Transcript Powerpoint

Presented by:
Ryan D. Bretsch: Square One Mentor and Instructor
Financial Operations
Revenue Planning & Financial Business
Modeling
The Purpose of Financial Modeling
Is NOT About: a Marketing Exercise.
• NO - “Made-Up Revenue” Pitch to Woo Investors
• NO - Financial Statement Filled with “Plug-In Numbers
• NO - Revenue estimation task with no forethought in planning for
how you will acquire customers and revenue.
IS About: About Truly Understanding Capability in Your
Business.
• YES - Thoughtful consideration for how you will acquire
customers.
• YES - Thoughtful organization for how you will manage costs to
acquire those customers.
• YES - Modeling is planning. Financial planning is a process
centered around understanding and managing realistic potential.
Core Elements of the Financial Model
Revenue or Income
• Sources Segmented by “Lines of Business”
COGS
• “Cost of Goods Sold” or “Cost of Goods & Services”
SG&A
• “Selling, General and Administrative Expenses”
EBITA
• “Earnings Before Taxes, Interest and Amortization”
• Also known as “Net Profit Before Taxes”
It’s Not Just About Revenue!
Definition
Direct costs attributable to the
production of the goods or services
sold by a company.
Some Factors to Care For
 Materials Cost
 Shipping and Freight Cost
 Direct Labor Costs
COGS
Why Is It Important?
 Understand what the
production costs are in your
business.
 Understand what your Gross
Margin is before factoring in
your company operating
expenses.
SG&A
It’s Not Just About Revenue!
Definition
Direct costs attributable to the
running of the company itself.
Some Factors to Care For
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Compensation
Marketing & Sales – Drives Revenue!
Professional Services – Cost
Office Space – Cost
And Many More…
Why Is It Important?
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Understand what the expenses are
to run your business.
Understand what commitments
actually drive revenue in your
business model and what
constitutes unnecessary expense.
Do you know what is truly needed
at what point in time?
“Everyone knows that financial models in St. Louis are
not even remotely accurate. But investors need to see
your model, so you just have to labor through putting
it together. Just plug in estimates if you’re stuck.”
“Make sure you show as much revenue as possible so
investors will be interested. You can figure out what
the real numbers are once they have invested.”
- Anonymous Compilation Quote
A PLANNING TRUTH:
Inputs = Outputs
It’s Not Just About Revenue!
It’s Not Just About Revenue!
Objectives
This really counts!
It’s Not Just About Revenue!
Objectives
Rework and error
means extra
expense!
Understanding Sales Dynamics in Your Business
Model
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
• Direct Sales Acquisition Cost / New Customers Acquired
• $1.5M spent in acquisition /1,600 new customers = $937.50 per customer
Lifetime Value (LTV)
• Revenue Value of a Customer over “X” period of time.
• Calculated Retention over “X” period of time.
Requirements Based Pricing
• Understanding how price impacts both revenue production and the
demand curve in your business model.
• Ensuring proper markup exists to care for Gross Margin, Cost of Sales,
SG&A and EBITA .
Elements of Predictable Revenue
Lead Generation
• Understanding Factors Which Affect Lead Generation
• Lead Quality
• Lead Quantity
• Operational Bandwidth
Sales Conversion
• Lead Conversion (MQL & SQL)
• Lifetime Value of Customer
• Client Retention (as applicable)
The Price Is Right: Pricing Strategy
Markup is NOT Margin
• Make sure you have the right markup to support the
costs of your delivering your product/service and support
the cost of running your business.
Factors To Consider when Pricing
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Price Calculation
Competitive Evaluation of Price
Price Positioning
Price Presentation
Factors in Modeling Customer Acquisition
1. Lead Generation (Plan and Coordination)
2. Sales Cycle Length
3. Marketing Resources Needed to Deliver the Sale
4. Human Capital Resources Needed
5. Pricing and the Demand Curve
6. Market Segmentation
7. Cost of Sale
8. Operational Constraints
9. Churn Factors and more…
Understanding the Investment Conversation
MYTH #1
Financial models are never accurate. But we do need to have one in
our back pocket in case we’re asked for it. But its not as important
as our product or “story.”
MYTH #2
In a competitive funding world, investors need to see as much
revenue as possible by year “x” So it is of primary importance to
always show “hockey stick” level revenue.
MYTH #3
My PPT Presentation is the expression of my business story and the
financials are a spreadsheet that speaks to the numbers behind that
story.