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Numbers Coach Identifies Opportunities for Improved Cash Flow for Environmental Engineers

April 21, 2026 by greenmellen

THE COMPANY

In 1996, Scott Pate launched Sierra Piedmont (“SPI”) with a vision to create a superior environmental consulting, site assessment, compliance, and remediation services firm. Since then, SPI has served a wide range of companies from Fortune 100 businesses to regional firms throughout the United States. SPI’s innovative solutions and advice have helped its clients solve their environmental issues.

SITUATION

Pate and SPI’s management team wanted to realize improved cash flow in their day-to-day operations. However, they were not clear on which financial metrics were truly driving the business and needed more meaningful insights beyond the Profit & Loss statement.

SOLUTION: The Numbers Navigator™

SPI hired the Numbers Coach to provide a comprehensive analysis of its financial operations.The Numbers Coach (“NC”) uses its proprietary Numbers Navigator™ tool set to determine the key financial drivers in SPI’s business model. NC gained a further understanding of SPI’s key business issues through a discovery session with management. NC provided Pate and his team with a comprehensive financial report that identified opportunities to drive more cash flow from the business.

RESULTS

Together, NC and SPI determined realistic and actionable strategies to realize improved cash flow quickly. To achieve this goal, NC provided:

  • A 20+ page financial report detailing key drivers in SPI’s business model,
  • A systematic cash flow forecasting model to provide SPI visibility into its future cash flow,
  • “What if” scenarios analyzed to understand the impact of different financial strategies,
  • Establish guiding principles for disciplined cash flow management process
  • A short-term planning tool to ensure resources and cash were allocated appropriately

“Although it sounds cliché, Numbers Coach and the Numbers Navigator™ truly changed our financial life!” explains Pate.  “The fact is, for many years we had little or no ability to perform high level “what-ifs” or projections of cash effects based on pulling different levers in the company.”

“I don’t know of another program quite like this one,” says Pate. “It doesn’t seem boilerplate or ‘canned.’  I think the most benefit is received by using the Navigator in conjunction with Numbers Coaching services to understand how to apply what is revealed by the report to our financial metrics.”

To learn more about Sierra Piedmont, visit www.sierrapiedmont.com

To learn more about the Numbers Coach financial leadership services, click here

Filed Under: Case Study, Cash Flow Forecasting, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Modeling, Financial Tools, Numbers Coaching Tagged With: cash conversion cycle, cash flow forecast, cash forecasting, cash planning, financial analysis, financial education, financial leadership, financial management

Do You Know What This Financial Warning Sign Could Mean For Your Business?

September 20, 2025 by greenmellen

Owners are often so immersed in the day-to-day details of their businesses that they can’t always see financial warning signs of tough times ahead. If you can’t see the warning signs, you can’t avoid the danger.

At the Numbers Coach, we teach business owners how to spot the warning signs. We closely monitor revenues, receivables and cash flows. These three figures are closely related. Businesses often struggle because of poor cash flow, which usually indicates declining revenues and/or slow collection of business receivables.

12/12 Rate of Change

One of my favorite tools to spot early financial warning signs of potential trouble is a chart called the 12/12 rate of change. During difficult economic conditions, I watch this rate of change closely. If I start to see it slip from 20 percent to 19 or 18 percent, we need to investigate why. If a business continues down that path for too long, the impact will be quite negative.

Let’s take revenues as a simple example. Each month, we calculate total revenues for the past 12 months and we compare it against the same figure for the prior year. Then, we calculate the rate of change from last year to this year. If last year’s 12-month revenue figure is $1 million and this year’s 12-month revenue figure is $1.2 million, we have a 20 percent rate of change. Perhaps you can’t change the revenue figure during tough times, because customers postpone the purchase of your product or service. In that event, it may be possible to lower your expenses and avoid losing money.

The 12/12 rate of change provides a long-term view of your business. It is very useful for spotting changes in a business trend, positive or negative, that have occurred during the past year.

12/12 Rate of Change for Fixed Overhead

To take the analysis a step further, I like to review the 12/12 rate of change for the fixed overhead of a business. It tends to be a leading indicator of future bottom-line results when combined with the 12/12 rate of change for revenues.

