Sunday, February 28, 2010

Weathering the Economic Storm - Part 3 - Review Costs


In part one of the series on Weathering the Economic Storm, I discussed using dashboards to identify the most important performance measures of your business and keeping them in front of you and your management team.  In part two, I spoke about managing your business to improve profitability.  While you should be doing these things all the time, you should pay even more attention to them during a period of economic distress.  Here in part three, I'll discuss reviewing your costs.  Yes, I know it's another 'Duh', but....

Review Costs


The small business owner should review cost structures and operating efficiencies and make improvement plans.  Start with your product costs.  Look for ways to reduce costs in every phase of operations.  If you can save a few pennies of cost in each operation, you’ll make your whole business more profitable.  Some of the more obvious ways to reduce your product costs are:

Inventory Management:
  • Better manage your inventories
  • Improve your purchasing efficiencies
  • Review your min-max order points to reduce costs
  • Work with vendors to improve delivery lead times
  • Consider bulk purchase contracts to reduce costs
  • Use vendors to warehouse raw material inventories
  • Use just in time deliveries where possible
  • Evaluate employee counts and efficiencies
Review Operating Costs of:
  • Employee workloads and counts
  • Benefits coverage and costs with your insurance agent and make changes as appropriate
  • Your energy usage; on plant equipment, warehouses, offices - everywhere you use it
  • Operating costs of in-plant vehicles
  • Fleet efficiencies; track # of deliveries, % of truck full, speed, idling
Review Costs of Services:
  • Telephone
  • Internet 
  • Waste disposal
  • Electricity, natural gas, water
  • Confidential shredding
  • Temp employee contracts
  • Office equipment service contracts
Financial Costs:
  • Insurance coverages
  • Bank line interest rates
  • Credit card fees
  • Merchant account fees
The lists can go on and on, but I think you get the picture.  With your management team, divide and conquer.  Split the company operating costs in to categories and assign each to the manager most able to attack costs in that part of the company.  Take each category and apply a simple Pareto analysis to the costs and start with the biggest.  Don't be afraid to think outside the box either.  If the only way to decrease fleet costs is to design and implement a fleet safety policy, then do it.  Generally speaking, the safer and more well trained your fleet, the less accidents they'll have.  Fewer accidents mean lower insurance cost, lower deductible costs and lower damage to leased delivery vehicles.  You win all around, plus your employees behave more safely, and that's always a good thing.

Once you've reduced costs as far as possible on the first item, start working on the second item.  On the other hand, if you find that you can save money on an item further down the list by making a simple change, do it.  Take whatever approach works for you and your company.  As those shoe guys say, "Just Do It!"

NEXT:  It's the Cash!

No comments:

Post a Comment