How to Extend DPO Without Damaging Supplier Relationships
Extending your days payable outstanding (DPO) means keeping cash in your business for longer by taking more time to pay suppliers – but doing it badly can cost you the…
Extending your days payable outstanding (DPO) means keeping cash in your business for longer by taking more time to pay suppliers – but doing it badly can cost you the…
The accounts receivable turnover ratio tells you how many times per year your business collects its average outstanding receivables – in plain terms, how efficiently you are turning invoices into…
Yes – debtor days and days sales outstanding (DSO) are essentially the same metric, measuring the average number of days it takes your customers to pay you after you invoice…
Reducing your DSO starts with invoicing the same day you deliver, then systematically removing every friction point between your invoice and your customer’s payment. For UK SMEs, late payment is…
A good cash conversion cycle is one that falls within a reasonable range of your industry average and is stable or improving over time – there is no single number…
Working capital is the difference between your current assets and current liabilities at a specific point in time, while cash flow is the movement of money into and out of…
The cash conversion cycle (CCC) measures how many days it takes your business to turn the money you spend on stock and operations back into cash in your bank account.…
Net working capital is your current assets minus your current liabilities – it tells you how much short-term financial cushion your business actually has after accounting for what you owe.…
The working capital ratio (also called the current ratio) measures whether your business has enough short-term assets to cover its short-term liabilities – in plain terms, whether you can pay…
The cash conversion cycle (CCC) measures the number of days it takes your business to convert its investment in stock and other resources into actual cash from sales. Think of…
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified accountant or financial adviser for guidance specific to your business.