Fixed costs are those incurred whether you generate any revenue or not. They include rent and, for many service businesses, staff salaries and benefits.

Let’s imagine a business has a 12/12 rate of change for revenues that shows 5 percent growth. If the 12/12 rate of change for fixed overhead shows 10 percent growth, the business has a problem to address. The business is adding to its fixed overhead at a rate that exceeds top-line revenue growth. That’s a financial warning sign. Because of the long-term nature of the 12/12 rate of change, there is no need for immediate panic. However, if the situation is not remedied, it will pose a threat to the future health of the business.

To investigate further, I look at the trailing 12 months of revenues and fixed overhead expenses – not the rate of change, just gross dollar amounts. Is the revenue increasing or decreasing? We plot points on a graph to develop a clear trend line. We do the same for fixed overhead expenses. If, earlier in the year, you noticed an unhealthy rate of change trend and took corrective action, you can check your progress by reviewing the trailing 12. Using both metrics gives you a better read of the situation you face today.

What type of corrective action can you take? There are several possibilities, including increasing your sales, speeding up your collection cycle, or cutting expenses.  If you are not sure which path is best for your business, contact us for a free consultation.

Filed Under: Cash Flow Planning, Financial Metrics, Key Performance Indicators, Numbers Coach TIPS, Own Your Numbers Tagged With: business financial planning, financial analysis, financial education, financial leadership, financial management, financial metrics, key performance indicators

Money Tips From the “Oracle of Omaha”

May 5, 2025 by Mike Iverson

We all know Warren Buffett, founder and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, is famous for his investing skills. He’s the guy who, at age seven, as the story goes, borrowed a book titled, “One Thousand Ways to Make $1000,” from a public library in his hometown of Omaha, Nebraska. One thousand quickly became many thousands, then millions, and billions.

Now at age 92, Buffett has a net worth of over $90 billion and ranks number six on the Forbes’ 2025 World’s Billionaire List. He still lives in Omaha, and is known as “the Oracle of Omaha,” a down-to-earth guy with memorable and profitable financial tips.

Here are 5 of his best money tips:

  1. Take smart risks. Instead of buying any stock that has gone down in price, buy it only if you believe in the company. Is it a company that has a solid foundation and can handle an unpredictable economy and come back strong? According to Buffett, “risk comes from not knowing what you’re doing.” He says the best way to minimize risk–something he highly recommends doing–is to actively educate yourself about finances. “Invest in as much of yourself as you can, you are by far your biggest asset,” he notes.
  2. Develop positive money habits. Buffett also encourages people to develop positive money habits, no matter what their age or stage of life. Habits such as saving money for a rainy day, and not going into debt. In a 2007 address at the University of Florida, Buffett explained that most behavior is habitual and the “chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken.”
  3. Become debt adverse. Then there are Buffett’s popular financial rules, “Rule 1: never lose money. Rule 2: never forget rule 1.” The point is that it’s hard to bounce back when you are working from a loss. The Oracle of Omaha is debt adverse. He says he would rather make interest work for him than work to pay interest. “If you are smart, you are going to make a lot of money without borrowing.”
  4. Cash is King. Buffett is unwavering in his advice to keep a good stash of cash in business and personal life. It may be tempting to invest all your cash or spend a lot on something because it’s a good deal and a “once in a lifetime opportunity,” but resist the temptation. Not having cash reserves may be your downfall. You never know when you will need it.
  5. View money as a long-term game. Buffett once said, “Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.” Building wealth, paying off debt, making a profit, saving for college and retirement take time and patience. Remain steady and keep your eyes focused on the end game of financial security.

Filed Under: Blog, Money Tips, Own Your Numbers Tagged With: financial education, financial leadership

The Numbers Coach Stitches Together Financial Plan for Fabric Company

April 17, 2025 by greenmellen

big duck canvas logo

The Company
Big Duck Canvas (“BDC”), founded by Shawn Mitchell, provides high quality fabrics, canvas and threads to both wholesale and retail stores. Their services include customer cut-and-sew fabrics and fabric printing, which adds a customer’s design features to a fabric. BDC distributes its products throughout North America and can be found online at www.bigduckcanvas.com

The Situation
The BDC team wanted to enhance their financial management and reporting. They were looking to create a platform to communicate the company’s key performance indicators (“KPIs”) that drive its financial results and gain a better understanding of their numbers. The BDC team wanted a financial “road map” that could guide them as they made financial decisions regarding strategies for growth.

