Internal Controls for Small Businesses

‘Internal controls’ – accountants love to throw the phrase around and tell you just how important it is to have them.  They’ll tell you that without them your financial information will be inaccurate, your accounting practices inefficient, and in all likelihood your employees will steal from you. Hearing this may worry you, and in all honesty, it should. Accountants don’t just say these things to scare you. In our experience, it is absolutely the truth.

Accordingly, the accounting profession will gladly help you create procedures to reduce your risk. One of the most basic of these procedures is to make sure that you have one person create invoices for customers, another collects payments and creates deposits, another person take them to the bank, and a third person reconcile the accounts. By using this structure, each person’s work is verified by another person, which drastically reduces the likelihood of errors or theft. The same process works for vendor payments: you can have one person enter invoices, another person processes the payments, and yet another approves the payments.

Easy, right? Actually, the methods are quite simple. However, if you own or manage a business with less than five or six people in just your accounting department, this setup is all but useless. Many, if not most of you reading this have one or less dedicated accounting staff, much less an entire dedicated team. Fortunately, a very large segment of the accounting profession is dedicated to small and medium sized business that have been developing processes that can be tailored to your needs.

Let’s take the first example, which involves invoicing clients, collecting payments, and getting their payments into the bank. The reason the profession tries to separate these duties is that, in theory, an unscrupulous employee could create an invoice, receive the payment, then route the funds to his or her accounts rather than the business. Then, the invoice is deleted from the system, and no one ever notices.

For a small business, the combination of technology and management and owner oversight can effectively combat this scenario. Most modern accounting software packages can create warnings when an invoice number is missing or out of sequence. There are also several solutions available for making deposits. First, you can request your customers pay you electronically using a credit card or an online service provider. Additionally, you can use an electronic check reader from your bank to electronically deposit all checks immediately upon receipt, rather than taking any of them to the bank. For those in cash heavy industries, many banks will provide you with on-site lockboxes in which the cash can be immediately inserted and deposited. The bank then makes this cash available to you and will periodically come by to pick up the funds from your location.

The final step involves oversight from either the owner, a supervisor, a third party, or a combination of those parties. Any one of those individuals must be able to check the system warnings for invoice numbers that are out of sequence. They can then review the accounts receivable aging reports to confirm customer balances. Finally, the bank account should be reconciled by one of these individuals. By utilizing this streamlined process, a small business or medium size business can protect itself with the same policies and procedures as a large accounting department.

One very important idea should be sticking out to you while reading this; the internal control system described above still requires the people (or person) in your organization to do their job honestly and effectively. That is why the last step – oversight – is crucial to the power of the control system. Without it, people can simply skip steps or worse, work together to circumvent the controls.

That means the supervisor must be someone that understands what the end result should be. In this example, he or she should be able to quickly scan an invoice listing noting anything out of sequence. This person should also be able to trace a customer’s transaction from the invoice to collecting payment and depositing it into the bank. It should also be someone that does not have an incentive to circumvent the system.

The owner is a somewhat obvious choice for the supervisor role. The trade-off for the owner performing this duty is the loss of time and energy available to grow the business. If, however, it is not in the business’ best interest for the owner to supervise this duty, another person must be chosen. This could be a separate executive level employee within the organization. An outside party such as your external CPA could step in to perform this function at the end of each month as he or she works with you and your accounting staff to close the books.

There is a definite need for strong internal controls for businesses of all sizes. We have only explored an accounts receivable and deposits scenario today, but we will continue to explore different examples in the future. All businesses – big and small – need effective internal controls. Continue checking in with us, as we’ll continue providing real life solutions custom tailored for small and medium businesses.

SBA (7a) Loans: How they Work and What you Need to Know

Need a Loan for Your Business? As a company grows, inevitably it will need to partner with a bank to provide long-term financing and additional working capital. Over the years, I have been involved with many clients that struggle to get traditional financing. The response that my clients usually get upon applying for credit is “we like the business model, but it is just ‘not’ the right fit for the bank.” After applying to five different banks, it is quite possible to receive five different reasons for not being a good fit. Maybe it was a ratio, type of industry, or the type of collateral that triggered the rejection. Whatever it may be, the bank says to come back in six months and we can look at it again; the only problem is that many small businesses might not have six months to wait and reapply.

There is a solution for companies that are operating at a profit but don’t have a significant amount of equity built up. Recently, I have worked with a client that is being forced out of bank. While they are current on the payment terms for loans outstanding at his bank, the business incurred some significant losses in 2013 due to a change in the business model that would allow the company to make more money in the future. The company funded the losses by a loan provided by a minority investor. Despite the fact that the minority investor with deep pockets guaranteed the loan, the bank downgraded the loan internally, froze the line of credit, and required the owners to pay down the line of credit by 40%. From that point, the bank was unsure of its next step, since the client’s company started making money in 2014 and is doing fantastic in 2015. So my client and I kept meeting with his banker on a quarterly basis for a quarterly renewal/extension of the loan. Each meeting they just nicely asked for us to pay down the line of credit more and more to squeeze as much cash out of the company as possible. The main problem with that was he was growing and his inventory and receivables were going up which required more cash.

