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Budget for Success 6

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RichGeoffroy

Materials
Apr 30, 2004
64


Before you even consider starting your own engineering practice, you have to have some idea of how much it’s going to cost for you to run the business --- never mind trying to make a profit. One of the first things you have to do is to prepare a budget.

A budget is nothing more than a financial plan. It’s something you need to do to help you to stay out of trouble, and to help you to provide for contingencies when financial trouble hits --- and it will.

Here is a basic list of accounts for a financial plan:

Income

• Gross Revenue
Gross receipts --- actual amount of cash and checks received.

• Billed Expenses
Expenses billed to clients will be part of the gross receipts and must be subtracted from income. The fees charged by laboratories, outside consultants, or job-shoppers used on projects should be included in this category, as they are expenses billed to clients and not income attributable to your labor.

• Net Revenue
Gross Revenue less Billed Expenses yields Net Revenue, the gross income derived from your client labor.

Expenses

• Client Labor
Total sum of salary by you and/or your employees attributed to billable hours. Note that the ratio of Net Revenue to Client Labor is the mark-up used to establish your consulting rate.

• General Overhead Labor
All other non-billable labor. It may be convenient to break this down into other categories, such as marketing labor, proposal labor, sales labor, and accounts receivable. This may help monitor your efforts and help you to identify problem areas.

• Holiday, Vacation, & Sick Time
An easily overlooked category of time because it’s time not-worked, but it must be considered in your overall budget.

• Recruiting Expenses
The expenses associated with finding, hiring, and potentially moving an individual to your location for employment. This item may not be important to the small one-man consulting office, but can be a considerable expense for any firm who hires employees.

• Payroll Related Expenses
All those expenses related to employees, such as medical insurance, unemployment insurance, disability insurance, long-term care insurance, educational expenses, etc.

• Retirement Plan Contribution
This is also a payroll-related expense, but it requires special attention. You must plan ahead for your future.

• Advertising Expense
The expenses, other than labor, incurred in promoting and advertising your services to prospective clients.

• Sales Expense
The expenses, other than labor, incurred in attempting to secure a project --- whether you get it or not.

• Marketing Expense
The expenses, other than labor, incurred in general marketing of your business, like attending professional meetings, developing standards, public speaking, or taking part in governmental task groups, etc.

• Office Expense
All those expenses incurred in running an office, i.e., office supplies and office equipment --- only that which is not required to be depreciated.

• Automobile Expense
The costs associated with operating and maintaining a vehicle for the company, such as gas, oil, maintenance, and insurance --- not the cost of the vehicle, however.

• Telephone Expense
The cost associated with installing and maintaining your phone system, including equipment, lines, monthly charges, etc. Also, internet charges can be included in this category.

• Postage
All charges associated with postage, including stamps, express mail, and Federal Express and UPS packages.

• Utilities
Often overlooked as expenses to the home office, these are true expenses to all offices. They include charges for heat & air conditioning, electricity, water, gas, sewer, etc.

• Rent
Rent paid for office, lab, shop, or storage space.

• Insurance
Insurance coverage other than those covered under Employee-Related Expenses and Automobile Expense, like Errors and Omissions insurance, General Liability Insurance, etc.

• Maintenance Expense
Like it or not, things will breakdown and need repair. The office will require routine cleaning and maintenance

• Library Expense
The costs associated with maintaining your professional magazine subscriptions, technical books, literature searches, and library fees.

• Dues & Fees
Membership fees for professional societies and the entrance fees into exhibits and symposia.

• Professional Services
Fees associated with services rendered by lawyers, accountants, and other professionals necessary to maintain the business.

• Contributions
Actual out-of-pocket contributions to charitable fund raisers. Unfortunately, your time is not considered a contribution expense.

• Interest and Service Charges
Interest income or expense, or service charges on bank accounts, loans, credit cards, revolving accounts, etc.

• Miscellaneous Tax & Fees
There will be other taxes and fees that don’t fit into any of the above-stipulated accounts, such as business registrations fees, local property taxes, etc.

• Depreciation
Unfortunately your business will require equipment (vehicles, computers, desks, office furnishing, etc.) which will be an expense to the business, but in the eyes of the taxman, the items cannot be “expensed” as the costs are incurred --- they must be “depreciated”. That is, a portion of their costs is incurred as an expense over several years, depending on the expected lifetime of the equipment. This account can be very large as it carries over from year to year. During an expanding business cycle purchasing depreciable capital equipment can be a real drain on cash, however, when business is declining and purchases stop or decrease to a trickle, the depreciation expense carry-over can be a lifeline for cash flow.

Earnings

• Earnings Before Taxes
Subtracting the sum of the expenses from the Net Revenue will yield the Gross Profit, or Earnings Before Taxes.

• Federal, State & Local Taxes
When you finally make a profit at your business, you’ll find that you’ll have to give a major chunk of it to the local, state and federal governments

• Net Profit
Finally, whatever is left over is PROFIT.

Run through this budget and apply your best estimates to these costs. Try several different income scenarios like averaging 1 day/week, 2 days/week, and 4 days/week to see what happens if things are slower or busier that you expected. Remember some of your costs will increase as your income increases, while others may decline. Attempt scenarios using a different mark-up structure.

