How Small and Midsize Companies Can Generate Growth
Transcription
How Small and Midsize Companies Can Generate Growth
CFO Handbook Think Big How Small and Midsize Companies Can Generate Growth SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG Small and Midsize Companies Think Big is published by CFO Publishing LLC, 51 Sleeper Street, Boston, MA 02210. Mary Beth Findlay and David Owens edited this collection. Copyright © 2012 CFO Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, copied, transmitted, or stored in any form, by any means, without the prior written permission of CFO Publishing, LLC. www.cfo.com Cover design by Robert Lesser. ISBN 978-1-938742-03-3 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD: GROWING RESPONSIBILITIES 6 THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO 8 A More Influential Finance Function Growing Through Innovation Managing Your Time to Manage Your Business Dealing with Organizational Fatigue 9 11 13 15 FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING 17 Finding the Right Bank for Your Business Help for the Little Guy Overcoming Hurdles: Smoothing the IPO Path Thinking Outside the (Traditional Banking) Box: Alternative Financing 18 22 26 28 GOING GLOBAL32 4 CFO PUBLISHING Opportunities Overseas: M&A Business Beyond Borders: Supply Chain 33 38 UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT 42 Creating a Secure Foundation for Growth Constant Pressure on Working-Capital Improvement Funding Alternatives: Auctioning Receivables Supply Chain Financing: Shoring Up the Supply Chain to Support Growth Many Hands Make Light(er) Work: Getting Your Organization on Board 43 45 48 51 54 FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE 57 Staying on Track: 401(k) Considerations for Growing Companies Covering Costs: Health Care Advice for Growing Companies Navigating Complex Waters: Tax Advice for Growing Companies An Additional Technology Challenge: Security 58 61 65 68 CONCLUSION: MAKING THE MOST OF OPPORTUNITIES 72 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG FOREWORD GROWING RESPONSIBILITIES F rom stewards to strategists. That’s the path that CFOs at many small and midsize companies have travelled in recent years. Once the embodiment of the number-crunching class—preoccupied by precision, and dazzled by data—CFOs thrived on fulfilling requests for financial information, delivering results in a timely fashion and in an appropriate format. To the extent they shared a broader understanding of the business, CFOs were typically cast as the voice of unreason, injecting a CEO’s often optimistic outlook—about any large-scale business move— with a strong shot of reality-based skepticism. But that’s all changed—well, most of it anyway. While CFOs haven’t lost their affinity for properlyprepared financial statements, technology has enabled them to automate many of the low-level transactional functions that once consumed much of their time. That change has helped free senior finance functions up to shift their focus to more strategic aspects of the business. And just in time, too. In recent years, several factors—from the 2008 credit crisis to the new regulatory demands brought on by legislation—have forced them to abandon their silos and join the management team in uniting around the bigger picture. Working side-by-side with operating executives, CFOs have helped the executive group manage business risk by evaluating opportunities and strategic initiatives, ranging from geographic expansion to making investments in R&D. In a rapidly changing economic environment, it has become the CFO’s job to provide much more than numbers, peering beyond the P&L to provide 6 CFO PUBLISHING useful insight and analysis to support decision making. Nowhere is this role more pivotal than in resource-challenged small and midsize companies, where a misstep can lead to a dangerous fall. With market expansion now a priority, CFOs have stepped out again, moving beyond their recession-related role as cost-cutting strategists to evaluate growth opportunities. Theirs is a complex and evolving task, continually growing ever more vital. That’s where this CFO Handbook comes in. In the following pages our goal is not only to define the CFO’s changing identity at growth companies but also to share tools and tips that we’ve gleaned from other senior finance executives at small and midsize companies. They, too, have been required to supplement their more tactical and compliancedriven duties with the more critical financial and strategic challenges of company-building. And if there’s one thing we’ve learned from a decade’s worth of surveying CFOs of small and midsize companies, it’s this: they are up to the challenge. Mary Beth Findlay Editorial Director, Product Development CFO Publishing, LLC. SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO “More than half of all respondents to a 2011 CFO Research survey say that improving finance’s ability to identify growth opportunities would contribute most to their small and midsize companies’ ability to succeed over the next two years.” 8 CFO PUBLISHING THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO A MORE INFLUENTIAL FINANCE FUNCTION I f you’re a CFO at a small or midsize company and your role hasn’t expanded in the past two years, you might want to think twice. In 2007, CFO Research Services published The Superstar CFO, documenting the views of senior finance executives on the attributes that characterize highly successful CFOs. In responding to the survey, one executive wrote at the time that “extraordinary CFOs know no boundaries.” That statement is even more true today. In a world changed by technology as much as by economics, CFOs need to be persuasive agents of change for their companies. They must first have a vision for improving the company, and then be able to build credibility with other leaders within the organization to “sell” the vision. In a 2011 followup to The Superstar CFO, Sarah Urban, finance director for the Americas for Brady Corporation, observes, “The CFO roles are transforming over time to be much more focused on general business leadership. That really brings strength to your whole organization.” “Strengthening the whole organization” has become the mandate for finance leaders, especially in difficult times. A 2011 survey of CFOs conducted independently by Accenture found that the vast majority of them have been asked to take on new responsibilities in areas outside of finance. At small and midsize companies, these include areas such as information technology, client services, strategy and business development, operations, and marketing and sales. “The key messages are really the same at small and large companies,” says Paul Boulanger, global managing director of Accenture’s finance and performance management group. “Challenges in the business environment over the past 24 months have driven CFOs to play a bigger role in profitability, though that takes different forms in different industries.” But circumstances at small and midsized companies have rarely been more favorable to senior finance executives eager to make improvements. As the financial system teetered on the brink of collapse in the fall of 2008, freezing credit markets and chilling economic activity around the world, finance executives took the lead in securing funding, managing cash and working capital, paying down debt, and implementing the financial disciplines— including cost discipline—that often proved essential to their companies’ survival. Survey results confirm that the finance function— already highly influential at most small and midsized companies—has gained in organizational stature in the wake of the recent downturn. Seventy-two percent of respondents confirm that the experience of the recent downturn has enhanced the finance function’s standing and influence at their companies. These results suggest that many CFO PUBLISHING 9 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG finance executives are well positioned to gain organizational buy-in and support for the initiatives they deem important in the post-downturn environment—including the maintenance (and even improvement) of cost discipline. In our 2011 study, Dave Martin, vice president and CFO for Dimensional Fund Advisors, describes his role as “all of the above.” As he tells us, “It’s compliance. It’s accounting. It’s tax that gets increasingly complex. [It’s] understanding the drivers of the business; trying to make sure that our headcount is growing at the right pace and not faster, in step with the firm; predicting where we are in terms of bonus and shareholder distributions; communicating with shareholders. It’s all the way from the strategic to the very tactical and everything in between.” In all this, today’s CFOs continue to develop their financial expertise, their understanding of their companies’ markets and businesses, and their relationships throughout the enterprise in order to remain—as one of our interviewees puts it—“the best business partner” to both the CEO and their operations colleagues. Or, simply put, according to Wong Wai Ming, senior vice president and CFO of Lenovo in Hong Kong, “Over the next two or three years, the finance organization will focus more on how to accelerate the growth of the company.” Find out how Finance Chief Wayne Lipschitz of Make Meaning is leading his company to growth. Read Hands on Growth. 10 CFO PUBLISHING CFO Summary • Senior finance executives (SFEs) have played a key role in their companies’ ability to weather the economic downturn. • SFEs’ mandate today: “Strengthen the whole organization.” • Now SFEs must continue to grow their financial expertise, understanding of their company, and relationships with other functions. THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO GROWING THROUGH INNOVATION H ow can CFOs discover new growth opportunities? Overall, the CFOs interviewed report that they spend the largest portion of their time working with others in the business on optimizing operational and financial performance. In this, they emphasize the importance of meeting regularly with all the operating units to get to know the business better—and to let the operating units know the CFO better. Marcelo Martins, CFO of the Brazilian sugar producer Cosan SA Indústria e Comércio, says, “I think the most important characteristic of a CFO is the ability to influence the top and the middle management of the company. It derives from his abilities to draw respect from his peers. It’s not only his technical expertise, but also the ability to understand the problems of the company— both the need of the company to rationalize and become more efficient, and from the long-term, strategic view of the business of the company.” For this reason, the CFO should “have the capacity to interact with colleagues [who have] different views, different skills, and different ambitions,” advises Michel Allé, CFO of the Belgian national railway SNCB. And chances are your employees have some ideas about how to make the business better. Some of them might be brilliant; others abysmal. But few companies are able to effectively corral the ideas and separate the wheat from the chaff, meaning many so-called growth strategies are simply the product of political savvy rather than holistic calculations. Enter John Varvaris, CFO at health company Best Doctors. He joined the $120 million firm, which provides an employee benefit in the form of a network of leading specialists for additional consultation on major medical decisions, in late 2008 to help it move “from the go-go stage to the middle market,” says Varvaris, the former Ernst & Young partner and insurance-company CFO. Besides building a finance function and tightening up the accounting, one of his first steps was to almost immediately put a process in place to support innovation. “We have a culture of experimentation; we like to try new markets, extensions of products, new distribution partners, etc.,” says Varvaris, “though to do it in a risk-balanced way is a challenge.” A decision-making team was his first response to that challenge. The team, which includes Varvaris, the rest of the executive team, and any senior-level staff relevant to a particular issue, is scheduled to meet once a month but also convenes ad hoc for more pressing opportunities. Employees present the committee with business cases, often based on companyprovided templates and sometimes prompted by client requests. The committee then assesses risks, looks at cost-benefit analyses, and decides whether the proposal should go on to the next phase. Projects that get the nod go to a team of project managers who map out what other functions in the organization need to get involved to make the idea come alive. Most new ideas “have legal, finance, and/or transferpricing issues, so they can get complex quickly,” says Varvaris. Those that appear to have enough upside to justify the cross-functional effort then become business plans, though tentative ones. “It’s really a series of go/no-go decisions,” says Varvaris. “We first look at ‘What do we have to do to “We have a culture of experimentation; we like to try new markets, extensions of products, new distribution partners, etc. The real challenge for us is doing this in a riskbalanced way.” CFO PUBLISHING 11 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG CFO Bill Chorba describes innovation as his growing company’s core product. Can you say the same? Read On the Fast Track: Nine Sigma. 12 CFO PUBLISHING deliver the project with low to moderate risk?’ Then, if it’s working, we build resources around it. That allows us to say keep going, build bigger, or stop, as the case may be.” Over time, employees have become more accustomed to what they’ll be asked and come to meetings better prepared, Varvaris says. That means a high percentage of projects, around 70%, now make it to the second phase; about 20% make it beyond that. Currently, about 30 projects have gone through the committee, including major technology implementations such as rolling out a global CRM. “The goal for me is to build a dynamic infrastructure so we can tell the businesspeople to bring it on,” says Varvaris. From a topline perspective, that seems to be working. The benefits firm grew revenue 30% [in 2010], to $120 million, and its staff by 21%, to 400 people, in large part by expanding in overseas markets such as Australia, Portugal, and Canada. It’s on track to hit $150 million [in 2011], says Varvaris, an implied 25% growth rate. He also helped raise $20 million in equity from strategic investor Nippon Life, at a corporate valuation of $230 million. All of which leads to the next post-go-go phase: being “IPO ready,” one of Varvaris’s top priorities for 2012. “It’s one thing that you can grow, but are you growing the right places in line with the corporate objectives? If you’re not growing in that scalable, profitable way, you might have all the right controls, but you don’t have any résumé, so you can’t go ask that next investor for a higher valuation,” he says. “Does being IPO-ready mean we’ll do an IPO? Not necessarily, but it’s one of [the] ways we prepare for liquidity.” CFO Summary • Optimizing your company’s operational and financial performance requires working with colleagues to develop ideas to improve your business. • Support innovation by developing a decisionmaking team that meets regularly to present ideas and analyze associated risks and costs. THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO MANAGING YOUR TIME TO MANAGE YOUR BUSINESS A s many CFOs of small and midsize companies have learned, CFOs have a special opportunity when it comes to growth. But many factors can intercede between an initial idea and the successful nurturing of a growth strategy. CFOs face plenty of hindrances in trying to get their job done right: office politics, sluggish staff members, and a never-ending set of new regulations demanding compliance, to name a few. Which one is most vexing, though? “Time” is the ever-popular answer, particularly for small and midsize CFOs with too many roles. This response underscores how broad and vast the CFO role has become at many companies. Feeling overwhelmed is common among executives, but it’s a manageable problem if they’re willing to be more proactive about planning and managing schedules and, in particular, meetings, experts say. “It’s not about managing time; it’s about managing events,” says William Staats, an executive coach with Peak Performance Plus and a certified instructor for Franklin Covey, a well-known time-management consulting firm. Staats suggests several practical steps to make meetings more effective, including always having an agenda for them (published ahead of time so people can prepare), always starting meetings on time, and always ending them on time. Naming meetings can also be very effective. “Is it an update meeting, a forecast meeting, a jump-start meeting, or a clear-the-air meeting? It shouldn’t be a surprise to people when they arrive,” says Staats. Pushing for a decision at a meeting is critical, as well as keeping notes to record that decision and any associated deadlines, so that people can refer back to them as needed. Outside of meetings, CFOs also need to protect their time to focus on what’s important and most urgent. Using the phrase popularized by Stephen Covey’s book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective CFO PUBLISHING 13 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG The structure of your finance department can make a world of difference. Read How to Structure Your Staff for Success. People, Staats says, “You’ve got to stay in Q2,” referring to Covey’s four-quadrant diagram that puts activities that are “important” but “not urgent” in the second quadrant CFOs, in fact, should make a door hanger that says “Q2” that can signal to others they’re not available at certain times, he advises. Above all, it’s important to acknowledge that in almost any given amount of time, some work will have to fall by the wayside. Finance executives may take some comfort knowing that even the CFO of Franklin Covey, Steve Young, shares that pain. Young follows many of the steps recommended by his firm’s consultants, planning out each week to address the most-important items and checking in with his staff to help them prioritize weekly as well. Yet, he confesses, “I can’t remember a time in the last 11 years that I could get everything on my plate in a given week done.” Given that, he says, “it’s all the more critical that you focus on the things that are important.” A 2011 Accenture survey showed that CFOs at smaller companies, in particular, are focusing hard on finding ways to free up time for the finance function itself. Between 70% and 80% of CFOs at midsize companies (those with $100 million to $1 billion in revenues) said they needed the finance function to be more flexible, which Accenture’s Paul Boulanger says often means turning to outsourcing or shared services. In the full survey, more than 40% of CFOs from companies of all sizes said they have increased their use of outsourcing or shared services, while another 40% plan to do so in the next 18 months. “Small companies can’t push as far down that path,” notes Boulanger, “but where they have the scale, it’s still of value to them.” For example, at Brady Corporation, finance director Sarah Urban says that her company’s recent consolidation of transactional activities into shared-services centers has been good for both the “The move to sharedservices centers has really allowed my team to have more scale, not have to worry so much about transactions, and be able to give better support to their business leaders. As a result, we’ve been able to spend more time on the things that actually drive business decisions.” 14 CFO PUBLISHING business and the finance function. Ms. Urban’s team members are getting more out of their own jobs as the scope of their responsibilities has expanded into more value-added areas. “[The move to sharedservices centers] changed my job in good ways,” she says. “It has really allowed my team to have more scale, not have to worry so much about transactions, and be able to give better support to their business leaders. We’ve been able to spend more time on the things that actually drive business decisions rather than managing accounts receivable and accounts payable.” The move has also helped the finance function to become more efficient; they’ve been able to reduce headcount, while doing more with less. “[One finance manager] can now support multiple businesses effectively,” Ms. Urban explains. As a result, Ms. Urban notes, “we are able to spend much more time helping to drive business decisions.” Even with the lower headcount, she explains, business lines “get more time from us rather than less, and they get better reporting and analysis.” CFO Summary • Conquer time crunches by taking a proactive approach to planning and managing your schedule. • Make sure your meetings are as effective as possible. This means always having an agenda, starting and ending on time, naming meetings (e.g. forecast meeting, update meeting), and keeping notes. • Prioritize your tasks and work with employees to make sure the most-important items that week are their focus. THE EXPANDING ROLE OF THE CFO DEALING WITH ORGANIZATIONAL FATIGUE I n these efforts, CFOs know they must work hand-in-hand with all the business units to develop a deep understanding of the real drivers of the business. Finance provides the numbers and analysis that allow business units to optimize performance in line with corporate growth strategies. CFOs also see themselves as the stewards of profitable growth, protecting the bottom line and ensuring that the rewards for new directions the company takes are commensurate with the risks. But it’s not always so simple. In one of CFO Research’s 2011 surveys, finance executives see a lack of cross-functional collaboration (particularly between finance and the operating business lines) as a major obstacle. Aside from the universally problematic “lack of time, attention, and resources,” survey respondents most often choose “organizational resistance in other functional areas or in the business lines” as a barrier to finance’s ability to contribute to growth (35%). (In addition, more than one-quarter of respondents see the “absence of a broad organizational mandate for finance’s participation in identifying, evaluating, and pursuing growth opportunities” as a substantial barrier.) (See Figure 1.) Many also may need to make major IT upgrades or better hires before they can feel more in control. After time, many small and midsize CFOs encounter IT problems in the form of lack of or delayed data, making financial analyses and ensuing decisions more time-consuming than they need to be. For example, in a 2011 Accenture survey, very high Figure 1. Aside from the perennial lack of time, attention, and resources, organizational resistance from outside of finance is the most-often cited barrier to finance’s ability to contribute to growth? In your opinion, what are the greatest barriers to making the finance-related improvements that would contribute most to your company’s overall growth efforts? Lack of time, attention, and resources 40% Organizational resistance in other functional areas or in the business lines 35% Inadequate IT systems 29% Absence of a broad organizational mandate for finance’s participation in identifying, evaluating, and pursuing growth opportunities 27% Business/organizational complexity 22% Lack of access to competitive intelligence or relevant benchmarks 22% Lack of knowledge/training in analysis, decision support, forecasting methodologies, or other specialized finance activities Scarcity of finance talent Organizational resistance within finance 17% 8% 6% CFO PUBLISHING 15 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG percentages (between 70% and 85%) of CFOs at midsize companies said they have needed to make changes to the financial planning and forecasting function in the past 18 months. Accenture’s Paul Boulanger says that often means “industrializing” the planning process, upgrading its technology from a morass of spreadsheets to a software tool and incorporating macroeconomic indicators that may not be on the sales team’s radar screens. Faced with these kinds of barriers, CFOs at small and midsize companies tell us that they are most concerned with fatigue—an understandable concern, given the persistent atmosphere of scarcity and the amount of time and attention that cost control efforts can absorb. Forty-six percent of all respondents say that “organizational resistance/ fatigue” will rank among the greatest obstacles to maintaining cost discipline at their companies over the next two years, followed somewhat distantly by “increasing business complexity” (33%). (See Figure 2.) CFO Summary • SFEs tell us that in addition to a lack of time and resources, they also face significant organizational hurdles. • Evaluating and upgrading your IT support systems may be the quickest way to conquer one barrier to finance-related growth. Figure 2. Organizational fatigue will likely be a serious barrier to maintaining cost discipline over the next two years, respondents say. In your opinion, what will be the greatest obstacles to maintaining cost discipline at your company over the next two years? Organizational resistance/fatigue 46% 33% Increasing business complexity Lack of a standardized approach to cost management across the company 25% 22% Lack of access to competitive intelligence or relevant benchmarks Lack of time, attention, and resources in finance 21% Lack of communication among finance, operations, and/or procurement Lack of tools, frameworks, and decision-making methods for cost management 19% 18% Lack of benchmarking data to evaluate vendor offerings/provide leverage in negotiations Lack of robust reporting on spending 16% 6% Sources for The Expanding Role of the CFO: 0 10 20 30 40 “Enemy Number One: The Clock,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, July 6, 2011. “Finance’s Expanding Borders,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, February 7, 2011. “Teaming Up on Innovation,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, January 25, 2012. “The Path to Prosperity: CFOs at small and midsize companies on post-downturn cost control,” CFO Research, June 2011. “The Superstar CFO: After the Crisis,” CFO Research, June 2011. “The Superstar CFO: Optimizing an Increasingly Complex Role,” CFO Research, May 2007. 16 CFO PUBLISHING 50 FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING “The CFO of a small telecom company laments, ‘There’s more money out there, but we either don’t fit many banks’ profiles, or the rules remain problematic and ultimately prevent banks from lending their money.’” CFO PUBLISHING 17 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG FINDING THE RIGHT BANK FOR YOUR BUSINESS I Click here to access CFO’s latest articles on Credit & Capital. 18 CFO PUBLISHING n early 2011, small and midsize companies were still feeling the effects of the recession in the form of credit scarcity. Relationships between businesses and their banks were still tense, according to a 2010 Greenwich Associates’ annual survey of banking experiences for companies in was already in decline. Not surprisingly, about one-quarter of the businesses surveyed reported having switched banks over the course of the year, up from a traditional norm of about 11%, according to McDonnell. While banks were becoming increasingly the $1 million to $10 million revenue range. Overall satisfaction levels were down across the board, in large part because companies were having a hard time borrowing, according to Chris McDonnell, a vice president at Greenwich Associates. The national mean for banking-satisfaction scores dropped several percentage points from 2009, which comfortable lending to larger, more-stable companies, many remained wary of loans to smaller businesses, which were still viewed as risky. McDonnell described a nearly one-to-one relationship between a company’s size and the ease of borrowing. Small and midsize companies gave the highest marks to banks that were able to get out FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING there and talk to their customers and put fears in context. Faced with difficulty borrowing from big banks, it is no surprise that many small and midsize business owners grew to love their local banks. In 2008, Jamie Pennington, founder of Atlanta-based Flexible Executives, moved most of her company’s money to The Bank of Sandy Springs in Sandy Springs, Georgia. The reason? The Bank of Sandy Springs agreed not to put holds on her customers’ payment checks, unlike the big bank she had been using. “As a small-business owner, we like doing business on a handshake,” says Pennington, who started her firm in 2005 to help source part-time executives for growing businesses. Pennington was so impressed by her new bank, in fact, that she stayed with it even when its parent company, Buckhead Community Bancorp, went on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) list of “problem” banks amid rumors of its demise. “That bank was so supportive when we started out, if they were going to survive, we wanted to keep our assets there,” she says, noting that she protected her deposits by keeping them under the $250,000 insurable maximum. “I wanted to repay the favor.” Such loyalty couldn’t prevent Buckhead from failing, though. In December 2009, the FDIC took over the bank, which held $856 million in assets, and sold it to State Bank and Trust, a regional bank with $2.8 billion in assets. Pennington’s own assets were safe, but the allure was gone. State Bank “sent a nice letter about wanting to have a relationship with us, but almost immediately, the