The Solution: Numbers Coaching
Numbers Coach (“NC”) coaching services was an ideal fit for BDC’s needs. NC developed a financial scorecard focusing on financial drivers that gave the team visibility into the profits and cash flow critical to sustained profitable growth. The scorecard offers an “at a glance” view of results. NC also developed a financial model using its Numbers NavigatorR proprietary software, providing the financial road map for the BDC team to see where they were headed with profits and cash flow. The Numbers NavigatorR provides a rolling forecast, allowing the BDC team to make financial and operational decisions towards the achievement of their goals.

The Results
NC pulled together financial and non-financial data to complete a customized scorecard and a financial model. NC met with the BDC team regularly to review results and provide numbers coaching around the financial results. From the monthly meetings, the BDC team could take actions on activities to improve the company’s bottom line results and implement best practices.

Learn more about our Numbers Coach financial leadership services here

Filed Under: Business Planning, Case Study, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Rolling Financial Forecast Tagged With: business financial planning, financial dashboard, financial education, financial leadership, financial management, financial metrics, financial reporting

Want To Stand On Solid Financial Ground?…Follow These 9 Key Strategies

April 28, 2023 by Mike Iverson

Don’t shoot yourself in the financial foot.  Stay clear of common financial mistakes by following these 9 financial concepts.

  • Cash is “king” so keep a handle on your cash by reviewing your cash flow statements, your weekly cash receipts, and weekly or daily cash balance.
  • Understand what would be the right mix of debt vs. equity in your business.  Each business has its own “speed limit” and growing too fast can cause you to pile on debt and thereby, risk to the business.
  • Have a written plan even if it’s a short one page which I prefer.  The lack of a plan is the plan to failure.
  • Know how to read your financial statements, and not just you profit and loss statement but also your balance sheet and cash flow statement.  Otherwise it will be hard for you to make good decisions for the business.
  • Know your costs.  This is especially true to understand at what point of your growth will you need to add more fixed cost to the business in order to go the next level.
  • Keep up good relationships with your bank and vendors.  These are your key stakeholders who can make the difference between success and failure.
  • Missing the “forest” because you are only looking at the “trees”.  You are missing the bigger picture of your business and industry.  Understand the trends and be able to step back from the business to see if you are driving in the right direction.
  • The absence of timely data from operations and finance.  If you are waiting 30 days or more to review this data, its most likely too late for good corrective action and rather you will be more in a reactive mode.
  • Lack of understanding the cause of the results.  Get to know the drivers of your business including your financial drivers.  These metrics will provide insight into the direction you are heading.

Follow these 9 key strategies and you will get the financial results that you want. Here’s to achieving your financial goals!

Mike

Filed Under: Business Growth, Cash Flow Forecasting, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Metrics, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Numbers Coach TIPS, Working Capital Tagged With: business financial planning, financial accounting, financial education, financial management, financial metrics, KPI

3 Tips For Better Business Planning

April 28, 2023 by Mike Iverson

Planning is a critical part of making sure your business is focused and on track.  Here are six important elements for long term planning.

  • Define the outcome.  Each planning session should have a desired outcome in mind that you define at the beginning of it and then circle back at the end and ask yourself the question if you actually addressed it.
  • SMART goals need to be the prepared and documented.  Your management team should come up with what they feel from their perspective the goal or goals should be so that you can see where the common ground is and where your team is thinking the business should go.
  • Have a specific written agenda prepared ahead of any planning session and stick to it.  Don’t let meetings drag on without keeping people on time which means on track.

Follow these 3 guidelines for your next business planning session and create a better road map to your success!

