick on and suddenly the disaster is upon you and you’re only half prepared. By the same token, it is amazing what you can achieve in a short time when you have a real, serious deadline to meet – I shifted ¼ tonne of sandbags, cleared my garage, moved belongings to safety, made up some shuttering, oh and booked a couple of sales meetings, had a customer review meeting and calls with staff in less than a day!

It’s the same with a start-up, or indeed in a business in trouble. There is a finite amount of cash to invest in getting new customers, perfecting the product and bringing the right people in. There will be lots of information, lists and versions of forecasts, making it very difficult to see what’s really happening. The impending disaster is the moment the cash runs out, which can initially seem a very long time away. The trouble is, unless you set deadlines and milestones and actually recognise them, no bells or whistles go off each time you hit a milestone, and most importantly, there doesn’t appear to be any immediate consequence of not hitting them.

And it’s the latter point that means elapsed time is always much longer than expected for the vast majority of early stage businesses. It’s also why many DIY turnarounds fail because too little is done too late. If there were nasty consequences each time the team failed to hit a deadline, they’d be more likely to succeed and hit the next one, and the one after that.

Entrepreneurship guru Robert Craven talks about the “valley of death” – the “investment” period between being a profitable sole-trader and having about twenty employees. “You simply have to run as fast as possible to get there, otherwise you go bust”, he says.

Back to the sense of urgency; it’s very easy to be “heads down” on the tasks in hand, forget the important longer term goals, and end up a victim of the silent killer – time.

So how do you keep your head up and run the business every day as though your life depended on it?

Here are my top six business “sandbags” to get in place before the flood arrives:

  • Have a clearly communicated plan with real milestones
  • Make deadlines and milestones matter – celebrate success, learn from failure and crack on
  • Employ a finance director – then you have objective forecast information; it’s too easy to duck impending problems otherwise, and they’ll tell you what to look at and what’s irrelevant
  • Monitor cashflow closely – how much cash (= time) have you got in reserve? Your FD should pester you constantly
  • Get a non-executive director – all successful entrepreneurs have them, love them and hate them – they make you look far enough ahead, whilst avoiding tripping over your feet
  • Hold regular Board meetings away from the business – how close are you to plan, what actions are needed by whom and by when and ensure that actions are carried out

Ignore them at your peril – get them in place and cash should be the only flood you’ll have coming in.


Useful links:

Robert Craven's valley of death article

Friday, 27 July 2007

Death by PowerPoint

So Powerpoint is pointless! How amusing that research by Professor Sweller, of University of New South Wales, has confirmed what business people have always known.

Apparently when confronted with the same information coming from different sources at the same time, such as verbally and on a screen, the human brain shuts one of then off. This explains why so many people nod off at conferences.

Or at Board meetings. There is a serious point about the way Directors convey complex information to each other. Talking the Board through reports that are still warm from the photocopier is a definite turn-off. Now we know why.

Sadly, in my experience the worst offenders tend to be finance people, who read a set of results in a dull monotone, then wonder why they are marginalised.

Perhaps this explains why the most popular business courses are "finance for non-financial managers". Prof Wellers has now shown that what's really needed is "communication for non-communicating managers"

Relevant Links
http://www.unsw.edu.au/news/pad/articles/2007/mar/Cognitive_load_theory.html

Private Equity - Come on Guys!

It’s been interesting to see how some of the cleverest and most entrepreneurial people in the land, who are hugely adept at making money, have proved utterly inept at PR in the face of the ill-informed and largely irrelevant comments from the trades union leaders.

I think the debate also exposes the uneasy relationship the British people have with success.

Damon Buffini of Permeira made an excellent point before his House of Commons grilling, which was that his company is a business that he started with his own money 23 years ago. I’m pretty sure that if he was a retailer, or manufacturer of electronic goods we’d all be saluting him now. Because his business has the title “private equity” he’s branded this decade’s unacceptable face of capitalism. “Arise Sir Alan, Sir Tom, Sir Philip etc” – what are the odds on “arise Sir Damon?”