fees changed, service charges started piling up, and we just didn’t know anyone at that bank,” she says. Searching for another local option, Pennington moved to the Bank of North Georgia, not realizing it was owned by Synovus, an even larger southeastern bank with more than $30 billion in assets. After her local banks were gobbled up, Pennington was biding her time. “We need to find another real community bank, but I’m waiting for things to settle out before switching, to see which community banks survive,” she says. Unfortunately, by 2011 the outlook for businesses looking to work with small, local banks was bleak. Thanks to a variety of factors, experts were predicting more and more consolidation in the banking industry—meaning that friendly local banks will become fewer and farther between. As for new banks, “it’s tougher now to form a bank than it has ever been,” says Chris Cole, senior vice president and senior regulatory counsel for the Independent Community Bankers of America. Only 11 new banks were chartered in 2010, he notes, compared with 190 in 2006. For businesses that depend on small banks, this meant reduced access to credit, higher service fees, and fewer handshake deals. Undercapitalized and Overregulated By early 2011, bank mergers in the wake of the financial crisis mostly centered on targets that were distressed or, like Pennington’s bank, had failed and were sold with some backing from the FDIC. Excluding the failures, the number of mergers involving banks with assets under $1 billion rose 37% in 2010, to 153, according to SNL Financial. One universal reason for the uptick in bank mergers was the new compliance and reporting burdens on banks stemming from the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. These regulations made it more expensive for banks to stand on their own. “No matter what size a bank is, it believes it needs to be bigger to digest the cost of the increased regulatory burden that’s coming its way,” says Michael Clarke, president of Access National Bank, which is based in Reston, “It’s tougher now to form a bank than it has ever been.” Only 11 new banks were chartered in 2010, compared with 190 in 2006. For businesses that depend on small banks, this has meant reduced access to credit, higher service fees, and fewer handshake deals. CFO PUBLISHING 19 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG Virginia, and has $832 million in assets. In response to the Dodd-Frank Act, many banks had to add fulltime compliance staff members and they also had to lower “swipe” fees charged when customers used bank debit cards for payments. While smaller banks were “carved-out” from this mandate, they were forced to adopt the same price level in order to avoid the risk of losing business to the largest banks. And many local banks may have simply been too small to shoulder the new regulatory burden. Joseph Fenech, a banking analyst with Sandler O’Neill, expected banks would need at least $1 billion to $2 billion in assets to sustain the additional costs, since “it’s going to be really hard for some of these smaller institutions to make do.” Bigger Banks, Less Credit Talk of such mergers made executives at small and midsize companies nervous about future access to credit. CFOs were concerned that big banks’ lending decisions would be made at “arm’s length” using a formulaic decision process with no regard for a business’s credit and repayment history. These decisions did not contemplate the opportunity for discussion that small, community banks gave to businesses seeking funds. Indeed, 73% of small businesses using a small bank got the credit they sought in 2010, compared with 48% of those using a large bank, according to a report by the National Federation of Independent Business. Credit access wasn’t the only problem for finance executives in a shifting banking environment. Sharon Gottlieb, CFO of LogicMark, a fast-growing maker of personal emergency response systems, with more than $5 million in sales, saw her bank service fees go up by 30% from 2010 to 2011, largely due to hikes in checking-account fees and creditcard processing fees at larger banks. By 2011, such fees consumed about 1% of LogicMark’s revenues. Unlike community banks, where fees are somewhat negotiable, Bank of America and others “are very polite but very firm about their fees,” she said. Gottlieb couldn’t escape the large banks—Bank of America, for example, has a secure online wiring service that she needed to pay her overseas manufacturers—but she’d like to. “They’re charging me more and giving me less,” she says. At the community banks she works with, “you have [your banker’s] cell-phone number, so when there’s an issue you talk to a real person who knows who you are. At the big banks, you have to go through all the layers of the phone menu, and my ‘banker’ takes three or four days to call me back.” Added Dr. Michael Lesser, owner of a $6 million specialty veterinary practice in Los Angeles: “I know [large banks] don’t really care. I just want someone who will pretend to care.” He has grown frustrated with Citibank after banking with them for 9 or 10 years, in part because they held up the sale of his wife’s business by forcing him to come up with more than $400,000 in less than a week to replace collateral for a property loan he has with the bank. As soon as a third-party lawsuit involving his real estate was resolved, Lesser planned to roll over his loan to a smaller, more local bank. But by late 2011, the banking picture for small and midsize businesses seemed a little brighter. The Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF), enacted as part of the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, encouraged lending to small businesses by providing capital to qualified community banks. In September 2011, Centennial Bank announced that the U.S. Treasury Department had granted it $1.8 million through the SBLF. Jim Basey, Centennial chairman and CEO, says the Greenwood, Colorado-based bank was glad to take the capital, for several reasons. It came with a low interest rate (1% at press time) and few restrictions, other than confining loans to businesses with fewer than 500 employees and capping loan amounts at $2 million. The recently recapitalized bank has been growing, with $70 million in business loans outstanding and an acquisition underway. But has the federal boostershot led to any loans Centennial wouldn’t have made “Big banks are charging me more and giving me less. At the community banks, you have your banker’s cell-phone number. When there’s an issue you talk to a real person who knows who you are. At the big banks, you have to go through all the layers of the phone menu, and my ‘banker’ takes three or four days to call me back.” 20 CFO PUBLISHING FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING otherwise? “No,” says Basey, without missing a beat. “We do the same credit screen on everything; we have to make sure every loan is done prudently.” In fact, the bank places a great emphasis on relationships, so “if someone walked through the door whom we didn’t know, we’d be pretty skeptical.” But so far the SBLF has not proven to be a miracleworker. Experts caution that it’s still early to assess the results of the federal boosters, many of which have only recently left government coffers. Yet the outflow into the marketplace seems to be weak, for reasons that have virtually nothing to do with the availability of capital. “Quite honestly, I don’t think banks want to lend right now,” says Lawrence Manson, CEO of Nexgen Capital Partners, which advises banks on their investments. “You can have all the programs in the world, but it’s not the cost of capital that is constraining [banks]. It’s the inability of people to get comfortable with where the economy is going.” Michael Eldredge, CFO of the $16 million telecom company AST Technologies, might agree that it’s all about confidence. His company recently received $5 million from PNC Bank on very favorable terms, but it didn’t come easy, despite the fact that AST has seen revenue increase by more than 30% and EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) grow by more than 80% in the past year. Eldredge spent a year working with bankers to secure a $2.5 million, five-year loan and a $2.5 million revolver. Thanks to a positive audit, the bank agreed not to tether the revolver to the state of payables and inventory, but the company will report on those monthly to the bank. And there are personal guarantees attached to the loans that will likely be removed in about a year pending favorable 2012 financials. In the end, things worked out well for AST, but Eldredge doesn’t believe a spate of new government programs had anything to do with it. “While there is more money out there,” he says, “we either don’t fit [many] banks’ profiles, or the rules remain problematic and archaic and ultimately prevent banks from lending their money. But if you can demonstrate a history of meeting or exceeding your goals, that gives bankers a comfort level that you’ll do what you say you’re going to do.” Also key, he adds, is developing a personal comfort factor with your bankers. “You have to form business relationships,” Eldredge says. “We’ve worked with some of the people at our bank for years.” CFO Summary • After being turned down by big banks, small and midsize companies turned to local banks that understood their unique financial needs and fostered close business relationships. Don’t be the last to know! Click here to read Vince Ryan’s Banking & Capital Markets blog. • But banking consolidation led to fewer community banks and a shortage of credit for smaller companies. • The Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF) encourages lending to small businesses by providing qualified community banks with capital. • Even with these federal boosters, CFOs remain concerned about getting financing from banks because of economic uncertainty. • The key to working with banks today: Develop a strong relationship with your bank so that they know your company’s history of meeting and exceeding business goals. CFO PUBLISHING 21 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG HELP FOR THE LITTLE GUY B anks unquestionably have money, and some companies are getting it, but what does that mean for small businesses in the current credit market? We surveyed the banking landscape for smaller companies, including assessments of what banks are doing to help and and low demand from banks, in part because small-business loan volume must increase in order to keep interest rates low. Banks applied for only $11.8 billion of the $30 billion Congress initially earmarked; just $4 billion in requests was ultimately approved, and then only to the healthiest banks. where some of the recently launched programs designed to improve the climate stand. About half of those banks were former recipients of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, and were required to use the funds first to pay off that debt. That cautious strategy may keep taxpayers whole, but it puts the government in the position of lending to banks that in many cases don’t really need the money. Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF) This ambitious, one-year program aimed at smaller banks (those with under $10 billion in assets) was dogged by both procedural problems 22 CFO PUBLISHING FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING So far, it’s unclear whether or not that money is spurring any lending that wouldn’t have occurred otherwise. In January of 2012, the Treasury Department reported that banks had collectively increased their lending by $3.4 billion over the program baseline; the trouble is that the baseline was an average of (generally low) 2009–2010 levels. Many had made progress even before they got the Treasury funds in mid-2011. The banks have some incentive to increase qualifying loans to maintain a low cost of capital, but many say that’s not a driving factor for them. For example, the 140-year-old Blue Hills Bank, based in Hyde Park, Massachusetts, launched its commercial lending division in early 2011, about a year before the Treasury granted the bank $18.7 million in SBLF funds. Starting with only $1.7 million in loans, “we don’t need [to make] much more than $17 million in loans for us to fill the plate, and our business plans go far beyond that,” says Stephen McNulty, longtime CFO of the $950 million (in assets) bank. “If there had not been [an SBLF], or if we had applied for it and gotten rejected, we still would have proceeded—and succeeded—with our plan.” Bank executives also acknowledge that much of their loan growth often comes from taking market share from other local institutions, meaning that the total pool isn’t necessarily growing. The bestcase scenario is that the money somehow creates a rising tide, where banks’ overall health sparks more lending. “The thinking was that the capital was available, and while we didn’t need it short-term... it sets a base for more-aggressive loan expansion in 2013 and beyond,” says McNulty. Even if the money helps fund more bank consolidation, it could be helpful, he adds, since “one larger bank has the ability to provide more capital than two or three smaller banks.” How to get it: Businesses with fewer than 500 employees can qualify for the loans, with no revenue limits. The Treasury Department maintains a list of participating banks on its website. Note that, unlike the Small Business Administration process (described below), banks are not generally creating a separate category of “SBLF loans.” State Small-Business Credit Initiative The $1.5 billion program (which ultimately dispersed $1.4 billion) is much smaller than the SBLF but has great potential, since the government is asking lenders to leverage the capital 10 times over. According to a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) survey, recipients expect to use the funds to create or support 153 lending programs, ultimately fostering up to $18.7 Bank executives acknowledge that much of their loan growth comes from taking market share from other local institutions, meaning that the total pool isn’t necessarily growing. The best-case scenario is that the money somehow creates a rising tide, where banks’ overall health sparks more lending. billion in new private financing and investment. All but two states applied for the funds, and all were approved. Perhaps most helpfully, the SSBCI is designed specifically to help generate nontraditional loans. California, which in October 2010 received $168 million (one of the largest tranches) in SSBCI funds, is channeling them through two programs in the form of loan guarantees. One of the programs, the California Small Business Loan Guarantee Program, is available for nearly any company that is considered “near-bankable.” Loans (which go to California-centric businesses) can range from $5,000 to $2.5 million, and include companies with up to 500 employees. The state’s loan-guarantee program existed CFO PUBLISHING 23 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG before the SSBCI was launched, says program director Merrill Stevenson, but “had pretty much gone dormant” in 2009. With the fresh infusion of funds, the program (propelled by local financial development corporations, or FDCs, that advocate for the companies) had convinced banks to make 110 loans through the end of 2011, and is hoping to hit 200 in 2012. “A lot of banks are hesitant about getting back into lending, but FDCs are working with them and that’s helping,” says Stevenson. Other states are using the money, in part, to set up venture funds. Missouri, for example, has used $16.9 million of its $27 million in funding toward a state-run venture capital (VC) fund that has already invested $7 million in 18 small businesses, according to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s October 2011 testimony to Congress. Since the government has not yet set up a reporting system for this program, and since much of the money was only recently disbursed, little is known about its progress. The ambitious multiplier effect is one likely future disappointment; the GAO report noted that some recipients “expressed concern that achieving a 10:1 leverage ratio of private financing and investment to program funds could ultimately prove challenging.” How to get it: The funds are mainly administered by statesponsored economic development agencies, so start your research at the state level (and, in a handful of cases, at the municipal level). Some of the programs, like Missouri’s venture fund, have standard application cycles with universal deadlines; others are more ad hoc. Small Business Administration Loans Is the freeze in smallbusiness financing starting to thaw? Read Warming Signs? 