{"id":4128,"date":"1955-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1955-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1955-vol-36-no-9-money-management-in-small-business\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:29:11","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:29:11","slug":"september-1955-vol-36-no-9-money-management-in-small-business","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1955-vol-36-no-9-money-management-in-small-business\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1955 &#8211; Vol. 36, No. 9 &#8211; Money Management in Small Business"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">One bugbear of the manager of a small business                     is to maintain productivity. Machines cost money whether they                     are used or not, because they depreciate and become obsolete.                     Idle time of a machine is like idle time of a workman, paid                     for but returning nothing in earnings. Proper work organization                     is imperative, plus a sound knowledge of the facts of production.<\/p>\n<p> As small-business managers quickly come to realize,                     general-purpose machinery reaches economical value at                     a relatively low level of output, while special-purpose                     machines cost so much and are designed to produce so prolifically                     that their purchase is justified only by the need for great                     output.<\/p>\n<p>Professor W.M. Hoad, of the University of Michigan, put                     this in parable form in his book <em>One Hundred and Fifty                     Questions for a Prospective Manufacturer<\/em>. A small plant,                     he says, may have a number of different types of general-purpose                     machines. If it wants to expand by, say, 25 per cent, it simply                     needs to install one additional machine for each four already                     in use. A plant using special-purpose machinery to capacity                     will probably have to replace substantially all of it with                     a larger size in order to expand by 25 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>There are no disadvantages involved in the use of machines                     if they are carefully selected for their contribution to production                     in the way of efficiency and cost-savings. The great                     sin that lands a small-business manager in a hot place                     economically is when he gives in to the temptation of indiscriminate                     enthusiasm for modernization.<\/p>\n<p>Discretion is needed to make your choice on the basis of                     what has to be done. Determine your needs, call in equipment                     salesmen, listen to their advice, correlate their opinions                     with your own knowledge of what you want the machines to do,                     and work out the cost in terms of how long it will take increased                     production to pay for the machine.<\/p>\n<h3>Financing<\/h3>\n<p>The necessity for capital and saving is usually underestimated                     by sanguine young people. The whole of their financing problem                     is not solved when they have raised enough money to go into                     business: the important point is how much it takes to stay                     there.<\/p>\n<p>Proper financing requires two kinds of capital: equity capital                     and loan capital. Equity capital is composed of the funds                     invested in your business by yourself and your partners and                     stockholders in the hope of deriving profit from the venture.                     These take the greater risk, because they are entitled to                     a return on their investment only after the claims of creditors                     have been settled. The bondholders and other creditors, who                     supply the borrowed capital, enjoy greater safety, but are                     generally limited to a fixed rate of return.<\/p>\n<p>A survey showed that a shortage of equity capital persistently                     faces the small enterpriser, and consequently he must make                     use of short-term costly credit at a critical stage of                     his operation. It is in this period that credit is most difficult                     to get, because the business has not yet proved itself in                     such a way as to show certainty of being able to repay the                     obligation. A depression in general economic conditions would                     add still further to the uncertainty.<\/p>\n<p>The small-business manager will use credit as a money-making                     tool. One general rule should be to use credit only when its                     use will increase your net sales by an amount greater than                     the total cost of accepting such credit. Says the <em>Small                     Business Manual <\/em>of the Department of Trade and Commerce,                     Ottawa: &#8220;The only time you should break this rule is when                     your firm runs into a serious but temporary financial reverse.                     Then you may have to borrow merely to pull yourself out of                     the difficulty. You should make sure, however, that the reverse                     is a purely temporary one.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Authorities urge repeatedly the need for care in accepting                     credit, and the desirability of raising capital funds in other                     ways. Long term trade credit is a legitimate source of capital                     for the small new business, but a risky one. It is not comfortable,                     or conducive to his best effort, for the small-business                     man to be in a state of financial dependence on wholesalers                     or manufacturers who extend him credit. He would be much better                     to start small and work up carefully, even parsimoniously,                     until he can afford the bigger plant, the better office and                     the smarter machines he desires.