REL in the press
CFO, No Time to Lose: The 2008 Working Capital Survey - Beware your survival instincts: they may dampen corporate performance more than you might expect.
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Well-managed businesses measure and track performance on the metrics that matter most. A carefully selected set of performance metrics translates the business strategy into tangible objectives. By measuring your business performance, you can gauge improvement and find out whether your efforts are moving the business closer to its objectives.
REL uses a range of metrics to establish a baseline of current performance, benchmarking your organization against your peer group, sector average or an internal measure. Some key metrics include:
BPDSO is the value that achieved if all customers paid exactly to the agreed upon payment terms. Typically a business will offer more than one payment term to its customers and therefore the BPDSO takes the different payment terms offered into consideration by using a weighted average based on value of sales/revenue by payment term. This measure is often called the theoretical days sales outstanding (DSO) because in reality it is almost impossible to actually achieve as there will always be customers who pay late and other external factors hindering receipt of payments to term (e.g. banking delays, post service delays, etc.).
CCE looks at how efficient companies are at generating free cash flow from operations, or operating cash flow from sales revenues - how much free cash flow makes the journey through the operating cost structure of a company. While CCE is a simple metric to derive using it can provide powerful insights into the overall health of an organisation's cash-generation capabilities.
DIO is financial and operational measure, which expresses the value of inventory in days of cost of goods sold. It represents how much inventory an organisation has tied up across its supply chain or more simply - how long it takes to convert inventory into sales. This measure can be aggregated for all inventories or broken down into days of raw material, work in progress and finished goods. This measure is normally produced monthly.
DPO is a relative measure of a business' outstanding payment liability. DPO measures the level of outstanding payments at the end of a month expressed in terms of the number of days payments represented by the creditor balance, i.e. the number of day's worth of payments still outstanding. The metric is useful as it gives an indicator over time of what payment terms are being accepted and complied with within a company.
DSO is a relative measure of a business' debtor exposure. It measures the level of outstanding sales/revenue at the end of a month expressed in terms of the number of days sales/revenue represented by the balance of the accounts receivables (i.e., the number of days worth of sales/revenue still outstanding). This measure is typically represented as a monthly trend and is important as the increase in the gap between DSO and BPDSO can be an early sign of deficiencies in the credit and collections process. When determining if the DSO of a company represents good performance, it should be compared to the company's BPDSO. BPDSO is important as a reference point against which to compare a company's DSO performance. A DSO of 92 may initially appear to be very high, but if the company's BPDSO is 88, then a DSO of 92 represents a good performance.
DWC is a measure of the cash conversion cycle that gives insight about the underlying health of a business. It is a key metric because it measures the average number of days of tied up working capital in the operating cycle. If DWC is trending upwards over time then it will have a negative financial impact on overall company profit.
Compares the ratio of forecast error to actual sales and is expressed in percentage terms. It shows the accuracy of the sales forecast compared to actual sales within a period of time, normally a month. Forecast accuracy typically shows better results when we are predicting demand for the next weeks as opposed to the next months, or where we aggregate the measure for a group of items. The more accurate the forecast, the easier it is to manage inventory levels across the supply chain.
ROCE is a ratio that indicates the efficiency and profitability of a company's capital investments. The measure is important as ROCE ratio should always be higher than the rate at which the company borrows, otherwise any increase in borrowing will reduce shareholders' earnings.
SVA is a value-based performance measure of a company's worth to shareholders. The basic calculation is net operating profit after tax (NOPAT) minus the cost of capital from the issuance of debt and equity, based on the company's weighted average cost of capital. All working capital improvements help improve SVA.
Contact us today for a complimentary cash flow assessment and take the first step toward releasing more cash from your operations.
The outcome was much more than we expected. In fact, it was fantastic. This was a big, urgent project and expectations were met. We knew what we wanted, and it was delivered, in terms of cash, structural improvements and new, enhanced processes and procedures.
- KPN
CFO, No Time to Lose: The 2008 Working Capital Survey - Beware your survival instincts: they may dampen corporate performance more than you might expect.