Mike

Filed Under: Business Growth, Cash Flow Forecasting, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Numbers Coach TIPS, Rolling Cash Flow Forecast, Rolling Financial Forecast Tagged With: business financial planning, financial education, financial habits, financial leadership, financial management

Do You Have A Red Flag In Your Business?

April 26, 2023 by Mike Iverson

Small emerging growth companies often have limited resources and limited staff performing critical functions in accounting/finance.  Below is a list of tips that might indicate a closer look at your records for accuracy or the opportunity for fraud.

  • A spike in payroll expense without a reasonable explanation
  • Accounts receivable is growing but your sales are flat or down
  • Vendors who are being paid but you are not familiar with them
  • Human Resource records are minimal or non-existent for employee pay changes
  • Expense actual vs. budget shows a variance that is not reasonably explained
  • Prepaid expenses are growing consistently month to month but most expenses are flat or down in your income statement

I read an article recently where the same accountant who posted and deposited customer receipts had embezzled $126,000.  How?

The employee deposited customer checks to their ATM which is not always checked thoroughly the banking system.  The accountant then marked the corresponding invoice as “paid” and used the subsequent checks that came in for newer invoices.  This process could only go on for so long because the accounts receivable would grow from a larger pool of unpaid invoices.  Just as the accountant was about to leave the job, the embezzlement was discovered.

It was discovered by auditors checking on the cycle of a paid invoice; from receipt of check, to posting payment to the invoice, to depositing the check at the bank.  Some invoices shown as “paid” did not have a corresponding deposit.  Getting a copy of the deposited check from the customer revealed a different account number from the company’s account and discovered it was a personal account of the employee.

Here’s to a system of processes and activities that represents the phrase “trust but verify” to help you mitigate any circumstances where the health of your business is compromised!

Mike

Filed Under: Business Growth, Business Planning, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Metrics, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Numbers Coach TIPS Tagged With: business financial planning, financial dashboard, financial education, financial metrics, financial reporting, key performance indicators, KPI

Buffet’s Advice for Financial Success

February 26, 2023 by Mike Iverson

The “Oracle of Omaha” has created an impressive following of people and his investing results have proven the test of time.  Below are 10 simple bits of wisdom that I believe are timeless:

Never lose money.  Buffet’s rule # 1 is to not lose money.  And his rule #2 is to remember rule #1.  Keep in mind if you lose 50% of your investment, then it takes 100% return to get back to even.

Get high value for low price.  What he means is value is what you pay for.  Make sure that you are paying the right price for the value in the product, business or investment that you are buying.

Build healthy money habits.  Habits are what drive our behavior.  It’s been said that finance is 80% behavior and 20% math.  If we don’t change poor behaviors with our wallet then we can’t expect to find success with money or building a business.

Avoid debt and, more specifically, avoid credit card debt.  Credit card interest rates can be as high as 18% and more.  If you have to roll over your credit card balance regularly, then you can’t afford spending on it.  In effect, you are trading your future for your present satisfaction.

Keep cash on hand.  Come up with what your minimum cash balance needs to be.  Is it 3 months or 6 months of expenses?  “Cash is to a business as oxygen is to an individual: Never think about it when it is present, the only thing in mind when it is absent,” said Buffet.

Invest in yourself.  Your biggest income producing asset is yourself.  Improve your skills to make yourself more valuable to the market.  Unlike other assets and investments, “Nobody can tax it away and they can’t steal it away,” said Buffet.

Learn about how to manage money as a part of the investment in yourself.  Not everyone enjoys this subject, however, there are simple methods to follow that help you win with money.  Spend less than you make. . . save 15% into a low cost index mutual fund. . . it’s not how much you make, it’s how much you decide to spend.

Trust a low cost index fund. Expenses matter when it comes to returns on your investments.  Consistently adding to your investments each month or quarter exercises an important “money muscle.”

Give back on a regular basis.  Giving of our “time, talents, and treasure” to our community and nonprofits is a natural law of human nature where we want to help others in need.  Giving produces psychic benefits for the giver and it helps society move forward.

Invest for the long term.  Investing not only with dollars but in ourselves is a long term game.  Building true financial security takes time.  Buffet said, “someone’s sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”

Together these pieces of advice can help take us on the journey to financial security.  The advice is simple and timeless.