<\/p>\n<h3>Mistakes cost money<\/h3>\n<p>Some things must be learned by the new enterpriser through                     trial and error, but the error part costs money. Mistakes                     may be avoided to some extent by following sound financial                     policies undeviatingly. If certain basic principles of financial                     management are followed, says R. B. Tower in <em>A Handbook                     of Small Business Finance <\/em>(Superintendent of Documents,                     Washington), &#8220;there is no possibility of financial failure.                     The greater the difficulty a small manufacturer has in following                     them, however, the more certainly his finances will ultimately                     drag him down the road to insolvency.&#8221; Mr. Tower states the                     three principles in simple terms: avoid an excessive investment                     in fixed assets; maintain net working capital in proper proportion                     to sales; avoid excessive inventories.<\/p>\n<p>In this advice the operative word is &#8220;excessive&#8221;. It is                     poor economy to skimp on money for the necessary or desirable                     development of your business. No one should hesitate to borrow                     so long as he can put the money to efficient and profitable                     use and pay it back when it is due.<\/p>\n<p>The careful operator of a business will take certain safeguards.                     He will, for example, look ahead for five or more years and                     draw up alternative sets of plans to meet varying business                     conditions. He will prepare memoranda of his anticipated cash                     requirements for shorter periods, perhaps for months as well                     as for six-month periods. These will show now what will                     be needed when, and give the manager a chance to plan where                     he may hope to get the money.<\/p>\n<p>The manager will shift some risks from his shoulders by                     insurance. He will take competent advice about preparing his                     tax returns, so as to secure advantage of all legitimate deductions.                     He will take all necessary steps to keep up his equipment.<\/p>\n<h3>Credit through banks<\/h3>\n<p>Most of the short-term credit to business in Canada                     is supplied by the chartered banks.<\/p>\n<p>In order to make loans with a high degree of safety and                     protection for the depositors who supply the funds that are                     loaned, bankers need clear and dependable facts concerning                     the businesses that ask for loans.<\/p>\n<p>Banks are, naturally, careful about advancing credit to                     business men who have placed little or no capital of their                     own in the venture and have not yet demonstrated the probable                     success of the business.<\/p>\n<p>Credit standards and requirements of banks vary with the                     type, condition and size of borrowers. One principal requisite                     of credit to small business is the personal and moral character                     of the borrower. This means that the borrower will do everything                     in his power to conserve his business assets and thus assure                     repayment of his indebtedness, and that he is a man of his                     word. &#8220;A bank,&#8221; says the <em>Small Business Manual<\/em>, &#8220;does                     not want to have to police a loan, or seize and sell a firm&#8217;s                     assets in order to secure repayment. Therefore the bank lends                     only to those in whose integrity it has confidence.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>While the banks want to lend money, because that is part                     of their business, they require certain basic information                     on which to base their decision to do so. Some of this will                     be given by the borrower and the rest will come from the bank&#8217;s                     credit files. It will relate, roughly, to what is covered                     by the six &#8220;C&#8217;s&#8221; of credit: character, capacity, capital,                     collateral, circumstances and coverage (insurance).<\/p>\n<p>In considering whether or not to advance credit, the bank                     performs a double service: it facilitates business and it                     guards against indiscretion. All financial experience shows                     that too much credit may be fully as dangerous as too little,                     and that unsound credit is as harmful to the borrower as to                     the lender and is bad for the community.<\/p>\n<p>The banker, weighing projects with the care and judgment                     that come from experience and knowledge, and having behind                     him all the information sources of his great institution,                     is in a position to encourage a sound proposition or to raise                     a warning signal when the would-be borrower is too optimistic                     to be supported by the facts.<\/p>\n<h3>Money management<\/h3>\n<p>Financing is only one of the many aspects of management,                     and financing is often complicated by problems deriving from                     inept or inexperienced management in handling inventories,                     extending credit, purchasing, predicting sales, and so forth.<\/p>\n<p>Money management &#8211; the old-fashioned, every-day,                     common sense handling of money matters- is an absolute                     essential to the health of a business. Its absence is a weighty                     factor in many of the commercial failures that take place                     every year. There were 2,278 failures recorded under the Bankruptcy                     and Winding Up Acts in 1954, an increase of 37 per cent over                     1953, with $53 million in defaulted liabilities.<\/p>\n<h3>Making a budget<\/h3>\n<p>The only generally available way to manage money efficiently                     is by the budget system. Few, if any, techniques are more                     vital to the sound management of an enterprise than budgeting,                     yet it is a tool unwisely neglected by many small companies.