Inside Small Business | Small Business & Home Business Marketing


Blood Money

Inside Small Business | March 23rd, 2007

Mike Michalowicz, Serial Entrepreneur

I recently received a notice congratulating me on donating a gallon of blood. I quickly did some research on Wikipedia and learned that the human body has slightly over a gallon of blood pumping through it. Clearly, if I gave a gallon of blood in one sitting I would be a goner. Shoot, even if I only donated one third of my blood (approximately 3 pints) in one sitting I might suffer some tough consequences. But since I donate one pint of blood at a time, my body hardly misses it and I can donate as frequently as seven times a year without missing a heartbeat (pun intended). My blood donations have quickly piled up and in a very short time I have given a gallon.

We’ve all heard that cash is the lifeblood of our business. I think it’s hard to argue otherwise. Shouldn’t we treat our money like our business’s blood? Just like a medical emergency, a business in need of fiscal attention often requires an infusion of capital.

Medical needs sometimes can be predicted and sometimes can’t. Regardless of the timing, with a pool of easily accessible blood reserves the chance for survival dramatically increases. Sometimes our business problems are predictable and other times they blindside the living crud out of us. Regardless of the timing, with a pool of easily accessible cash the chance for business survival dramatically increases.

That’s why you need to regularly “donate” business cash flow to your reserves. The best method is by taking your profit first. What do I mean by this? Every time money comes into the business, and I mean every time, a percentage is automatically transferred into a separate account. Just like a pint of blood, a healthy business will hardly feel it being withdrawn. I like to call this reserve the Profit Distribution Account (PDA).

How much money can be transferred to the PDA without threatening the health of the business? Most stable companies should be able to post a profit of 10% to 25% after all expenses. So trying starting with a low threshold, maybe 5% of every inbound dollar goes to the PDA. Over time slowly increase the percentage and monitor closely to see if your business gets woozy. Once you have consciously (more often subconsciously) adjusted expenses and cash outflow to sustain your PDA withdrawals, you will quickly accumulate a tremendous cash reserve. Be cognizant not to stow away too much money too quickly. Just like donating blood, the rapid drain of cash exiting from business operations will cripple or kill your organization.

Should tough times come upon your company, and they often do, you now have a source of funds that you’ve built up. The PDA’s dinero reserve will see you through these times. On the bright side, as these funds grow they will ultimately be in excess of any imaginable rainy day needs. At that point you should take portions as an equity distribution. Trust me, it’s a real nice way to reward yourself for running a healthy business. There is a nifty little process I recommend on how to do this, but I’ll save that for another article.

If you’ve never given blood, I strongly encourage you to do it. There’s no question it saves lives. If you don’t currently donate to your company’s PDA account, I strongly encourage you to start. There’s no question it saves companies.

Author

 

Mike Michalowicz’s passion is making small businesses BIG and doing it fast. He was founder and former President of Olmec Systems, Inc., which he sold in 2002 through a private transaction. He subsequently co-founded and served as Co-Managing Partner of PG Lewis & Associates, LLC. There his leadership helped bring it to national prominence in three short years. The company was subsequently acquired in a public transaction in 2006.

Michalowicz was recognized as New Jersey’s Young Entrepreneur of the Year by the SBA in 2000, Young Entrepreneur of the Year in 1999 by the MCCC, and is a 2004 graduate of MIT’s “Birthing of Giants” Entrepreneurial Program. Michalowicz has been highlighted on entrepreneurial topics in Inc. magazine, the New York Times and other periodicals.

A graduated member of YEO (Young Entrepreneur’s Organization), Michalowicz has a BA from Virginia Tech in Finance and in Management Sciences. He is married, has three children and lives in NJ.

 

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Posted on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 at 2:32 pm and is filed under Business, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, SOHO. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

8 Comments | “Blood Money”

JOE SPANO | March 23rd, 2007 at 3:27 pm

MIKE
LOVE THE BLOOD ANALOGY.
LOOK HOW MANY DISCIPLES JESUS GOT BY USING PARABLES.
OF COURSE, HE HAD A LITTLE HELP FROM A HIGHER AUTHORITY.
GOOD WORK
JOE

jeff | March 23rd, 2007 at 3:51 pm

Did you ever consider contacts for the little nipper?

Steve Forte | March 23rd, 2007 at 4:55 pm

Your advise is sound, but I think companies have to be real careful to balance their liquidity needs and rainy day funds against leaving a big number on the balance sheet for creditors to salivate over. Probably the lawyer talking, but I’m more apt to take a distribution and then lend it back to the company when a cash infusion is required. So I guess I would keep the PDA outside the corporate structure that way if there is a lawsuit, a creditor would have to pierce the corporate veil before I’d lose the funds. Pretty unlikely.

My 2 cents.

Lesley-Ann Trow | March 23rd, 2007 at 11:56 pm

Thanks Mike
Great advice for the occasionally undisciplined.

Mike Michalowicz | March 25th, 2007 at 6:21 am

Steve,

Thanks for the legal insight. That is an EXCELLENT point. I think I now have a concept for the next article… after some research and legal counsel.

Steve Forte | March 25th, 2007 at 6:22 am

I read the article, it was a nice easy read. Your advise is sound, but I think companies have to be real careful to balance their liquidity needs and rainy day funds against leaving a big number on the balance sheet for creditors to salivate over. Probably the lawyer talking, but I’m more apt to take a distribution and then lend it back to the company when a cash infusion is required. So I guess I would keep the PDA outside the corporate structure that way if there is a lawsuit, it a creditor would have to pierce the corporate veil before I’d lose the funds. Pretty unlikely.

My 2 cents.

Marty Orloffski | March 27th, 2007 at 12:38 pm

This sounds like an administrative nightmare. Too many transfers, too often. The author should recommend a periodic transfer, perhaps monthly or quarterly. Otherwise, I think it is pretty sound advice.

Glen Marthens | April 3rd, 2007 at 3:47 pm

Great article! Great analogy! Most have lost common sense, regardless whether it is a PDA, cash flow or working capital
it is critical to plan for the ebb and flow of business. To bad our gov’t did not think like you!!!


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