In fact Sir Tom Hunter, or “billionaire Sir Tom” as he is styled in the press, now runs West Coast Capital, which is of course a private equity company founded with the money he made in retailing. It’s doing battle with the big bad ogre Tesco right now as Sir Tom tries to consolidate the garden centre industry. And consolidating fragmented industries is a typical private equity strategy. When someone popular like Sir Tom does it, he’s a good egg. When a far-too successful outfit like Tesco does it then it’s just too much.

Mandelson, when he was Industry Secretary, and Brown as Chancellor made it very clear that they wanted to encourage entrepreneurship and risk-taking. They did this by de-stigmatising failure and through some generous tax breaks, for people who sell business assets they have held for more than two years.

We simply have to face the fact that if you encourage entrepreneurs they will go for it. And if they are successful they will get rich. If they are not successful they will lose. Get over it!

Looking through the private equity companies’ investment portfolios, it’s very hard to spot any PR agencies amongst them. Far too nebulous and intangible. My bet is that the smarter guys will be having another look at exactly what that industry does right now. Who knows - maybe it’s ripe for consolidation?

Thoughts on Success

As Jimmy, Reginald Perrin's brother-in-law used to say, "funny customers, customers"

They come in many shapes and sizes, some talk a great story, some achieve incredible things.

I've been very privileged to work directly and indirectly with about 60 smaller businesses over the last few years and I've started to notice some patterns. In particular, what characterises successful businesses.

My "decompression chamber" between large companies and smaller ones was our very first customer, AMT Coffee. The work I and my colleagues did there was instrumental in helping us understand what makes entrepreneurs tick. And boy were they entrepreneurial.

They operate those neat gold/brown coffee bars in railway stations and the like and have about 40 of them now.

Run by three brothers (Angus, Allan, Alistair) who had an English Dad and Mexican Mum, they could barely agree on anything - who started the business, whether to offer customers bags, who used the company most to buy personal things.

But you know it was immediately clear to me that there were certain things they regarded as fundamental that they really did agree on and on which they would not compromise at all. Quality of coffee, value for money, speed of service, training of baristas, cleanliness of the bars, opening on time...

In their head office they even set up a dummy bar so all new baristas would get 3 days training on making coffee and selling food. They also had a chap called Brian, about 55, who audits the bar and woe betide any bar getting less than 10/10.

Brian was one of those apparently browbeaten individuals yet had incredible loyalty to the brothers. He'd be checking the opening time in Bristol at 5am then Allan would send him to check the handover routine in Glasgow in the afternoon.
Funny how these fundamentals happen to be all the things that matter most to their customers.


So despite the internicine warfare, the business grew from about £3 million when I first met them, to around £20 million now.

And I truly believe that the key challenge to any new or ambitious business is to be absolutely on top of what it is that the customers value and never ever compromise on them.

AMT is now a fully fledged business with a full management team and I am very proud of the part we played in its development. Alistair is a good friend now.

Very sadly, Angus died of cancer in late 2006 still only in his early forties. For all the "interesting" times we had, and there were many, he was a decent chap and his legacy is the strong business that has outlived him.

I wish them well and am truly grateful for the insight they gave me into entrepreneurship. And Angus, you're often in my thoughts.

Relevant Links
http://www.amtcoffee.co.uk/

Thursday, 26 July 2007

Get rich with myFD

Hey we're holding an event with our good friends at the IoD; it's in Taplow on October 16th 2007. We helped an extremely good bloke sell his business for £14 million. And he's agreed to come and share some secrets.

If you're an owner-manager, come along - we'd love to meet you.

If you're a bank manager, bring an owner-manager or two!

Click here immediately!

http://www.iod.com/intershoproot/eCS/Store/en/pdfs/berks_bookingform_mudguards.pdf

Fred Edwards

July 2007

What myFD is all about

There's a big problem at the heart of smaller businesses and whilst there is a cottage industry developing around it, no-one yet has made a real noise about it.