<\/p>\n<p>When one builds a budget, reducing to dollars and cents                     one&#8217;s best estimate of sales, expenses, capital expenditures,                     credit and all other income and outgo, that is an inoculation                     against disaster. It uses both hindsight and foresight, because                     it draws on the experience of past years to judge the expected                     performance of future years. It shows the break-even                     point, below which all the dollars we earn by selling at a                     price higher than the actual out-of-pocket expenses                     of producing the product must go to pay for services, equipment,                     taxes and so forth. Above that point we have a chance to start                     contributing to our own pockets.<\/p>\n<p>The use of departmental budgets for cost control is a most                     effective way of making workers cost-conscious, because                     they know they either have to live within the budget or explain                     the reason why. This is important in a small business, where                     workers can lose more with shovels than the manager can bring                     in with a bulldozer.<\/p>\n<p>Cost accounting is not an end in itself. Its purpose is                     to provide management with information that is useful in directing                     operations, in choosing between alternative processes, and                     in guarding against adverse developments.<\/p>\n<h3>Business records<\/h3>\n<p>Many small-business people have not kept their records                     up to the standard of other phases of operation, yet maintenance                     of proper records and accounts is an essential factor in the                     success of a small business. In fact, surveys made in an attempt                     to find out why so many small businesses in Canada have failed                     show that a large percentage of those which have become bankrupt                     either kept inadequate records or none at all. In making this                     statement the Department of Trade and Commerce handbook previously                     referred to adds: &#8220;While record keeping will not insure your                     success, it will keep you informed as to progress of your                     business and disclose faults in operation which might be disastrous                     if not detected in time.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There are other reasons than the economical running of the                     business for the keeping of records. Suppliers and banks require                     financial statements before advancing credit; income tax regulations                     require supporting evidence of all transactions undertaken                     during the year; some industries are required to report certain                     information to the customs and other government departments;                     and well-kept records play a big part in persuading someone                     to invest in the business or to buy it.<\/p>\n<h3>Marketing<\/h3>\n<p>Last act in the daily drama of business is marketing. Invention,                     financing, production, management, and all the rest would                     be futile if the goods were not sold. Proficiency in marketing                     can go a long way toward overcoming incompetency in one of                     the others.<\/p>\n<p>The principle of effective marketing is to know what people                     want and then convince them that you can supply it in good                     quality at a reasonable price. Although many other things                     influence profits, a producer cannot long survive the fault                     of having an inferior product, or the handicap of charging                     higher prices than his competitors.<\/p>\n<p>Here is another use for records. They can be made to tell                     the story of past sales: what the level and trend is of sales                     by commodity groups, where sales have originated and in what                     volume from each territory, what is the relative importance                     of each channel of distribution being used. The answer to                     many other questions, like cost of selling, expense of storage                     and losses incurred through carrying dead stock, will turn                     up almost incidentally in process of analyzing sales data.<\/p>\n<p>Upon the base of such information the manager may plan an                     enlarged, more economical sales programme, filling in gaps                     and expanding into new territory where that seems to hold                     out promise of profit, and withdrawing where experience indicates                     that sales activity is uneconomical.<\/p>\n<p>Another fact that records will reveal is the soundness or                     unsoundness of the firm&#8217;s credit policy. The result of too-generous                     credit, a weakness common to small companies, is excessive                     losses in accounts that become worthless, and tied-up                     capital that may be badly needed.<\/p>\n<p>Sound credit sales policies begin with a thorough knowledge                     of your customers&#8217; financial position. If a small business                     sells on credit it should have a firm understanding in every                     transaction about the length of the credit period, and a definite                     undertaking to pay by a set date. Then its records should                     be of such a sort that the transaction is kept in sight and                     the necessary steps taken to secure fulfilment of the promise.<\/p>\n<h3>As for the future&#8230;<\/h3>\n<p>Every person of normal sensibility wishes to see the business                     he has built continue to thrive, whether he is present in                     it or not, and yet many a man puts off planning for the time                     when he will not be there until, alas! it is too late. There                     are some who postpone retirement or estate planning because,                     in the delightful way Dorothy Sayers puts it in one of her                     Lord Peter Wimsey stories: &#8220;it upsets them to think of such                     things.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Small businesses are mostly of the individual or family                     type. Many of them will be continued by sons and daughters,                     or managed by partners for the benefit of the family. Who                     is to run the business, with what resources, are questions                     urgently demanding the attention of every small-business                     owner.