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9 ways to avoid being crushed by your rapid business growth

5-minute read

It might sound like a paradox, but companies are often crushed by their own growth. A boom can bring about many changes—you might be taking on numerous commitments at once, signing lucrative contracts in record time and watching orders soar. But all of this requires greater cash flow needs, growth planning and the right financing. If your company is growing too fast, you might not have enough cash to deal with your day-to-day financial obligations, including bills, payroll and supplies.

Fast growth is not always easy to handle—but a proactive, step-by-step approach can help make it more manageable. It is essential that, even in a boom period, you keep control of the situation.

1. Define your growth objectives

Be strategic about your growth. It's a good exercise to first ask yourself some very basic questions in order to determine your key objectives.

  • Do I have the necessary capital to finance my growth?
  • Am I having cash flow problems, or am I managing well? For instance, do I have assets that I could turn into cash if need be?
  • Am I expanding too quickly?
  • Am I growing because I want to be more profitable or is it growth for growth's sake?
  • Am I hiring too fast?
  • Am I collecting my receivables fast enough?
  • Is my inventory in line with my growth?
  • Is my production line efficient?
  • Does my management team have the right competencies to handle my company's growth?

2. Do a growth diagnosis of your company

Essentially this means analyzing how you manage your company and how to gain more control over the aspects of your business that affect your cash flow. Generally, a comprehensive growth diagnosis includes an analysis of your sales, overhead, receivables, inventory and assets. Try and assess whether your inventory and capital assets are absorbing too much of your cash flow, if they do, take the necessary steps to tightly control them. This will help you define your refinancing requirements and help you avoid future liquidity problems.

3. Ensure your growth is sustainable.

Be certain that your company is not undergoing seasonal or one-time-only growth.

4. Prepare a growth strategy

Prepare a growth strategy which will enable you to understand the risks and opportunities for your company. Your strategy is a result of looking closely at internal resources, the market, the economy, competitors, marketing and distribution channels and demographics.

5. Forecast your cash requirements

Forecast your cash requirements by doing an analysis of your cash inflow and outflow. This will enable you to determine future cash requirements. Knowing this, you can look at your current financial situation and assess if you can make improvements. You may be able to get additional financing for working capital, restructure your debt or convert unused assets into cash.

6. Analyze receivables and payables

Analyze receivables and payables to see how you can improve your liquidity problems. To improve how you manage your receivables, be sure that you:

  • Do credit checks on clients
  • Have clear payment terms
  • Use the right collection methods
  • Resolve problems quickly
  • Monitor the collection time and take the right means for substantially overdue accounts, such as freezing accounts
  • If your credit policy is affecting your cash flow, are there any ways to reduce your collection time?

Apply the same logic in examining your payables: A sale is not a sale until the money is in your bank. Ask yourself:

  • How much commercial credit do you get from your suppliers? How much interest do you pay?
  • Do you wait until the due date to pay your suppliers or do you pay them in advance?
  • Can you get an extension on your commercial credit?
  • Do you use the "just-in-time" method i.e. reduce your inventory by closely coordinating reorders and deliveries?

7. Control costs

Control costs through vigilant planning. You can consider using a rigorous streamlining system that addresses overhead such as: Rent, equipment, human resources, office supplies, etc. Be sure you set concrete goals for cost-cutting, assign somebody accountable and secure employee buy-in to help reduce costs. Be particularly careful about maintaining cost controls during growth spurts where businesses often binge with spending.

8. Control debt

Control debt to ensure that your lenders will continue to consider you as a viable client and give you the financing that you need to meet your needs. Remember that high-growth companies can be risky for financial institutions. You can also look for alternatives to conventional debt financing. For example, you can negotiate better payment schedules with suppliers, or look at leasing vs. buying assets.

9. Get the refinancing you need

After analyzing your company, you will be better able to examine your payment procedures. Refinancing can help reduce your monthly payments by rescheduling your debts and spreading your payments over a longer period.

A refinancing application is very similar to a financing application. In both cases, the lender establishes certain debt repayment conditions, which you must be able to fulfill. If you cannot demonstrate your repayment ability, the lender cannot assume the risk alone.

BDC provides business loans to refinance debt for businesses undergoing rapid expansion, purchasing equipment or increasing financial flexibility. For example, you could replace multiple debts with a single debt that is easier to manage. BDC also provides flexible-term refinancing which can be repaid in equal monthly, progressive or seasonal installments. Terms take your enterprise's rate of cash flow into account. The repayment period is determined by the nature of the assets provided as security.

If you answer yes to several of the five questions below, BDC may be able to grant you a loan to refinance your debt:

  • Is your management team competent and experienced?
  • Are you able to clearly demonstrate your ability to repay the loan?
  • Does your business have good equity capital?
  • Taking your business project into account, is your working capital sufficient to cover short-term needs?
  • If your business is in the start-up or development stage? Has a complete business plan (including a financial forecast and a description of your management team, products and market) been prepared?
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