24 CFO PUBLISHING The longest-standing federal program to aid small-business lending has had several good years, in part due to the same Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 that created the SBLF and the SSBCI. In the last quarter of 2011, though, it seems to be taking a hit, with the number of SBA-backed loans down about 50%, compared with the same quarter of 2010. It’s not that the SBA is being cheap. Andrew McCune, an attorney with McDermott, Will & Emery who helps arrange SBA financings for clients, says he has never seen the SBA so proactive at trying to educate the marketplace on its offerings and, in some sense, sell them to banks. (The SBA generally guarantees the vast majority of a loan that a bank deems risky.) But, as noted by Lawrence Manson, CEO of Nexgen Capital Partners, many banks are averse to even the hint of risk these days, and the guarantees do not change their minds. One frustrated former CFO who has been pursuing an SBA-backed loan in the hopes that it will allow his company to acquire a small, profitable business in the Houston area says the program’s inflexible criteria are obstructing his progress. “While money is available, the terms are so severe that it is next to impossible to qualify,” he says. (He asked that his name not be used, as he hopes to work with the banks in the future.) One example: the bank will consider only tax returns from the selling business, and not the interim results, which show 40% growth this year. It also won’t allow for adjustments to back out the current owners’ personal expenses and reflect its higher real cash flow. Collateral is another problem; the banks require it, “but will not utilize the existing $700,000 in inventory or receivables as collateral,” since they deem it unsellable, says the former finance executive. Instead, they want a lien on his house. (The SBA website notes that it “will generally not decline a loan when inadequacy of collateral is the only unfavorable factor,” but for all SBA loans, “personal guarantees are required from every owner of 20% or more of the business, as well as from other individuals who hold key management positions.”) One potential ray of hope emanating from the SBA is the increase in other types of funding the agency is promoting, beyond standard bank loans. The agency’s budget indicates it is aiming to make more microloans available to “unbankable” entrepreneurs, while it is also crafting a new venture-like program. Parallel to all of that is the increasingly successful SBIC program, which lends money to private-equity firms at low rates for middle-market financing. How to get it: The list of SBA lenders is on the agency’s website (www.sba.gov). It’s also worth poking around the byzantine site for some of the lesser-known alternatives. Large Banks: Ready and Willing? Government efforts aside, how easy is it for smaller companies to get a conventional bank loan or line of credit these days? The answer largely depends on whom you ask. Multiple sources indicate that credit is still tight for smaller companies. Between Q3 2010 and Q3 2011, the majority of finance executives polled in our Duke FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING University/CFO Magazine Business Outlook Survey said they found borrowing to be about the same or slightly more difficult. Few said it was much more difficult, although those who did were concentrated in the under–$100 million revenue range. Executives at the biggest banks counter that they are, in fact, aggressively seeking to lend to smaller companies. “We are all extremely motivated to extend more credit [to smaller businesses], and our people are very focused on it,” says Robert Hilson, head of Bank of America’s small-business segment, targeted at companies with up to $5 million in annual revenues. The dollar volume of new originations (including credit-card-based debt) to such companies increased 21% in 2012, he points out, with loan-approval rates doubling in the past 18 months. That growth has been bolstered by an internal reorganization and the presence of 700 newly hired small-business bankers in branches across the country. “We’ve always had people in our branches available to talk small business, but to be fair, we did not have the level of expertise in those banking centers that we have today,” Hilson acknowledges. Such bankers still don’t make the final decisions on loans, but “at the end of the day, they get paid for making good loans.” As far as credit standards, “I don’t want to say our credit standards have loosened,” Hilson says, but the improving economy is allowing loan officers to be “more accommodating” and look at variables like future orders and interim reports along with historical financials when assessing a client’s ability to repay. The same trend holds true at Wells Fargo, which saw new lending to companies with under $20 million in revenue rise 8% in 2012, to almost $14 billion, including a 40% spike in SBA-backed 7(a) loans for federal fiscal-year 2011. What drove the increase? “The quality of applicants has improved,” says Marc Bernstein, head of Wells Fargo’s smallbusiness segment. He sees the decline in lending over the past several years as a function of several factors. When the recession began, many businesses were carrying high levels of debt and faced declines in sales that made it harder to obtain additional credit. During the recession, “it’s not as if we required something dramatically different, it was that the businesses coming in looked weak,” says Bernstein. Now, loan approval rates are “the same as they were before the recession.” Those claims are supported by data from the Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Lending Index, which measures the volume of new commercial loans and leases to small businesses. It was up 18% in 2011, hitting a four-year high in November (when the annual statistics were compiled). The situation is frustrating, to be sure: piles of money (including hard-earned taxpayer dollars) are parked at banks, while many businesses starve for lack of funding. In the end, despite the positive statistics at the macro level, many individual companies are left feeling that they still can’t get the money they need. In the not-too-distant future, the federal programs may live up to their lofty potential and create enough competition to spur banks to lend more readily. That certainly hinges far more on what’s happening beyond the banks’ vaults and approval systems. Says Andrew McCune at McDermott, Will & Emery: “Once there is more confidence in the economy, there is extraordinary liquidity available.” If things go well, that could be the understatement of the decade. CFO Summary • The Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF) encourages smaller banks to lend to businesses with fewer than 500 employees. Visit the Treasury Department website for a list of participating banks. • The State Small-Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) aims to generate nontraditional loans for small businesses, with funds administered by state economic development agencies. • Small Business Administration Loans (SBA-backed loans) guarantee the vast majority of a loan that a bank deems risky, and include a variety of loan programs for specific purposes. Visit www.sba.gov for a list of SBA lenders. • In addition to government programs, larger banks have increased loans to small and midsize companies. One big bank executive explains, “The improving economy has allowed our loan officers to be more accommodating and look at variables like future orders and interim reports along with historical financials when assessing a client’s ability to repay.” CFO PUBLISHING 25 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG OVERCOMING HURDLES SMOOTHING THE IPO PATH T he year 2010 showed yet again how volatile the initial-public-offering market can be. The Securities and Exchange Commission kicked off its latest effort to open up funding options for private companies with an all-day meeting of its new advisory committee on small and emerging business in late October 2011. “People have woken up to the fact that funding innovation is a problem we should do something about,” says committee co-chair Stephen Graham, an attorney with Fenwick & West who represents growth companies in financing deals and IPOs. He says the group will be making ongoing 26 CFO PUBLISHING recommendations to the SEC during its two-year lifespan. The group was formed in summer 2011 in response to concerns that the IPO process is too high a hurdle for growth companies, that Sarbanes-Oxley compliance may be too costly for them, and that smaller companies need other means for raising capital from private investors. The biggest issue the group confronts: coming up with alternatives that lift the burden on companies while still offering investor protections that the SEC would deem adequate. The idea of an “IPO Lite” is one of the more alluring options the committee is considering. “How do we make it so that it’s not either on or off; one day you’re a private company and the next you’re a public company. . .spending $3 million on compliance?” muses Graham. He points to some alternative models, like a phased series of compliance hurdles that independent group IPO Task Force has proposed, as avenues of exploration for the committee. Others are looking to work within the current boundaries of the SEC’s Regulation A process, a modified IPO in which companies can register shares without producing a full set of audited financials. Reg A is rarely used, because companies can raise only up to $5 million and must comply with a variety of state securities laws. At the meeting, FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING SEC officials explored how they could make the process more useful. Congress is also looking at Reg A, with the House of Representatives passing a bill to raise the limit from $5 million to $50 million in the week following the meeting. However, the efforts in Congress and at the SEC are not dependent on one another. Says Graham: “We’re focused on making recommendations the SEC could implement without an act of Congress.” If the Reg A cap were raised to $50 million, and if the state compliance burden were reduced, the process “would be worth looking into for my company,” said Kathleen A. McGowan, vice president of finance for Tobira Therapeutics, at the meeting. Tobira is a venture-backed biopharmaceutical company focusing on HIV treatments that raised a B round of funding in September 2010. Indeed, some investors seem very open to something less than a full-blown SEC reporting regime from the companies in which they invest. “Why couldn’t the SEC come up with a one-page reporting [format] that a company could post on the web?” asked Milton Chang, managing director of Incubic Venture Fund. On the flip side, Richard L. Leza, chairman of Exar, a company that makes specialized silicon and software products, suggested the cost of complying with reporting structures like Sarbanes-Oxley might not be as great as some people supposed, particularly as corporate executives learn the process over time. Exar, a Nasdaq-traded company with close to $150 million in revenue, saw its audit and compliance costs double, from $1.5 million to $3 million, when it initially began hewing to Sarbox rules. Now, those costs are back down to $1.5 million, Leza said. By early April 2012, President Obama had signed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act into law, easing the way for small and midsize IPOs. The bill rolls back some SEC rules to make it easier for more companies to become publicly traded by bypassing audits and disclosures once required for investors. Under the JOBS Act, companies with less than $1 billion in gross revenue seeking to go public would have up to five years, or until revenues reach $1 billion, to supply the SEC with an independent audit and certain investor disclosures. CFO Summary • Smaller companies looking to go public face considerable hurdles, particularly the expense of complying with Sarbanes-Oxley and raising adequate capital from private investors. • In response to frustrations with IPO hurdles for small, private companies, a new bill has eased SEC rules for some companies to bypass the audits and disclosures required for investors. The group was formed in summer 2011 in response to concerns that the IPO process is too high a hurdle for growth companies, that Sarbanes-Oxley compliance may be too costly for them, and that smaller companies need other means for raising capital from private investors. CFO PUBLISHING 27 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG THINKING OUTSIDE THE (TRADITIONAL BANKING) BOX ALTERNATIVE FINANCING A t a late October 2011 meeting of the Security and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) new advisory committee on small and emerging business, a discussion of crowd-funding revealed the committee’s frustration with some of the current SEC rules. While most crowd-funding raises are now outside the purview of the SEC, since they involve