<\/p>\n<p>To start with, he should give earnest attention to succession                     duties, a liability made pressing by today&#8217;s high rates. From                     each bequest under a will the proportion of succession duties                     payable on it is deducted before the bequest is paid. Federal                     duties and provincial duties are ordinarily payable within                     six months, and the necessary cash must be raised from the                     business or from other sources.<\/p>\n<p>Some saving may be effected. For example, a trust may be                     created giving a life estate to the primary beneficiary, with                     an ultimate division of the capital among other beneficiaries.                     Otherwise an estate may shrink considerably, as for example                     by the payment of succession duties twice, once on the testator&#8217;s                     death and again on the death of his beneficiary.<\/p>\n<p>What we are principally interested in, however, is to see                     that an estate is so set up that the business may continue                     in operation, and shall not have to be liquidated in order                     to pay succession duties. There must be liquid assets available.                     One way of insuring this is by having a specially earmarked                     life insurance policy.<\/p>\n<h3>A family business<\/h3>\n<p>Montreal Trust Co. puts it this way in a booklet entitled                     <em>How to Keep Your Business in the Family<\/em>: &#8220;The problem                     of leaving the estate in a form liquid enough to meet the                     succession duty liability and other debts can only be solved                     by intelligent and early estate planning. It is impossible                     to stress strongly enough the importance to the owner of a                     family business of placing his affairs in order early in life                     while he is in good health and there is time to do a proper                     job by using the services of a qualified estate planner.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The booklet, which is available on request at any office                     of Montreal Trust Co. and at branches of The Royal Bank, goes                     on to tell some of the advantages of estate planning. The                     owner of the business is, of course, the one best qualified                     to discuss the problems facing it. With his intimate knowledge                     made available to estate planners, they may be successful                     in establishing principles that will continue the business                     on a firm base.<\/p>\n<p>The owner who wishes to keep his business in the family,                     or to have it continue after his retirement or death so as                     to provide a continuing income, must have four objectives                     in mind. He must reduce the tax liability as much as possible;                     he must establish with as much certainty as possible the actual                     value of his estate; he must leave his estate in a form liquid                     enough to provide funds to pay the succession duty liability                     and other debts; and he must make suitable arrangements for                     the continued management of his business. Failure to arrange                     these things may leave his family in very insecure position,                     or force the sale of the business.<\/p>\n<p>Some owners make the mistake of keeping in their own hands                     sole control over all phases of operation, so that when they                     pass from the scene there is a drastic state of confusion.                     When a son is relied upon to continue the business, he needs                     to be trained, and responsibility must be given him over the                     years so that when the time comes he will take the reins with                     confidence and ability. The owner of a business who has no                     family member to take over faces an even greater problem.                     He must not only train those who are to succeed him, but he                     must also secure their continuing loyalty to the business                     after his death.<\/p>\n<h3>Is the business successful?<\/h3>\n<p>Many things may be taken into account when assessing whether                     or not a man has been successful in his business, but there                     are four questions that cover the matter rather well.<\/p>\n<p>1. Has he done what he set out to do? His may not have been                     the biggest establishment in its line, but perhaps it was                     what he wanted. There are other measuring tools than the yardstick                     of size.<\/p>\n<p>2. Has the volume of his business been as big as was warranted                     by its nature, its environment, its opportunities, and his                     desires?<\/p>\n<p>3. Has he managed his business in a money-wise way,                     so that profits were as big as could reasonably be expected,                     used in such a way as to contribute to the growth of his business                     and his family&#8217;s welfare?<\/p>\n<p>4. Has he planned efficiently, so that he can rest assured                     the business he has reared will continue in a healthy way                     after his departure, well managed by people he has trained,                     yielding the sort of income he desires for his family?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[35],"class_list":["post-4128","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-35"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 9 - Money Management in Small Business - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1955-vol-36-no-9-money-management-in-small-business\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 9 - Money Management in Small Business - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"One bugbear of the manager of a small business is to maintain productivity. 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Machines cost money whether they are used or not, because they depreciate and become obsolete. Idle time of a machine is like idle time of a workman, paid for but returning nothing in earnings. 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