--Avoid "cash traps" that cause businesses to fail
--Simplify your record-keeping
--Interpret your financial information accurately
--Plan for payroll and payroll tax filings
--Learn how to value your business
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Clear, concise and eye-opening information.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Small Business Survival Guide, 3rd Ed. (The Small Business Sourcebooks) (Paperback)
Of the many books that profess to help one start and run a business, this book provides eye-opening and thought provoking content that will give the budding entrepreneur a solid grasp on cash management and the realities of traditional accounting. An absolute 'must-read'!
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The single most important business book I have read,
This review is from: The Small Business Survival Guide, 3rd Ed. (The Small Business Sourcebooks) (Paperback)
Robert E. Fleury's The Small Business Survival Guide presents a system for organizing your paperwork and staying on top of the financial condition of your company. The system is at once simple, convenient, and perpetually audit-ready. Best of all, it allows you to accurately understand your cash flow so that you're able to make sound business decisions. Think you can delegate all this to your accountant? Not so. Standard reports don't forecast actual cash requirements, so you see only half the picture. Example: paying down debt doesn't show on a Profit and Loss statement; the statement may show a healthy profit, but the profit may have all gone toward paying off a bank note, so you can't assume that the money is available to spend. Though the system is great, the writing is in places terribly obscure. The book also appears to be victim to a major, half-finished revision. One symptom is that the reader is asked to do a cash analysis for a case study in chapter 10, but cash analysis is not introduced until chapter 13. Revision errors abound, such as several discrepancies between dollar amounts shown in the case study's cancelled checks and those shown in the finished reports and the text explanation. It's extra work for the reader to figure out what the author meant, versus what he said. Ironically, though, arguing with the author can increase the depth of your understanding of the material, so it's not all bad. Nevertheless, let's hope that a future edition will correct these faults. In spite of the writing, the system is so powerful that I'll only deduct one star. Yes, it's that good. (I reviewed the third edition.)
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Scared me silly. . but probably saved my business,
This review is from: The Small Business Survival Guide, 3rd Ed. (The Small Business Sourcebooks) (Paperback)
. . yikes. The "Cycle of Demise" is a phrase that will ring in my ears every time I make a mistake but this book is the first one I have read on the subject that ended up empowering me to write my business proposal . . after reading the whole thing I am anxious to begin and not afraid of the accounting.
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