a company offering a product rather than securities in exchange for money, some companies would like to raise more money through such platforms and offer debt or equity. While that is technically possible now, investor- 28 CFO PUBLISHING protection laws often hamstring them. The rules limit how and to whom the deals can be marketed, making it difficult for companies to reach a critical mass of investors. Considering Crowd-Funding Many argue, in fact, that attempts to confine the marketing of such deals to the traditional “friends and family” is unrealistic in the world of Facebook, LinkedIn, and other web-based networks. “The SEC cannot lock down everything,” said Shannon L. Greene, CFO of Tandy Leather Factory, a small-cap company traded on Nasdaq. “If someone wants to FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING put something stupid out there, you can’t protect every $100 investor. Some of the onus of investor protection has to be on the individual investor.” Meanwhile, Paul Maeder, general partner with Highland Venture Partners, pooh-poohed the whole notion of crowd-funding. “What problem are you trying to solve?” he shot at SEC officials, suggesting that qualified investors such as his firm are very easy to find. “If you don’t have an angel network, it’s because you don’t know how to use a browser, which arguably means you shouldn’t start a business,” said Maeder. For small companies, he argued, “access to capital is not a problem.” But access to capital often varies greatly by region, other panelists countered, and asking a large group of people for investments doesn’t always mean a company is too weak to get funded by traditional means. Sean Greene, the Small Business Administration’s special adviser for innovation, said: “There are a lot of smart, interesting people looking at this, not just people with wacky ideas.” Another Option: Angel Investors When finance executive Ane Ohm joined Harqen, an early-stage company that makes tools to index and analyze recorded phone conversations, one of her reasons for taking the job was, in a sense, lofty: she hoped to meet angels. While the ones she was targeting are not quite as rare as the heavenly variety, angel investors are not as commonplace as smaller companies would like. With bank financing still uncertain, small and midsize companies are looking to alternatives, with mixed results. Angel groups generally invest in only 1% to 10% of the opportunities that come before them, according to Marianne Hudson, executive director of Angel Capital Association. Those are slightly better odds than companies seeking venture funding or private-equity infusions will encounter, according to a recent survey by the Pepperdine Capital Markets Project, but just 13% of businesses that responded to that survey reported getting funding from any of those sources. Small businesses on the hunt for cash may, however, benefit from the massive cash hoards that large companies possess. According to one recent study of more than 800 public companies, cash balances at the end of 2010 had more than No matter how the capital comes in the door, finance executives need to understand that by cashing the check they are accepting a new and active partner. That involvement can take the form of board seats, coaching programs for top executives, and even business-plan revisions. quadrupled, on average, compared with 10 years earlier. Indirectly, these deep pockets may help growth companies by providing tired investors with renewed liquidity. “If the large corporates make more acquisitions and create more exits, they may get people excited about investing again,” says Jeffrey Sohl, who tracks angel investing as director of the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire’s business school. More directly, many large companies are looking to sink money into companies that can possibly speed their own growth. An increasing number, including EMC, Google, and Juniper Networks, have established or renewed such efforts. “Corporates see [such venture efforts] as outsourcing R&D,” says Gerald Brady, managing director with Silicon Valley Bank’s venture-capital group, who previously worked with Siemens’s ventureinvestment arm. No matter how the capital comes in the door, however, finance executives need to understand that by cashing the check they are also accepting a new and active partner. Experts say that both angel and largecompany investors want to be intimately involved in the business. That involvement can take the form of board seats, coaching programs for top executives, and even business-plan revisions. For Ohm at Harqen, such intervention has been a benefit rather than a burden. “I can’t say enough about how much value I’ve gotten from our angels,” she says. As vice president of finance and operations, she has participated in coaching and strategy programs run by her angel investors. That has helped her track what’s happening on the competitive landscape, and develop a vision CFO PUBLISHING 29 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG For more information on working with angel investors, read How to Dance with Angels. 30 CFO PUBLISHING for how the company should grow and evolve over time, so that when it’s time for an exit, “it’s a good transition,” she says. Ohm joined after Harqen had raised two rounds from angels. The company is currently seeking its third round to help launch a new product. In her time with the company, Ohm has learned that angels stick close. The same investor, Lauren Flanagan, has led all three rounds, and has helped introduce the company to others that could help, including angel groups that aim to invest in woman-led companies. Such closeness has drawn a tight circle around the types of investors Ohm will approach in this latest round. “When you have a really good group, you want to think very critically before you go outside of it,” she says. Her main goal is to make sure any additional investors contribute specialized expertise, a goal that could at some point extend to a corporate venture arm. Angels typically look for high-growth firms with great market potential, even if they have no current revenues. Such firms are typically valued at $1.5 million to $2.5 million before the investment, with median deal size between $500,000 and $750,000, says Angel Capital Association’s Hudson. Larger sums, however, may be more readily available because angels are increasingly syndicating their deals. Jeff Gray, CEO of cloud-computing start-up Glue Networks, says that “more than $4 million appeared [practically] out of thin air,” thanks to two angel groups that syndicated the deal with four others. Here Come the Corporates Corporate venture investors are also getting more involved in portfolio-company operations, in large part because they view such investments as a vital part of their own growth strategies. In the past, “they kind of stood back, and did not take board seats or an active role,” says Mark Heesen, president of the National Venture Capital Association. “Now they want to be an integral part of helping that company grow to the next level.” “Our investment efforts are generally intended to be friendly; we’re fairly straightforward in the terms we propose, and we try to add value to the companies and make them successful,” says Jeff Lipton, a former engineer and VC who now heads up Juniper Networks’s venture efforts. Juniper reviews more than 200 companies a year, and ends up investing in only 7 to 10, about a 5% hit rate. The firm is open to acquiring, and has done so in at least two cases recently, but its main aim is to help products come to market that complement its core platform, Lipton says. While corporate venture funding tends to rise and fall with corporate fortunes, the volume of dollars coming from corporate venture arms was up to $1.4 billion in the first two quarters of 2011. That puts it FINDING FUNDS BANKING AND FINANCING on pace to be the best year in a decade. Most deals involve a co-investment between traditional and corporate VCs. Traditional VCs are more open to getting help than in the past, particularly in capital-intensive industries like clean technology and semiconductors. “There’s a sea change in how the corporate VCs are perceived; they are now the well-heeled, deep-pocketed investors that are also the likely acquirers,” says Gerald Brady at Silicon Valley Bank. For their part, corporates appreciate the deep deal experience they can gain from partnering. “We like to follow financial investors and have them set the financial valuation,” says Lipton. Each corporate fund has its own mandate, and it can vary greatly even within the same firm, as Juniper’s funds demonstrate. While the bulk of the investments go toward a broad range of early- and late-stage software firms, the $4 billion maker of high-speed switching routers will also consider hardware and component makers at any stage. It is also willing to consider even younger companies, though its investment time horizon is generally one to four years. The moral of the story? With a little creativity, high-growth companies may find ways to shake loose much-needed capital from investors both large and small. To do so successfully, CFOs should research what investment groups are looking for—their goals and rules can vary widely—and be patient and persistent in wooing them. It wouldn’t hurt, of course, if the stock market were to make a spectacular recovery. CFO Summary • Research what investment groups are looking for and be persistent. • Crowd-funding has attracted both interest and skepticism. For some companies, access to capital can be hard to come by, but critics say that isn’t really a problem for small and midsize companies looking for investors. • Another alternative to consider: angel investors. While angel groups only invest in a small percentage of opportunities that come their way, they bring considerable knowledge to growing companies and often take an active role in the business. • Venture capital (VC) investors are interested in acquiring smaller companies as part of their own growth strategy. Most deals are co-investments between traditional and corporate VCs. Corporate venture investors are getting more involved in portfoliocompany operations because they view such investments as a vital part of their own growth strategies. In the past, “they kind of stood back, and did not take board seats or an active role. Now they want to be an integral part of helping that company grow to the next level.” Sources for Finding Funds: Banking and Financing: “A Small Problem,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, April 1, 2011. “Capital vs. Confidence,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, March 1, 2012. “Credit Still Scarce for Small Companies,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, January 27, 2011. “Just Call Me Angel,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, October 1, 2011. “Smoothing the IPO Path,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, December 1, 2011. CFO PUBLISHING 31 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG GOING GLOBAL “Exploiting fast-growth markets is certainly one reason to take the plunge. But midsize CFOs beware. ‘To be willing to take on that level of risk and complexity, you’ve got to have really good reasons, like new markets, new technology, or new sourcing,’ says one midsize corporate finance executive.” 32 CFO PUBLISHING GOING GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES OVERSEAS M&A A s many CFOs at small and midsize firms search for growth, the most popular growth strategy remains expanding within U.S. markets. But over time, companies in this revenue range expect to be more reliant on overseas markets. “Because there’s such a high concentration of revenues today within U.S. borders, it’s natural for them to look outside for new growth opportunities,” says Stephen McGee, head of corporate finance for Grant Thornton, a firm specializing in advising growing, privately-held companies. The Asia-Pacific region, China, and Western Europe top the list of new markets that companies are pursuing. Making an overseas acquisition is a true test of CFO savvy. Such transactions are rife with things that can go wrong, including due-diligence roadblocks, regulatory missteps, and cultural snafus. In fact, because cross-border acquisitions are “as hard as it gets,” says McGee, “many companies, particularly midmarket companies, just choke on that risk and bypass such deals.” Of the 41% of privately held companies that plan to grow through acquisition in the next three years, for example, fewer than a third plan to do so through foreign acquisitions, a ratio that, McGee says, has remained fairly constant through different economic cycles. Instead, most companies without a dedicated international M&A team tend to get a toehold in a foreign market by first setting up a sales office or working with a local partner, then slowly adding more people as operations expand. But not every CFO has the luxury of taking that slow-and-steady approach, particularly in geographies that are booming. “Brazil is growing so fast you can’t keep up just by growing organically,” says Michael Lucki, CFO of CH2M Hill, a $6.3 billion global engineering and construction firm. CH2M Hill has had a presence in Brazil for more than 10 years, and now has about 180 employees there, but the company is currently evaluating Brazilian businesses that it could merge with its existing operation. “In a good year, we can double head count from, say, 200 to 400, but the change in Brazil is so great, we probably need 1,000 people there tomorrow,” Lucki says, noting the country’s projected 9% GDP growth rate for 2011 and equally impressive government construction budgets. Exploiting fast-growth markets is certainly one CFO PUBLISHING 33 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG reason to take the cross-border plunge. And with the domestic economy expected to limp along for the foreseeable future, those with aggressive growth goals may be forced to look overseas. CFOs also say they are buying abroad to follow existing clients, or to tap new sources of innovation. Very rarely, however, are they buying companies with assets that could easily be found or replicated stateside. “To be willing to take on that level of risk and complexity, you’ve got to have really good reasons, like new markets, new technology, or new sourcing,” says McGee. Approximately 450 U.S.