What's the problem? Finance people - boring, negative, risk-averse, backward-looking, retentive, repressed, accountants. The trouble is that's all a smaller company can afford. Or so they thought until now.........

And I reckon it's costing millions and creating heartache for owners of small businesses all over the place.

How do I come to this conclusion? Well I was a finance director in very large company and because I'm an entrepreneurial sort of chap I used to go and see customers - much better than adding up numbers all day. I was looking to increase credit limits and sell more stuff. And after I'd seen 30 or 40, I could see that although they were dead keen to share information and tell me what was going on, their financials were utter rubbish! I frequently found myself wondering, "how the hell do these guys make decisions?"

One chap running a shopfitting company in Manchester had gone bust once before and ran a £5 million business based on a list of customers who owed him money and suppliers who he owed money to. If the total on the left was bigger he slept, if the one on the right was bigger he went and got another contract quick. How daft is that? I recently came across a £4 million contracting company that has no idea which contracts are profitable.

It wasn't what I was used to in big companies, where proper information, with balance sheets and cashflows and forecasts were done by day 5 of the month, and we talked about the future and how to make more money or new products and markets. The businesses I was meeting (and they were anything from a million £ up to £30 or 40 million in size) were just existing and said that their auditors "did the depreciation so we only have a balance sheet once a year", that they struggled to get invoices out and didn't really know what was going on.

There was a pattern - I could see that businesses go through a seemingly inevitable cycle - they get set up, need some basic stuff like invoicing and paying suppliers done, so they go to some local accountant with a beard and a copy of Sage.

And it goes haywire from then on. The numbers bit of the business is set up for the benefit of Mr Beard -he gets the VAT done and the PAYE paid on time, but nothing of any commercial use comes out. A friend of mine suffered from a local Beard who was so slow in "writing up" (whatever that means) the sales ledger that my friend was not aware that it was taking on average 90 days for customers to pay. So his profitable business was running out of cash.

How about making sure that products and services are priced properly so you make a decent margin? Making sure everything you deliver gets invoiced? Avoiding entering the same information twice? Getting decent reports off the system without resorting to spreadsheets (don't get me started..)

No- businesses have to struggle on until they can afford the holy grail - a finance director (or FD). But, and it's a big but, most FDs who want to work in smaller businesses are basically Mr Beards with a shiny suit and a slightly posher accent. Useless, and get turfed out after a couple of years of sitting in the office not speaking to anyone.

So, a couple of years back, having done a buyout and exited, I thought, "there has to be a better way".

What is needed, went my thinking, is a way of making the smaller company role attractive to senior, experienced finance execs who want a bit of variety and to get closer to the coalface. People who don't go jungly after a week and start to agree that it really is difficult to get invoices done on time after all.

So with some help from a couple of people I set up myFD, to do exactly that. It's a service based around key features that deal with the main issues that arise from the traditional solutions. We replicate the big company environment in miniature. So we

  • manage the service delivery closely at company level rather than rely on the individuals' party pieces
  • work as a team to support each other and share knowledge
  • have tools and methodologies so we don't reinvent wheels all the time
  • get the right resource on the job - financial controllers and finance directors
  • call customers customers (why? - well I could go into esoteric arguments about service but it's basically so we act differently to the accountancy brigade)
  • are as entrepreneurial as our customers (but scrub up nicely when we meet the bank managers)

Like it? Run a business between £3m and £30 million turnover? Or just very ambitious and looking to get moving? see our website http://www.myfd.co.uk/

One of the people who has helped is a chap called Robert Craven. We realised that one of the main issues for finance folk is that they speak another language - we needed to express ourselves in ways that our customers would relate to and Robert was supremely helpful.

We also do a lot of work with the Institute of Directors (IoD) - if you're running a smaller company I'd recommend joining, if nothing else for the free use of the premises. Hey and if you decide to join give them my membership number E134488 - I'll split a case of champagne with you.

Cheers

Fred Edwards

July 2007

Relevant Links

Robert Craven - see http://www.thedc.co.uk/

IoD: http://www.iod.com/