When

Thursday, November 29, 2018 from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM EST
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Sponsored by:


Where

SCORE Office 
100 Middle Street
East Tower, 2nd Floor
Portland, ME 04101
 

 
Driving Directions 

Contact

Nancy Strojny 
SCORE Portland Maine 
207-772-1147 
scoremaine@gmail.com 
 

Your Business--Your Money: Financial Literacy

This Workshop is FREE and sponsored by Infinity Federal Credit Union. Preregistration is required.

Understanding financial statements is essential to understanding how well your business is doing. If you are not monitoring, and understanding, your financial statements on a regular basis, you are not managing your business.

Why Financial Literacy is Essential to Your Success

Your business plan will need a set of detailed financial projections; potential lenders or investors will insist upon it. This workshop provides the financial grounding you need to later develop the financial projections required in your business plan. 

In this workshop you will learn about the three key financial statements:

The Balance Sheet

The balance sheet measures the long term health of the organization. Is your business getting stronger over time, or weaker? Are you monitoring your balance sheet for developing cash flow problems? Are you alert to indications of customer dissatisfaction? If not, you could be missing early signs of potential trouble.

The Income Statement (P&L, operating statement, earnings report, etc.) 

The income statement monitors your business’s profitability and operating performance period over period. The income statement helps you determine if you are operating efficiently, relying on too much or too little on general and administrative support (overhead) or potentially underpricing the market. In effect, the P&L helps you measure your overall effectiveness as a manager.

The Statement of Cash Flows

 The statement of cash flows can be the most important of the financial statements, particularly at start up, expansion or market contraction. The cash flow statement reconciles the balance sheet and the income statement to project available cash going forward. Cash – not profits – pays the bills. Do your company a favor, monitor your cash on a recurring basis.