-based companies acquired businesses outside the United States in the first quarter of 2011, up from 370 in the first quarter last year and on track to surpass the 1,666 such deals in 2010, according to Capital IQ. At companies with revenues between $100 million and $1 billion, finance chiefs completed 45 cross-border deals in the first quarter of 2011, compared with 31 in the first quarter of 2010 and 136 during all of 2010. Europe is still the hottest place for midsize companies to seek targets, but Asia is quickly gaining ground. “We haven’t seen a lot of M&A in China, because of the complexities of acquiring there,” says Larry Harding, president of High Street Partners, a firm that helps U.S. companies with back-office functions overseas, “but I would expect that to change in the next 18 to 24 months.” So how can CFOs contemplating their first overseas deal avoid a disaster? Several finance chiefs who have recently been through the process—some for the first time—share their best advice. 1. Find a Stunt Double Antenna Software, a venture-backed software developer focused on mobile applications, recently bought Volantis, a mobile Internet specialist, based in Guildford, England, in order to complement its core product lines. Antenna CFO Bill Korn’s first A finance chief considering an overseas acquisition will likely need lots of assistance, much of it not available in-house. Indeed, part of the recipe for cross-border success is recognizing the need for a significant amount of help. 34 CFO PUBLISHING step along the path to a successful transaction was to find himself a stand-in: a UK-based CFO with M&A experience who could head up due diligence on the company before the purchase. While Korn himself was on-site for the first week of due diligence, he considers it essential to have a trusted adviser “living” at the company throughout the process. Brian Knight, whom Korn found through the Financial Executives Networking Group, an international cross-industry organization, spent four to five days a week at Volantis for a month, in part to help foster camaraderie with employees at the target company. He also passed along key insights, Korn says. “When you have a question, you have someone who can walk across the hall and ask, ‘Why was this deal structured this way?’“ he says, an approach that is much faster and less confrontational than the alternative, “which is to have your lawyers call their lawyers.” Knight’s job was done when the deal closed, but Antenna retained Volantis’s former CFO as the vice president of finance for the global company, which helped accelerate integration in both directions. The distance “is not a problem,” says Korn, and he expects his new UK-based colleague to be “instrumental” in helping prepare the company for its initial public offering. 2. Don’t Skimp on the Help A finance chief considering an overseas acquisition will likely need lots of assistance, much of it not available in-house—particularly at a smaller company or one that is new to international markets. Indeed, a part of the recipe for cross-border success is recognizing the need for a significant amount of help. In general, a company needs either two sets of attorneys—one based in the United States and one based in the country of the acquisition—or an international law firm with offices in both locations. For its part, Antenna hired a hybrid team of UK- and U.S.-based law firms that were able to work together. Antenna’s UK attorneys led the process, says Korn, but with advice from its U.S. lawyers, “who were most familiar with Antenna and comfortable with its process of completing acquisitions.” Of course, lawyers are happy to point out the perils of getting that equation wrong. One attorney with a multinational firm notes that a new client, a private-equity-owned company looking to expand abroad, made such a disastrous initial cross-border acquisition that it is now considering less-radical expansion options. By using only Brazilian legal GOING GLOBAL counsel when it bought a company in Brazil, the company misunderstood some of the regulatory approvals it had to get and was ultimately delayed in its efforts to go to market there. Similar regulatory red tape abounds in other high-growth emerging markets, including China, adds Mark Harris, a partner with McDermott Will & Emery. “Local counsel may understand the landscape, but may not be able to communicate it back [to you],” he says. Finance chiefs acquiring abroad need other kinds of expertise as well. For example, InnerWorkings, a $482 million public company that helps manage print procurement for large global companies, bought a company in Chile in order to better meet the needs of its global clients. The company had made many acquisitions—five or six per year—in the past, but this was only its second international deal and its first in South America. As such, CFO Joseph Busky did something he says he would never do for a U.S. acquisition: he hired a Big Four accounting firm’s Chilean office to help investigate the target firm, CPRO. “The risk for fraud in South America is much greater than in the United States, so make sure you have the right controls and...have someone on your side who knows the pitfalls,” Busky says. “Having someone on your side who speaks the same language and who knows what the pitfalls are is invaluable.” That doesn’t mean that a company should simply outsource all due diligence, of course. “There’s no replacement for having someone in your organization do the technical due diligence [on intellectual property], if the acquisition is within your industry,” says Duncan Perry, CFO of PeopleCube, a maker of facilities scheduling and management software. Perry has been involved in several international acquisitions in his career, including one in the United Kingdom for PeopleCube in the past year. “If you don’t know what you’re getting in terms of intellectual property, you’re missing half the value,” he says. 3. Don’t Ignore Workforce Issues Many parts of Europe are famous for their laborprotection laws, which generally make it very difficult to fire people. “Reductions in the workforce usually take longer and cost more than you would ever imagine,” says High Street Partners’s Harding, in part because “the concept of ‘at-will’ employment doesn’t exist outside the United States,” he says. CFO PUBLISHING 35 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG To learn more about potential overseas tax issues, read Don’t Get Caught in an Overseas Tax Trap. For that reason, PeopleCube’s Perry recommends getting a good handle on a workforce strategy preacquisition. “If you’re going to be losing people, you should handle it prior to the acquisition, since the seller may have more flexibility on terminations than the buyer,” he says. If not, a company may be locked into a higher head count than it needs for longer than it expected. Case in point: after a recent acquisition, one company chose to close an operation in the UK that was performing well, rather than a somewhat poorer-performing location in the Netherlands, simply because Dutch labor laws made it so “difficult and expensive to terminate employees” that closing the UK operation “was the far cheaper alternative,” says Michael Martell, an attorney with Morrison Cohen in New York. Hiring contractors overseas can also be tricky, since short-term contracts can quickly trigger long-term obligations on the company’s part. But while new territories present plenty of new labor laws to digest, understanding local culture is equally important for buyers that want to get off on the right foot with new employees overseas. “Often, you can adhere to all the legislative requirements very carefully, but miss the one factor that employees in the office really care about,” says Perry. In his experience, flexible work hours can be one such perk. “It’s easy for U.S. employees, in a car culture, to concentrate on arrival time as something important, but that’s not as easy when you’re dependent on public transportation,” as most UK employees are. “If you were to impose hours that were inconsistent with the train and bus schedules, for example,” he says, it could be a disaster. 4. Take Care with Taxes Tax liabilities count among the greatest hidden risks of cross-border expansion, says Harding, who adds that “it often takes a while—up to three years—before such liabilities arise.” Tax issues fall into a couple of buckets, many of which a finance executive will be familiar with if the company already has a sales office or other presence in a country. Transfer pricing, or the way the company prices the goods and services it receives from the foreign entity, is a major issue, and one that tax authorities are getting more aggressive about scrutinizing. In this case, “the proper documentation of the methodology is almost as important as the methodology itself,” says Harding. 36 CFO PUBLISHING While the documentation requirements vary by country, few companies have fully documented their positions, and the task only gets harder as the volume of transactions piles up, so Harding recommends starting early. Companies may also consider setting up an advance pricing agreement with local authorities to avoid later challenges, a strategy that is becoming increasingly popular. Value-added tax (VAT) in European countries is another important topic to address early, since such tax is “hard to fix retroactively,” Harding says. (Rule number one is to never do business in Europe without a VAT registration number; rule number two—ideally and where possible—is to maintain that registration in only one EU country and clear all EU-based goods through customs there.) One other VAT tip: explore the potential tax benefits of establishing a foreign subsidiary, rather than opening a branch office. The latter could face much higher tax liabilities. Outside Europe, Brazil and India present particularly thorny tax requirements, “most of them not intuitive to U.S. finance professionals,” says Harding. Those countries, as well as China, also have strict rules about repatriating profits and other transfers of currency to foreign destinations, which can affect the overall tax picture. And if corporate tax rules don’t offer enough complexity, potential buyers should also be aware of the personal tax implications for owners and executives of foreign companies. “Personalcompensation tax overseas can be significant, and you can create disgruntled employees very easily if you convert their tax status,” says PeopleCube’s Perry. One often-overlooked incentive is the InterestCharge Domestic International Sales Corporation (IC-DISC), which can save small and midsized companies as much as 20% on income from exports. The provision enables companies that manufacture and ship products or services abroad to reduce their tax bill by creating separate tax entities called IC-DISCs that are taxed at the capital gains rate, a lower rate than income taxes. Here’s how it works. A company pays a taxdeductible commission based on its export income to this separate entity, its IC-DISC. The IC-DISC then pays dividends to the exporter that may be taxed at a capital gains rate of 15%, a lower rate than the ordinary income tax rate, which could be as much as 35%. Parts manufacturers can also qualify for this, for GOING GLOBAL example. Thus, a company that builds tires for cars that are shipped overseas could take the credit, says Dean Zerbe, national managing director at alliantgroup. And architectural and engineering firms can take the credit if they design buildings in the United States that are then built in other countries. The downside: the provision that allows companies to pay tax on these IC-DISC dividends at the capital gains rate will expire at the end of 2012, unless it is extended. Companies must therefore consider carefully whether it is worth the cost of setting up an IC-DISC right now. 5. Be Patient Antenna has a track record of completing U.S. acquisitions within four weeks, a strategy Korn feels gives the company an advantage in bidding even though it means a very intensive due-diligence process. “A large company might pay more, but it could take six months to get a term sheet and another six [to close the deal],” says Korn. He acknowledges, though, that cross-border deals will inevitably take a bit longer—eight weeks in Antenna’s case. He also says that companies should devote time to communication, because “in any deal the experience level of the parties will vary, so maintaining a dialogue is key.” The time lag can arise from time-zone differences, but also from cultural differences. “The culture in Chile is such that nothing is a rush, and the level of sophistication of the staff and the accounting systems is much lower than we have here,” says Busky. Accordingly, buying CPRO in Chile took InnerWorkings about nine months. Busky estimates that an equivalent domestic deal would have taken two months or less. Bear in mind, too, that the target firm may feel the due-diligence demands are over the top, even if they are standard for the United States. In general, U.S. investors “ask for much more detailed information than European lawyers would be interested in, like asking to review leasing agreements for photocopiers, agreements with office cleaners, parking spaces, and so forth,” notes Martell of Morrison Cohen. “In Europe, counsel tends to be more focused on the important agreements.” Patience, however, has its rewards, including a nice résumé boost for the CFO who can pull off an international acquisition. Companies looking for a new finance chief, particularly in the middlemarket revenue range, consider such experience a big plus, says Jim Wong, an executive recruiter with Chicago-based Clear Focus Financial Search. Even if the deal doesn’t go perfectly, “if the candidate can communicate his analysis of what to do the next time around, that’s just as important as the net result.” Indeed, making an overseas acquisition is a rite of passage both for a company and for a CFO. Demonstrating a talent for strategic growth is now a CFO skill highly prized by recruiters. No CFO would pursue a deal simply to burnish a résumé, of course, but it certainly yields a halo effect—if the deal goes well. CFO Summary • Making an international acquisition is an invaluable experience for CFOs at small and midsize companies. • Get a toehold in the foreign market by setting up a sales office or working with a local partner, and then add more people as operations expand. • Make sure global expansion promises enough reward to counter the risk: “To be willing to take on that level of risk and complexity, you’ve got to have really good reasons, like new markets, new technology, or new sourcing,” explains one SFE. • Have a trusted advisor on the ground at your overseas office. • Consider the legal complexity ahead: retain two set of attorneys (one here and the other in the country of your acquisition), and make sure your team understands any regulatory red tape it might expect to encounter along the way. • The greatest hidden risk: tax liabilities. Prepare for documentation requirements and personal tax implications, but consider the often-overlooked incentive of the Interest-Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation (IC-DISC) which can save your company as much as 20% on export income. CFO PUBLISHING 37 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG BUSINESS BEYOND