When you really start to get a feel for this budgeting process, try doing it on spreadsheet on a monthly basis. Unless you have projects in-hand on the day you start your practice, your client time will be ZERO for the first three to six months. You’ll see how hard it will be to get to even your worst-case annual scenario. And all that red ink at the bottom of the page where it says Net Profit, that’s all of the money that will have to come from your savings in order to stay afloat.

The reality is that you need a sufficient amount of cash to finance you and your business before the venture can start paying off. The same will be true when business turns down.

In order to survive you need to understand the financial aspects of your practice, and you must continually monitor the financial well-being of your business, with contingencies for slow times as well as busy times. The best way to plan for these contingencies is through budgeting.




Rich Geoffroy
Polymer Services Group
POLYSERV@aol.com
 
Awesome. I don't suppose you have any spreadsheets that you would share? Thanks again for sharing the wisdom.
 
Pretty god summary Rich.
A budget is a plan and a good way to think things trough. After that all the things you have listed are a lot of work. I would reccomend hiring a book-keeper or accountant. In the time you free up for yourself you should be able to make more money as an engineer that the cost of the accountant. Lots of accountants handle the books for small businesses.
 
There is one other expense that it is vital to include; provision for bad debt.

However unpalatable this may seem, some of the time you work for nothing or provide goods and services for free.

Coupled with this, and even assuming that the budget is acurate, a cash flow forecast, profit and loss account and a break even analysis are vital.

Far too many good businesses are destroyed through poor cash flow than anything else.

Most important to this is a good understanding for how long between billing and paying. You may quote 30days and discover that the actual index in your industry or region is 57days. This alone could end your business.



JMW
Eng-Tips: Pro bono publico, by engineers, for engineers.

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
 
Your overhead costs alone could be tens of thousands per year.

Insurance will be 3-5% of gross billings for E&O coverage.

Phone will be $100 per month minimum for landlines plus cell.

Internet access will be another few hundred a year.

Property insurance can be $500 or so depending on coverage.

Worker’s compensation will be around 0.25% of salary costs. (Canadian rates anyway)

Recruitment will be a minimum of several hundred dollars per position; if relocation is included it can be tens of thousands to move someone.

Retirement expenses can also be significant. Here in Canada we pay 5% of the first 40,000 or so into the Canada Pension Plan (employees also pay 5%) in addition to this would be any employer paid private plan.

Automobile. Count on $USD 0.30 per mile

Rent depending on location and market factors $2-10 per square foot per year and a small two-person office with a meeting and reception area can be 1,000 sq ft. Add 200-400 sq ft per person above that, Don’t forget storage space. You will soon have field equipment and project records to store for a while.

Cheep storage can be had by buying a semi trailer. Older trailers can be had for a couple thousand and if you have a place to put one they hold a lot of stuff.

Professional fees are relatively low in the US (I have seen them at $80 to 100 ever two years) By contrast these can be $CDN 300 per province per year plus that much again for the corporate permit to practice. I am registered in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and pay over $CDN 1,000 in professional fees.

In addition to these fees you can expect industry association fees to be significant. Membership in a couple of these is important for educational purposes and networking.

Depreciation expenses will be 20 to 30% of capital costs. In Canada this is on a declining balance method. (First year buy something for 1000 deduct one half of the allowance say 30% for a deduction of 150. The next year you deduct 30% of the remaining $850 and so on).

Depreciation is not an out of pocket expense. You are out of pocket when you buy the equipment and only deduct the depreciation for tax calculations.

My rule of thumb in buying capital equipment is that I have to be able to use it on a job that will generate enough revenue to pay for it. For example I bought a wide format plotter for $5,000. I did not buy this until I had a design job that paid me that much. Until then I rented equipment, used printing services etc.

The only exceptions to this were equipment that I used a lot on smaller jobs (transit level for example or was absolutely necessary i.e. computer).

Even with clients in hand you better be able to survive for 6 months before you collect the first income. In month one you will be negotiating the finer points of the contract. In month two you will actually start doing some work. You will bill for this in month three and might not collect for 60 or more days. I have had clients hold invoices for 4 to 6 months because someone in their accounting department had questions on $50 disbursements. I have also seen $200,000 invoices held up because of a box of donuts on an expense sheet.

A good practice is to submit two invoices. The first is for the fixed portion of the contract. This will normally be the largest part of the payment and should be the most straight forward and should not generate any questions. Put the disbursements on a separate invoice because sooner or later some clerk in the accounting department of your client will get excited over a minor item and hold payment.

If the client does not want two invoices submit the first couple without disbursements. This should generate a cash cushion so when the disbursements raise questions you can survive for the extra 30 days it takes to pay.




Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng

Construction Project Management
From conception to completion
 
Your client usually has the same cash flow problems you do.

One key area not to neglect when you supply a product or servcie is the little finishing up bits; documentation, manuals, drawings and the like.

Once he has your product or service he will want to hang on to "your" cash as long as he can and if he can find any loophole, he will use it.

JMW
Eng-Tips: Pro bono publico, by engineers, for engineers.

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
 
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