Brief
Five Steps to Optimize Net Working Capital
Five Steps to Optimize Net Working Capital
Skilled cash management can help a company free up liquidity.
- min read
- Summarize with Generative AI
Brief
Skilled cash management can help a company free up liquidity.
Businesses often fail to make the most of net working capital (NWC). Leadership teams tend to focus on the profit and loss (P&L) statement, frequently at the expense of the balance sheet. We see very few organizations managing their liquidity with the same rigor as they do their costs. However, expert management of the cash conversion cycle can rapidly free up liquidity while avoiding headcount reductions or an operational restructuring.
Efforts to optimize NWC face several obstacles. Leaders often have limited visibility into liquidity performance, P&L-focused financial reporting doesn’t adequately measure NWC metrics, and managers’ incentives are frequently misaligned with effective NWC management. Possibly the most significant challenge: Employees at all levels make daily business decisions that impact the cash conversion cycle, so any sustained improvement requires cross-functional cooperation and an organization-wide focus on cash.
Optimizing NWC requires a holistic approach, targeting accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory processes. Companies that excel at NWC management leave no stone unturned in the search for improvement. Five steps can support this journey.
Accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory management are the vital foundations of the balance sheet, yet they are frequently managed as an afterthought compared with revenues and expenses. It’s understandable: Optimizing NWC is not a straightforward task. While many of the tools for improving NWC are well-known, implementing them effectively is difficult. Many organizations already have put into place measures to improve receivables, payables and inventory with limited success. There is no one-size-fits-all approach, and guidance on what can be achieved through best-practice benchmarks is often scarce and industry specific.
Despite these challenges, the benefits are well worth the effort. Better management of NWC preserves cash and can provide a critical lifeline when the business faces economic headwinds, supply chain disruptions, or liquidity constraints. Leaders start embedding a cash mindset throughout the organization by including cash topics in executive and business unit reporting.
It is important to understand details of the cash conversion cycle to determine how much liquidity is tied up in accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory. Leaders following best practices provide visibility at the level of individual customers, vendors and SKUs, as averaging multiple transactions may obscure particular problem areas. They evaluate how core processes that influence NWC are running and assess whether the right disciplines are in place to provide oversight. This review will highlight the areas that are working well and those that need to be upgraded.
Leaders also collect information from multiple functions to understand the current state of cash conversion. Involve the commercial teams that manage receivables, the procurement teams that influence payables, and the operations and supply chain teams that oversee inventory, as well as business unit or channel leadership.
A solid understanding of the existing cash situation allows companies to pinpoint potential NWC improvements. This step also requires cross-functional collaboration, given the many daily decisions that affect NWC. To lead this effort, assemble a team of individuals who have a track record and passion for leading change. Their task is to identify the “long-list” of opportunities. Some examples:
Rank opportunities to increase NWC in order of priority and create an initiative roadmap. The roadmap should support the company’s strategy and broader business priorities. Start with actions that can be implemented immediately to preserve liquidity, while designing more complex longer-term initiatives in parallel. When creating the roadmap, it’s helpful to organize NWC initiatives in three groups:
Using the roadmap as a guide, assign clear ownership of initiatives, set up a governance structure to track and monitor progress, and launch the first wave of actions. Four elements will be instrumental to success:
Rigorous management of NWC can help companies cope with unexpected disruptions to the business. Even if leadership teams have few external options to increase NWC, such as renegotiating contract terms, internal actions can deliver significant value. These include improving collections management processes, initiating daily spending review sessions to challenge purchase requests, developing best-in-class procurement practices, and adjusting inventory management. Such actions improve cash management, helping companies navigate through difficult times.
Successful companies recognize the power of skilled cash management to strengthen the balance sheet. Improving the cash conversion cycle generates immediate liquidity to fund other transformative initiatives, increases enterprise value, improves credit rating and raises performance in the organization. Since the elements of NWC touch every part of a company’s operations, there are almost always opportunities to refine receivables, payables and inventory. However, there is no single recipe to optimize NWC. Leaders tailor their actions to their operating ecosystem and work to embed a cash culture. They know every day of operating with improved working capital can deliver significant rewards.