BORDERS SUPPLY CHAIN I 38 CFO PUBLISHING n line with anticipated global expansion, smaller companies are increasingly using offshore suppliers. In a 2012 survey among senior finance, IT, and line-of-business executives at U.S. companies, respondents anticipated that their companies’ use of third parties would grow relationships commonplace. “You’re going to pick the best supplier regardless of where they are,” says Grant Barber, executive vice president and CFO of Hughes Communications, which designs, builds, and launches communications satellites for its broadband service. (See Figure 1 on page 39.) in the next two years, both domestically and internationally. (See accompanying figure.) In particular, the mobilization of large, increasingly skilled, and cost-effective workforces in a wide range of developing economies, as well as advances in the information technologies that link widespread enterprises, are making longer-distance For the past two decades, Tennessee-based Storm Copper Components has sourced the raw copper bars and sheets that go into its products solely from U.S. suppliers. That strategy has worked well, says CFO Vince Schreiber, because the heavy materials are expensive and slow to transport, and customers want their orders fast. GOING GLOBAL Around 2009, however, it became clear that the fast-growing private company (150 employees) needed to diversify its supply base to work around the problem of sporadic domestic shortages and slowdowns. The solution: two additional suppliers on two different continents. “Our preference is generally to do business with U.S. suppliers,” says Schreiber, “but, ultimately, this is a customer-service decision.” James P. Jones, CFO and COO of Edward Don & Company—a U.S. maker and distributor of foodservice equipment—points out that even his company’s domestic suppliers are now depending more on overseas vendors. “We don’t manufacture as much as we used to in the U.S.,” says Mr. Jones. “The business world continues to seek more value, and that has forced us over the years to be more offshore.” That sentiment is increasingly being echoed at companies both large and small. Looking beyond U.S. borders for supply “is becoming much more mainstream, primarily due to competitive forces,” says Bob Ferrari, a supply chain analyst. In some cases, firms are simply being proactive; in others, they feel pressured to explore such options because they fear competitors will undercut prices by making the move first. But managing global suppliers isn’t easy. Even a company as sophisticated as Apple has trouble keeping its offshore suppliers in line, as the consumer-electronics giant disclosed in a recent groundbreaking report. Environmental and ethical violations abounded, such as using underage labor and underpaying workers. “You obviously can find cheaper-made goods” outside the United States, says Gene Tyndall, executive vice president of global supply-chain services at consultancy Tompkins International. But the real question for a CFO, he adds, is whether the so-called total delivery cost—the one that takes into account operational risks and potentially disastrous financial-statement effects—outweighs the cost-savings. Companies that want to extend their supply FIGURE 1. A majority of executives say that they regularly work with third parties, and very few expect their companies’ reliance on third parties to weaken. Over the next two years, how would you expect your organization’s use of third parties to change? Decrease use Domestically Internationally No change 9% 6% 49% 46% Increase use 40% 37% CFO PUBLISHING 39 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG chains overseas should keep the following considerations in mind, say experts: Longer order cycles The most immediate difference with a global supplier is that everything is likely to take longer, at least initially. For Chinese suppliers, a midsize company should plan on a 12-week cycle from ordering goods to receiving them, says Tyndall. The smaller the volume, the longer the cycle is likely to be. Longer order cycles can have an impact on a company’s finances. New suppliers may expect payment upon shipment, potentially tying up cash for long periods. “You go from dealing with suppliers you know, who give you normal payment terms, to a situation where they’re expecting you to pay before you have product,” says Schreiber. There are ways to avoid sending cash into the ether immediately. One of Schreiber’s new suppliers has credit insurance, which effectively covers the seller’s receivable until the product arrives and the buyer pays the invoice. Schreiber says he negotiated directly with the credit insurance company to get a line of credit sufficient to cover the full value of Storm Copper’s first order with the supplier. Over time, the terms have improved as both parties have become more comfortable with each other. “When we’re on the shop floor, we look at how clean it is, what kind of attitude people have about their work. It’s important that we don’t just talk to people who have been prepared to speak to us. We look employees in the eye and ask about what they focus on every day.” Myriad costs It’s important to have a cash cushion for the myriad smaller, often unexpected costs associated with foreign suppliers, experts say, costs that include customs duties, insurance, letters of credit, and even payment-processing fees. One surprise for many firms is that “the first time your company brings a container from anywhere else, customs opens it up and then sends you a bill for as much as $2,000,” says Shawn Casemore, president of Casemore & Co., a supply chain consultancy. 40 CFO PUBLISHING Tax and tariff policies It’s also essential to think about how a supplier country’s tax and tariff policies are likely to evolve. If a country is experiencing a manufacturing downturn, for example, the government might try to protect the industry by slapping export tariffs on unfinished goods rather than finished, packaged goods. “Chances are you’re not going to be in and out in a year, so you need to try to get a handle on the volatility in the environment,” says Gary Lynch, global leader of Marsh’s supply chain riskmanagement group. Balance-sheet issues Schreiber, who is now receiving copper from Europe and Latin America, says that since Storm Copper technically owns the material as soon as it ships, he must carry it on the books as inventory for the entire eight-week journey (something he doesn’t have to worry about when the copper comes from New York). That leads to an “artificial inflation” of the balance sheet, he says, which can affect debt agreements. “You have to test debt compliance ahead of time to make sure you don’t violate any covenants by adding a bunch of inventory and payables.” Foreign exchange Foreign exchange is another potentially thorny issue that comes along with buying global. At oralcare product maker Dr. Fresh, CFO Duane Horne says 85% of its products are sourced from China and have been since the company’s 1998 inception. For simplicity’s sake, the company still pays for the product in dollars, although it is moving toward paying in Chinese renminbi. Meanwhile, Horne is using 30-day nondeliverable forward contracts to help hedge part of the company’s exposure that is baked into its current prices. (In general, prices will be slightly higher in dollars to compensate the supplier for the exchange risk it takes on.) The forwards “have been successful to date, but you do have to watch them very closely,” warns Horne. Getting to Know You Several of the executives we interviewed for a 2012 research report emphasize the importance of getting to know the global partners they will be working with firsthand. So when Julian Eames, SVP of Business Operations at networking technology provider F5 Networks, is investigating a potential third-party partner, he makes sure to visit the supplier’s operations onsite as well as to sit down GOING GLOBAL frequently with its management. “When we’re on the shop floor, we’re looking at how clean and tidy it is, what kind of attitude the people have about their work,” he says. He watches employees at work and talks to them “to sniff out whether they have a sense of ownership, and a sense of pride in what they are doing.” It’s important, he insists, that “we don’t just talk to the people who have been prepared to speak to us. We look employees in the eye and ask about what they focus on every day.” With the growing use of overseas partners, having local visibility can be even more critical. “There’s a lot more vetting” when it comes to international suppliers, says Mr. Jones, the joint CFO/COO for Edward Don & Co. “We have our folks make sure that they are overseas enough visiting, developing the relationships, understanding the failure points and the risk mitigation strategies.” One result of this close attention is simply more confidence in your partner company’s performance, as well as its financials. Mr. Jones says that “we know the senior management at our strategic partner companies.” He continues: “We know the people we’re working with, as well as their organizational strategy, risk management techniques, and the durability of their financing. We develop personal relationships with our strategic partners.” Getting Started factories on our behalf and are in contact with them on a daily basis,” says Horne, adding that it’s also beneficial to have staff members in the U.S. who are fluent in the suppliers’ language. Brokers and other middlemen can also be helpful as volumes grow. Above all, it’s important to act with speed when an opportunity with a global supplier comes up—or it may soon be gone. Given the unpredictability of factors like labor costs, oil prices, taxes, tariffs, and natural disasters, cost advantages shift quickly, often to surprising places. “You’ve got to be flexible and agile,” Ferrari says. “Today, supply chain sourcing is a very active process.” CFO Summary • Smaller companies are increasingly turning to offshore suppliers to avoid domestic shortages and slowdowns. • Weigh the total delivery cost of using a global supply chain against your company’s potential cost savings. • Plan ahead: global suppliers often have longer order cycles, at least initially; budget for unexpected costs to arise; research tax policies and foreign exchange issues. The best approach, then, is often to start slow, and make sure not to neglect existing suppliers in the U.S. “Pick one commodity that you know is available in China and do a pilot test with one or two suppliers there,” counsels Tyndall. “Meanwhile, manage your supply base in the U.S., because if they get upset, that can affect everything.” Over time, there are a variety of best practices for vetting and managing foreign suppliers. For one, with sufficient volume, a company may want to establish a representative office in the suppliers’ country. That’s an approach Dr. Fresh has taken in China; about seven employees “coordinate with the Sources for Going Global: “Making the Leap,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, June 1, 2011. “Midsize Companies See Growth Ahead,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, April 26, 2011. “Not Made in America,” Alix Stuart, CFO Magazine, March 1, 2012. “Three Overlooked Small-Business Tax Breaks,” Marielle Segarra, CFO.com, February 27, 2012. “Working Well Together: Managing Third-Party Risk in a More Integrated World,” CFO Research, April 2012. CFO PUBLISHING 41 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT “Frozen out of credit markets, finance executives call for a self-funding growth strategy driven by cash flow from operations.” 42 CFO PUBLISHING UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT CREATING A SECURE FOUNDATION FOR GROWTH I t’s the kind of problem a company should be glad to have: Maintaining financial discipline often becomes more difficult as the business starts to grow again. Growth can stretch working capital as urgent spending and investment needs outstrip companies’ immediate ability to convert inventories and receivables to cash—which means that cash and working-capital discipline becomes, if anything, even more important during growth periods. In a survey conducted late in 2010 among small and midsize companies, we found that senior finance executives had once again begun to anticipate top-line growth for their firms. In our survey of more than 300 senior finance executives at companies with less than $250 million in revenue, nearly 75% of respondents said that they expected growth to come from selling to new customers—a strategy that is likely to consume more capital than, say, penetrating existing accounts more deeply. (See Figure 1.) Where will companies go to get that capital? During the downturn, small and midsize companies—just like consumers—found themselves forced to live within their means, looking in all corners before going out and spending. During the depths of the recession, the lack of access to credit made it a challenge for them to stay solvent. One survey respondent expressed that frustration by issuing a plaintive plea: “Get the banks to start making loans.” But even with economic growth slowly lumbering back to life, financial leaders at these businesses find themselves in the unhappy position of having to “grow it alone,” with little recourse to financial partners. Frozen out of credit markets, finance executives call for a self-funding growth strategy driven by cash flow from operations. Fully 72% of the respondents agreed with the statement, “My company’s growth is fueled more by cash from ongoing operations than by borrowing or equity.” Figure 1. As economic growth picks up, nearly 75% of finance executives at small and midsize companies see growth in selling to new customers. Which of the following do you see as your company’s most important opportunities for increasing sales over the next two years? Sales to new customers in current product/service lines 73% Sales to existing customer base 57% New product/service lines 45% Domestic expansion International expansion 25% 20% CFO PUBLISHING 43 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG determining your business’s ability to improve its cash position?”