Dawn Fotopulos | 5 Step System to Increase Profit in Your Business in 4 Weeks
- Department: Finance

Overview
This system emphasizes the importance of understanding the financial side of the business. When equipped with enough knowledge, one would be saved from running a business blindfolded and doom looped. The key concept of the system is to change the mindset of growing your business and convert it into growing your profit and cash flow.
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System Architect: Dawn Fotopulos
Website: www.hiddenprofitacademy.com
Generated as part of the www.BusinessSystemsSummit.com
Video
The Process
Step 1: Review your financial dashboard.
- This step should be done monthly.
- You should have an answer to these three investor questions:
- Are we making any money? If so, how much? Your income statement answers the question about profitability.
- Do we have the cash to pay the bills for 90 days? Your cash flow statement answers this question.
- Are we building wealth or just trying it? Your balance sheet answers this last question.
- If you don’t know the answers to these questions, investors would assume that you don’t know your numbers.
- These three statements are the foundation of your business and these help you in management decision-making.
Income Statement
- This basically shows the amount of your sales money.
- Sales and profit are two different things. What’s left at the end of the day is your net income which is your profit.
- Have a bookkeeper in your team aside from your accountant.
- A bookkeeper will track all your transactions that go in and out of your business.
- A bookkeeper is also responsible for generating this report for you, so you don’t have to know how to do it.
- Having someone else do this task frees up your precious time.
- Do not let an accountant run your business. Instead, focus on their indications and make your decisions from that.
- Your income statement, cash flow statement, and balance statement make up your business financial dashboard.
- Knowing how to read them is like learning how to read a thermometer – it indicates a lot about how you’d go on for the day depending on the weather.
- For every dollar you bring in revenue, you should have at least 15% (15 cents) on your bottom line to have a viable business.
- While 5%-10% still sounds profitable, your business will struggle when faced with hiccups along the way.
- If you’ve uncovered that you’re making below 15%, that is the time that you think of ways to fix that.
- You don’t have to do a lot and you may just do one or two minor shifts in your business to increase your profitability.
Cashflow Statement
- Do you have enough cash to pay the bills in the next 90 days?
- Know your expenses within 90 days.
- Know when your revenue will come in.
- Once you understand your cash flow statement, you can now look back on your previous cash flow statements to be able to predict the future.
Balance Sheet
- This sheet is particularly important to bankers and to investors.
- These people want to know how much debt the business is carrying and how many assets the business has to cover that debt.
- Look through your balance sheet as if you were a banker or an investor.
- When you do so, you can be aware of the risks that are present in your business.
Step 2: Focus on gross margin, not on revenues.
- Recognize that sales are not the most important thing in your business but it’s gross margin.
- Gross margin is your gross profit.
- It is what you get to run your business on.
- It is the third line in your net income statement.
- The way you win as an entrepreneur is by optimizing gross margin, not increasing sales.
- While gross margin and sales may sound like the same thing, these two are different.
- You deduct your cost of goods/cost of sales from your sales and what is left is your gross margin/gross profit which you use to keep your business on.
- How to improve gross margin with your existing customer base with the same level of services you offer?
- Look at your pricing.
Step 3: Increase your gross margin by increasing your prices.
- Pricing doesn’t happen in a vacuum.
- If your closure rate is at 40% (4 out of 10 new clients), you are charging too cheap.
- Charge premium for products/services that require your extra effort.
- Don’t raise prices on everything.
- Increase prices on the products that sell the most.
- Test the market and see if you’re overpricing.
- When your prices are too low, you trap yourself in running “IN” the business, and not “ON” it.
- Make sure that you are adequately compensated for all the time you put into your business.
Step 4: Increase your gross margin by eliminating unprofitable products and services.
- You could also shift the balance by spending less time on less profitable and enormously time-consuming products and services.
- You may resort to de-emphasizing these less profitable products and services.
- For creative people, your business should generate income so you can continue doing it.
- When you start eliminating those unprofitable products/services, it indicates that you’re starting to get good at your small number of products/services.
- By then, you can start to improve your systems, processes, efficiency.
- You become better at solving very specific problems for better specific people that make you a better solution for your prospects and clients.
- Do not assume that more customers and more products/services will generate more profit. It is exactly the opposite.
- Focus on your target audience.
- Focus on what you do best.
- Interview 3-5 of your best customers and ask them why they chose your business over other options?
- This will enlighten you on things you can focus on to increase profitability.
- Pricing cheap may appeal to investors that there is something wrong with your business.
- It’s not what you’re charging – it’s what you’re delivering, and that’s where your pricing should be based on.
Step 5: Increasing growth margin by identifying profitability by the client.
- A client base is an investment portfolio.
- Each client represents a cash flow stream.
- Do not assume that the client that invests big is the most profitable one.
- Large clients who often generate large revenue, are often demanding as they have their own systems and processes, own cycle time, own accounting systems in place.
- With this, you’ll have to make adjustments to suit their systems.
- Ask yourself if it’s worth it to do business with them.
- There are two things to look at when dealing with your client base:
- A third of your clients are at break-even. You’re not generating any profits from them.
- A third of your clients are underwater.
- This means, if you’re running an average business, a full two-thirds of your clients is actually costing you money.
- Look at profitability by the client.
- Look at the productivity of each sale per client.
- Nurture your relationships with clients that produce more gross margin.
- Let go of the clients that you don’t profit from. Provide them with other choices they can consider in replacement of your business with them.
- A profitable customer can generate 25% to 85% more in bottom-line profitability.
- The real profit and cash flow in any business lie in your existing client base, and not from new clients.
- Your existing client base is your apostle. These people love and know your business.
- These people have a huge network of people just like them and they can introduce you to their network.
- This also sends a message to your team members that your business is existing to be a profitable enterprise while enjoying working with clients that you love.
System Notes
- Look for a bookkeeper who is an expert in your industry.
- As you go over your financial dashboard, discuss with your bookkeeper on things you can improve your growth margin and cash flow.
- Create an action plan from that discussion.