It is essential to know how much money a business will need to meet payments when they are due. A cash flow forecast helps analyse expected receipts and payments and can be used to determine whether there is a need for an overdraft to provide sufficient working capital.
For new businesses, it is particularly useful to be able to determine exactly how much finance will be required to take the business through its early stages and to pinpoint when money will be needed. The cash flow forecast is the key part of any business plan from the point of view of potential funders.
Cash flow forecast
A typical cash flow forecast is split into three sections: receipts (all monies coming into your business from sales, loans, etc); payments (for expenses, loan repayments, drawings, etc); and balances (a monthly balance and a cumulative balance - which should be equal to the cash in your bank account).
A cash flow forecast only shows cash in and out, so non-cash items like depreciation are not included.
In order to prepare a forecast you will need to prepare budgets for sales and expenditure. From these, you can estimate when you expect to receive money for your sales (unless you are in a cash business, like retail, you will provide customers with an invoice and expect to wait some weeks before you are paid). You can also estimate when you might have to pay for the expenses that you incur - for staff wages, rent, insurance, advertising, bank charges, interest, raw materials, etc. You should also include loan repayments, your own drawings or salary and VAT if applicable.