Here’s to reaching your financial goals! Mike

Filed Under: Cash Flow Planning, Financial Modeling, Numbers Coach TIPS Tagged With: business finances, business financial planning, financial education, financial freedom, financial habits, financial management, personal financial planning, success habits, traits of success

Financial Independence: Another Name For Freedom

February 17, 2023 by Mike Iverson

I have been an avid reader of personal finance for over 35 years.  Maybe because of my business finance background or maybe it is something else, but it just seems to resonate with me. 

 

I have devoured books and podcasts about financial independence because I wanted to have the freedom to do the work I enjoy on my time. 

After my triplet girls were born, I became focused on this goal.  A friend of mine told me that in a “blink of an eye” our girls would be grown and away from home.  That seemed crazy after swaddling them in their baby blankets, but wow…. was my friend right!  It has gone fast, but I took his advice and focused on financial independence.

The equation I arrived at to define this freedom is: “Financial freedom” = [passive income + earned income from work I love to do] > my living expenses.

If I solved this equation, then the time freedom that I wanted would be at hand.  I focused on three factors to solve this equation.

  1. Building passive income from investments
  2. Maintain a reasonable standard of living
  3. Earn money doing work that I enjoyed

Generate passive income.   For me this means investments that generate dividends, interest, or capital gains from stocks and bonds.  I am comfortable with investing in the stock market using a simple approach with index mutual fund investments.  Others have invested in real estate with collecting rents or other assets that generate income without the need for labor hours.  Whatever works best for you and your risk profile is the right choice.  The idea is to create income streams that don’t require your labor effort (or at least a minimal amount).

Keep your living costs reasonable.  It was so easy for me and my family to inflate our lifestyle when the kids came along.  My wife and I worked hard for many years and felt the desire to have certain things that we could afford, and were “nice to have”, but not “gotta have.”  Being able to defer some spending that really was not going to make any difference to us in the long run made sense.  We lived below our means, but never felt deprived.  Simple family experiences were cherished versus the nice electronic gadgets that would not buy me my freedom.

Earn money doing work you enjoy.  So often I would hear friends or colleagues complain about their jobs, but they would not change.  Why?  Not always sure, but some may have felt stuck given lifestyle choices or fear of the unknown at the next business.  I didn’t always enjoy my work at times, but my attitude was one that I always took away some learning.  How could each new job or position help me get closer to financial independence and at the same time enjoy the journey?

Financial independence or freedom, whichever rings true to you, is both a mindset and a math equation.  If I had the right mindset and I understood the math behind it, then the time freedom with my family would be solved.  Are you ready for take your time back?  Let me know if I can help you.

Cheers to your freedom!
Mike

Filed Under: Business Growth, Business Planning, Cash Flow Forecasting, Financial Modeling, Human Resources, Numbers Coach TIPS, Own Your Numbers, Personal Development Tagged With: financial education, financial independence, financial independence retire early, FIRE, life style business, personal finances, personal financial planning

Scaling Up: “My Formula for Retirement”

September 1, 2021 by greenmellen

Do you need a clear path to make sure you have enough money to retire? In this “Scaling Up” podcast, Numbers Coach Mike Iverson share his formula for retirement:

Filed Under: Human Resources, Key Performance Indicators, Own Your Numbers, Personal Development, Podcast, Tax Planning Tagged With: financial education, financial freedom, financial habits, financial independence, financial independence retire early, financial leadership, personal development, personal finances, personal financial planning

Numbers Coach Eases the Pain of Financial Management for Medical Practice

March 23, 2021 by greenmellen

The Company

Pain Care, LLC (formerly Georgia Pain and Spine Care) is a leading pain management medical services firm that provides comprehensive solutions to help restore each patient to their original lifestyle. The company uses progressive approaches to pain management with education, counseling, and minimally invasive procedures. Their mission is to relieve pain, increase productivity, and improve the quality of life for its patients using technologically advanced treatment regimens through its various metro Atlanta offices.

