Cash Flow Management Vs. Checkbook Management
by John Gross
Are you running your business budget like a household checkbook—spending what’s left after the bills are paid? That’s “checkbook management,” and it might feel fine because that’s how many of us learned to handle money at home.
In a strong, steady economy, checkbook management might work. But when growth slows or surprises hit—lost sales, surprise expenses—it can drain your cash overnight and leave you scrambling.
Cash flow management prevents nasty surprises. It means actively planning, tracking, and controlling when money comes in and goes out so you can always pay bills, yourself, and fuel growth.
The core cash flow management tool is a cash flow analysis:
1. Break down all income and expenses by week or month.
2. Compare what you expected to what actually happened—watching for cash shortfalls, slow-paying customers, or bloated spending.
3. Act on what you learn to speed up collections, trim costs, adjust payment terms, and build cash reserves.
Don’t hide your cash health in the background—add it to your scorecard so you see it every week and act fast when things drift.
No business can dodge every curve ball—“stuff” happens. But strong cash flow management means you’re ready for it. Even better, cash reserves let you pounce when others stumble—buying inventory cheap, hiring talent, or grabbing market share.
Cash won’t fix every problem, but it solves a lot more than a balanced checkbook ever will.
PS. A great resource for learning more about cash flow management is “Profit First” by Mike Michalowicz.
John Gross is an EOS Implementer who helps small and mid-size businesses stop fighting fires & start growing by helping them take control. You can contact John at John@DrivingChangeInc.com or call 636.667.0579.