No problem, right? Just go down the street to a new bank and get the better treatment that your company deserves. The only problem with my client was he did not fit in the “traditional lending” platform primarily for not having two full years of net income. For most banks, if you’re not in the black for two years it is difficult to pass the loan committee review.

So who did we turn to for help? Believe it or not- our very own government. Most people don’t know that the Small Business Administration was established to assist small business owners by providing resources and programs to benefit the community. They have a loan program called the SBA 7(a) loan that, in certain cases, makes securing a loan a lot easier for qualifying businesses. Qualifying businesses vary by industry and may be defined as a small business based on either revenue size or the number of employees.

The SBA 7(a) loan program is not a loan directly from the SBA. Instead, the SBA guarantees loans underwritten by traditional lenders. Lenders have to qualify with the SBA to provide these loans and there a several types of certified lending programs they fall under depending on the circumstances of the applicant. These programs vary slightly, however, under the standard 7(a) process lenders submit a full application package to the SBA when they request an SBA guaranty. The SBA confirms the originating lender’s credit decision with its own analysis of the application, which typically takes five to ten business days.

There are some advantages for banks to lend under the 7(a) loan program:

  1. It helps banks serve customers that don’t meet the standards of a conventional loan, which allows them to generate new revenues they wouldn’t otherwise be able to generate.
  2. It reduces the bank’s portfolio risks due to the SBA guaranty
  3. Due to the SBA guaranty, it lowers a lender’s risk weighting for meeting capital requirements.

The SBA 7(a) loan program provides an 85% guaranty for loans of $150,000 or less and a 7% guarantee for larger loans. The amount of the guaranty is reduced to 75% as the size of the loans decreases. The maximum SBA 7(a) loan amount is $5 million.

In addition to the revenue and/or employee headcount guidelines, there are additional eligibility requirements for businesses applying for loans under these programs such as:

  1. Operate for profit
  2. Be engaged in, or propose to do business in, the United States or its possessions
  3. Have reasonably invested equity
  4. Use alternative financial resources, including personal assets, before seeking financial assistance
  5. Use the funds for a sound business purpose
  6. Not be delinquent on any existing debt obligations to the U.S. government

There are certain business types that are ineligible because of the activities they conduct such as:

  1. Lenders such as banks and finance companies
  2. Real estate development
  3. Life insurance companies
  4. Multi-level marketing companies
  5. Government owned entities
  6. Churches
  7. Promotion of sexually oriented products or services
  8. Oil and gas exploration

The SBA 7(a) program was established to encourage longer term financing. There are various factors to the actual term assigned to a loan, however, maximum loan maturities have been established: 25 years for real estate, up to 10 years for equipment, and generally 7 years for working capital. Applicants can request interest-only payments during the start-up and expansion phases to allow the business time to generate income before it starts making full loan payments.

The SBA expects every 7(a) loan to be fully secured, but may not decline a request to guarantee a loan if the only unfavorable factor is insufficient collateral, provided all available collateral is offered.

There are two types of costs related to 7(a) loans. These are loan origination fees and interest charges. The loan origination fees vary based on the size of the loan and range from 0.25% of the guaranteed portion of the loan to 3.5% on loans of more than $700,000. There is also an additional fee of 0.25% on any guaranteed portion of more than $1 million.

All interest rates vary depending on the negotiations between the bank and the applicant, however, the rates are subject to the SBA maximums. The rates can also be either fixed or variable. The maximum rate is composed of a base rate and an allowable spread which will be no more than 2.25% for loans with a maturity less than 7 years. For loans longer than 7 years, the maximum rate will be 2.75%.

Like most other traditional loans, there is a loan application checklist that is very thorough which tends to be one of the slightly negative elements of an SBA 7(a) loan. One of the most common challenges an applicant may face is the ability to provide financial statements that are current within 90 days of the application ‘and’ 3 years of historical financial statements. In addition, an applicant is required to provide a 2 year cash flow projection with an attached written explanation as to how you expect to achieve this projection.  From my experience and from conversions with SBA lenders, this is one of the most common pitfalls an applicant may face when trying to get SBA loans. The most likely cause of the lack of reliable financial information is due to the owner being more focused on growing the business than on the quality of the financial statement preparation. They typically rely on a back office that is spread too thin with administrative duties and getting their billings out on time.

That is where can help. Not only can we help you produce timely and accurate financial information, we can help increase the value of your company by helping you improve your core administrative process. The first step is to begin automating your processes. You also need to develop processes to make your business smarter and more efficient to reduce costs and increase productivity. Here are some examples:

  • Eliminate cumbersome and time consuming manual tasks such as: data entry, envelope stuffing, filing and check runs
  • Pay bills online at a fraction of the time it takes to process and sign checks
  • Automate customer collections
  • Stop opening mail by having the vendor emails sent directly into the accounting software
  • Reduce human error and increase accuracy with automated software
  • Improve internal controls to reduce the risk of fraud
  • Improve timely reporting of financial results
  • Improve collaboration of your limited resources

Free up your resources to focus on your team and customers which will ultimately help you grow the company and have the peace of mind that your company is operating in a smarter and more profitable way. Go and Grow can help you put the processes in place and become your back office at a much lower cost with better controls.

Blog post written by: Scott Bates, Audit and Business Services Partner

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