Situation

In 2020, the Pain Care team wanted to enhance their financial management and reporting capabilities. They wanted to create a platform to communicate the company’s key performance indicators (“KPI”) and help educate its key team members on what drives its company’s financial results. In addition, the Pain Care team wanted a “road map” that could guide them as they made financial decisions impacting strategies for growth.

Solution:  Numbers Coach Leadership and Numbers Navigator™ Services

The Numbers Coach (“NC”) financial leadership services were an ideal fit for developing Pain Care’s performance metrics. NC developed a financial scorecard to focus on the financial measurements that drive company profits and cash flow critical to sustained profitable growth. The scorecard offers an “at a glance” view of results. NC developed a financial model from its proprietary software, the Numbers Navigator™ . The software provides a road map for the Pain Care team to see where they are headed with profits and cash flow. The software’s rolling financial forecast provides the Pain Care team with a tool to make critical decisions “on the go” to achieve their desired results.

Results

NC pulled together financial and non-financial data to complete a scorecard and financial model. Each month NC meets with the Pain Care team to methodically review results and provide the input and analysis from NC’s Numbers Navigator™ financial software. From the monthly financial coaching meetings, the Pain Care team can take actions on activities that improve the company’s bottom line results.

For more information on Pain Care, LLC visit www.georgiapaincare.com

To learn more about the Numbers Coach financial leadership services, click here

“Mike has become an important part of our team.  His understanding of financial processes, cash flow, and approach to educating us on our results gives our team the right tools to help us understand how to navigate our finances successfully and stay focused on our financial goals.”  

Dr. Charles Brownlow, Founder / Medical Director

Filed Under: Business Growth, Business Planning, Case Study, Cash Flow Planning, Financial Metrics, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators Tagged With: business financial planning, business strategic planning, business strategy, company strategy, financial dashboard, financial education, financial management, financial metrics, key performance indicators, KPI

An Environmental Services Firm Uses The Numbers Coach to Achieve Financial Results

March 23, 2021 by greenmellen

The Company

Sustainable Investment Group (“SIG”), founded by Charlie Cichetti and Jason Kiefer, provides sustainability services to commercial property owners.  SIG provides high quality services for LEED certification with commercial buildings.  A LEED certified building ensures the property uses sustainable activities to help protect our environment.  SIG offers LEED training, consulting, and engineering services domestically and internationally.  SIG has become an industry leader and expert in LEED practices.

Situation

In 2020 the SIG team wanted to enhance their financial management and reporting.  They were looking to create a platform to communicate the company’s key performance indicators (“KPI”) that drive its financial results.  In addition, the SIG team wanted a “road map” that could guide them as they made financial decisions impacting strategies for growth.

Solution: The Numbers Coach Leadership Service

The Numbers Coach (“NC”) financial leadership services were an ideal fit for developing SIG’s performance metrics.  NC developed a financial scorecard focusing financial drivers that give the team visibility into the profits and cash flow critical to sustained profitable growth.  The scorecard offers an “at a glance” view of results.  NC developed a financial model from its proprietary software the Numbers NavigatorTM that provides the road map for the SIG team to see where they were headed with profits and cash flow.  The model provides a rolling forecast during the year so that SIG team could make financial and operational decisions “on the go” to achieve their goals.

Results

NC pulled together financial and non-financial data to complete a customized scorecard and financial model.  Each month NC meets with the SIG team to methodically review results and provide the input and analysis from the Numbers NavigatorTM financial software.  Each monthly financial coaching meeting, the SIG team can take actions on activities that improve the company’s bottom line results.

For more information on Sustainable Investment Group visit www.sigearth.com

To learn more about the Numbers Coach financial leadership services, click here

“Mike has been an important part of our team.  His understanding of financial processes, cash flow, and how to explain our results gives our team the right tools to navigate our finances successfully and stay focused on our financial goals.”  

– Charlie Cichetti

Filed Under: Business Growth, Business Planning, Case Study, Financial Metrics, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Rolling Financial Forecast Tagged With: business coaching, business financial planning, coaching executives, financial analysis, financial education, financial habits, financial leadership, financial management, leadership coaches, leadership coaching, numbers coach

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