A formerly profitable local business had started to lose
money. The owner was at her wits’ end. The business had lots of
good customers – in fact turnover had grown over the last year – but the losses
kept growing.
She had tried various marketing initiatives and had even
laid off some loyal staff but nothing seemed to help. She was on the
point of closing the business but first of all decided to take further
professional advice.
The main problem was identified to be her reduced gross margin. It became
clear that in expanding the business she had lost touch with purchasing and
pricing, which were now done by employees. Installing new processes,
controls and performance measurements meant her staff could run the business
profitably.
In a nutshell, what was lacking was cost control.
Why is cost control critical
to business success?
- Reducing costs is the easiest
way to improve profitability
-
Assume 40% gross margin and 10% net margin: to grow
net profits by £1 requires £2.50 of additional sales – but only £1 of cost
savings. Cost savings go straight to the bottom line
-
The start point is a budget which sets out what you expect to spend on any line
item
-
Individual budget holders must have achieving budget near the top of their
annual objectives
-
This budget must form the basis of your monthly management review, where actual
expenditure is compared to planned
-
Overspends must be identified and explained, with appropriate remedial action
initiated
- Annual budgeting (or a
decrease in profitability) should be used to review key cost drivers and
identify steps to reduce them
- Productivity
- Utilisation
- Supplier choice, terms and management
- Product or service design
- Organisational structure
- Automation and processes
- Outsourcing
- Standardisation and off-catalogue purchasing
- Customer, product or market profitability
- Relentless attention to costs
is a good thing but it must match your wider strategy
- If you compete on stock availability and breadth of supply then you would need to exercise caution when reducing stockholdings
- If you compete on product quality you would be foolish to continually source the cheapest components