—could be summarized in a word cloud that contains such phrases as: better terms, accurate invoicing, faster collections, timely billing, tightened credit policies, and access to bank line of credit, to name but a few. If only it were as simple as twisting the sales spigot and standing back to give the cash some room to flow. One respondent, an executive at an aerospace firm, pinned his company’s hopes on just this strategy: “Most financial problems can be solved by increasing sales. When we want to increase our cash position, we bite the bullet in the short run and increase our sales team, which leads to better cash flow later.” For most midsize companies, however, selffunding will require just about every form of operational tweaking that they can imagine. All but 18% of the respondents said that growth, by itself, wouldn’t generate sufficient retained earnings. Which means that finance executives are turning over all the working-capital rocks they can find to wring cash from them. In other words, finance is on the hot seat. Fifty-eight percent of respondents considered it very likely (23%) or somewhat likely (35%) that they would hold the finance staff more accountable for maintaining a strong cash position. They’re making sure their reports are relentlessly focused on shepherding working capital, in all its forms. (See Figure 2.) Respondents’ written answers to an open-text question in our survey—“In your opinion, what are the most important factors CFO Summary • To meet growth targets, SFEs are looking for selffunding growth strategies driven by cash flow from operations. • Faced with high expectations for working capital, the finance function is tasked with maintaining a strong cash position for their company. Figure 2. Senior finance executives stick with what’s tried-and-true, not what’s new. To what extent is your company likely to pursue the following steps in the next 12 months in an effort to strengthen its cash position? Very likely Somewhat likely 23% 35% Hold finance staff more accountable for maintaining a strong cash position Renegotiate business terms with suppliers 19% Borrow from commercial banks 17% Alter internal processes for collecting accounts receivable 16% Raise prices for goods and services 12% Offer invoice discounting or other incentives 44 CFO PUBLISHING 40% 35% 48% 20% 8% Curtail payments to investors 7% Raise capital from investors 7% Liquidate receivables through third parties 41% 3% 14% 18% 7% UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT CONSTANT PRESSURE ON WORKING-CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT D iligence—not necessarily innovation— is the essence of working-capital improvement. The finance executives who participated in the 2010 study emphasized consistency, focus, and continual engagement as keys to better cash and working-capital management. “I don’t think there are any silver bullets here,” one CFO told us. “It really is the basic blocking and tackling.” Survey results suggest that midsize firms have already been working hard at trying to extract payments faster from customers, negotiate more favorable terms with suppliers, and reduce inventory levels while maintaining overall margins. They claim they’ve had some degree of success. In another CFO Research survey conducted in mid2011, two-thirds of respondents reported that their companies’ days-working-capital (DWC) position was better than three years ago. Effort applied to collections was the primary contributor to this improvement; respondents are much more likely to report improvement in days sales outstanding (DSO) (56%) than they are to report improvement in days inventory outstanding (DIO) (41%) or days payable outstanding (DPO) (42%). (See Figure 1.) And, even following a year of concentrated working-capital improvement in the aftermath of the financial crisis, many midsize firms were able to achieve further gains. Across the survey population, respondents who reported improvement in DWC over the previous year outnumbered those who reported deterioration by a wide margin. (Fiftysix percent of respondents reported improvement in DWC; only 17% reported deterioration.) Again, improvement in collections led the way: respondents report improvement in DSO over the past year (47%) much more often than they report improvement in DIO (33%) or in DPO (36%). (See Figure 2.) As they strive for new gains, midsize companies are likely to continue focusing their efforts on Figure 1. Current Working-Capital Position vs. Three Years Ago Figure 2. Change in Working-Capital Performance over 2011 A majority of finance executives report improvement in their overall working-capital position. Improvements in inventory and payables positions lagged, however, behind improvement in receivables. Improvement in DSO, in particular, led to overall improvement in working capital performance. DWC DSO DIO DPO DWC DSO DIO DPO n Much better n Somewhat better n No change n Somewhat worse n Much worse CFO PUBLISHING 45 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG receivables performance, followed closely by better inventory management. (See Figure 3.) For instance, they might see opportunities to lower DSO by becoming more aggressive on the collections end or by tracking payments with problem codes so that recurring issues can be identified and addressed. One respondent, the controller of a transportation firm, advised financial chieftains at other companies to “have a strong internal focus on DSO and the individual factors that affect it.” Through “focused improvement in these areas and understanding the industry norms,” this finance leader suggests that small and midsize companies can gain an “understanding [of] where real improvement can come from.” Taking control wherever they can: Lack of bargaining power is a challenge So what’s blocking small and midsize firms from fortifying their cash and working capital positions? The results of our survey show that midsize firms are systematically at a disadvantage compared to large companies—simply because large firms, with their vast buying power, have a degree of bargaining clout that their smaller counterparts lack. For many smaller companies, the truth is that while they may have every intention of self-funding, their finance heads are keenly aware of the challenges of being the little guy. Most small companies, after all, sell to big companies. Survey results confirm that midsize companies do a lot of business with companies larger than theirs. (See Figure 4 on page 47.) Survey respondents also frequently note that larger companies aren’t hesitating to exercise their bargaining power, to the detriment of midsize companies’ ability to convert receivables to cash. Respondents who agree that larger companies have used their bargaining power to force them to accept slower payments outnumber those who disagree by a wide margin (47% versus 31%). Large companies aren’t the type of customers that respond well—or at all—to nagging. Writes one respondent, a top executive of a $50 million engineering services firm, “We deal primarily in unbalanced negotiation. Our clients are substantially larger and perceive unlimited choice in suppliers. Clients are imposing unilateral changes to payment terms. They are not willing to negotiate and have no consideration for impact on their supply chain. Clients that do agree to reasonable terms at times do not honor those terms, and that trend is increasing.” Another executive, who heads up a contract manufacturer, flatly concedes that his company’s success in self-funding is tied to “our ability to block large companies’ attempts to unilaterally, arbitrarily, and officiously extend payment terms on sales to them.” Of course, turnabout is fair play. Finance executives for midsize companies readily admit that they’re looking to extend their payments to their own suppliers. Sixty percent of respondents deemed it “very” or “somewhat” likely that they would renegotiate terms with suppliers. Throughout Figure 3. Working-Capital Priorities Receivables performance and inventory management surface as high priorities for improvement. A fairly large number of respondents decline to choose just one area, saying they plan to focus on “all three” equally. “Of the three main dimensions of working capital, __________ will be the highest priority for improvement at my company over the next year.” Receivables performance 38% Inventory management 34% Payables performance 7% Note: 3% of respondents answered “Not sure.” 46 CFO PUBLISHING All three 18% UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT the open-text responses, finance executives called for extending accounts payable (AP) in ways to match accounts receivable. So, for example, while the finance head of a business services firm says his company will “continue to focus on speedy invoicing,” he also says they have “created alternative payment schedules for independent contractors, delaying payment similarly to the delay we’re seeing in receivables (change of 15 days).” Those who agree that increased control over payments would yield a meaningful improvement in working capital (48%) outnumber those who disagree with that proposition (19%) by more than two-to-one. At the same time, a plurality of respondents (44%) admits that they have difficulty requiring their suppliers to accept modifications in payment terms. These results suggest that a lack of negotiating leverage places midsize firms at a disadvantage not only when they seek to collect briskly from their largest customers, but also when they look for more favorable terms from their own suppliers and vendors. Midsize companies’ working-capital accomplishments in recent years seem even more impressive when viewed in this broader context. But until the economy returns to robust growth and demand for goods and services rebounds strongly, midsize organizations can expect that their relative lack of bargaining power will continue to complicate their efforts to free cash on their balance sheets in the months to come. CFO Summary • SFEs tell us that consistency, focus, and continual engagement are the keys to working-capital improvement. • Collections efforts have led to days working capital (DWC) improvements for small and midsize companies. Now, to make new gains, companies are likely to focus on receivables performance and inventory management. • Smaller companies are at a disadvantage because larger companies, their biggest-volume customers, have a better bargaining position in payment negotiations, hurting small and midsize companies’ ability to convert receivables to cash. Figure 4. From which customer segments do companies derive a large volume of business? Firms most often derive a large volume of business from other companies that are bigger than they are. 9% Same size companies 15% 57% Respondent population Larger companies 25% 20% Individual consumers Smaller companies Government/ Public organizations CFO PUBLISHING 47 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG FUNDING ALTERNATIVES AUCTIONING RECEIVABLES A s small businesses hunt for working capital, alternatives that let CFOs quickly turn receivables into cash are growing in popularity. The results from our previous surveys suggest that there aren’t very many easy (or even not-so-easy) gains left to capture internally, with relatively large numbers of respondents seeing “no change” across the three main dimensions of their working-capital performance. For example, 71% of respondents in our 2010 survey said they already had very effective AR processes, and nearly two-thirds disagreed with the statement that “my company is 48 CFO PUBLISHING reluctant to pursue collections aggressively.” They’re already doing what they can—which means that many midsize firms are likely to find it difficult to continue to register working-capital improvements. Having watched as their liquidity evaporated over the past couple of years, smart finance chiefs aren’t assuming they know the next wave of challenges they will confront. More important, some of them are anticipating that they will be able to avail themselves of new tools. Or, for that matter, reconsider existing possibilities. In fact, when we asked them whether greater access to certain cashgenerating options would have a substantial impact on their company’s performance, 14% reported that they “didn’t know” about the effect of “selling or auctioning individual customer invoices on a spot market.” That option attracted the highest percentage of respondents to that category. It suggests a seed of curiosity. That seed will likely mature into a full-blown need. Having tidied up their accounts receivable, it will become clearer that their growth goals are still out of their financial reach. At that point—which will come soon, given how little waste finance executives already acknowledge seeing in their operations processes—they will start casting about for new options. To operate in a changed financial environment, small and midsize companies are going to have to look beyond the conventional financing options. When it comes to external sources of cash, finance executives cited a broad array of sources that they use. “Our chairman buys our receivables,” wrote one manufacturing CFO. Equity holders, too, were identified as a useful source of short-term liquidity. Strong relationships with commercial banks UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT and asset-backed lenders were also mentioned frequently. Rarely mentioned were factoring and collection agents, regarded as a “last resort” because of their perceived high cost and possibly detrimental effect on customer relationships. When we asked about the frequency with which they use certain cashbuilding techniques, the two least-used options were factoring of bundled receivables through a third party (91% of respondents report that they seldom or never go with this option) and selling or auctioning individual customer invoices on a spot market (94%). What financial executives at small and midsize firms want, it seems, is a source of liquidity that can bolster their short-term cash flow while addressing their concerns about affordability and allowing them to approach their customers with sensitivity. In general, small and midsize businesses would prefer that their customers didn’t know that they had resorted to factoring, which tends to emit a whiff of distress. Typically, factoring also requires small and midsize companies to give up something they often consider more precious than even getting full value for their receivables: control. Having offloaded all of their receivables to a factor, they are in effect washing their hands of their own customers. Says the CFO of a $10 million manufacturer: “Nonrecourse factoring or discounting AR will always have a negative effect on customers. That’s one of the trade-offs.” Or is it? Loyalties shifted—ever so slightly—when finance executives were asked about the likelihood of using certain techniques in the next two years. Fewer ruled out the possibility of factoring their bundled receivables through a third party or of selling or auctioning individual invoices on a spot market. In each case, a few more CFOs slipped out of the “seldom or never” category. After the “liquidity trap” of the last few years, CFOs weren’t automatically expecting that any of their assumptions would be intact two years hence. It should come as no surprise, then, that businesses are becoming more receptive to services allowing them to cash in sooner. Transaction volume on The Receivables Exchange, an online auction platform for invoices, grew five times over in the space of a year, and president Nicolas Perkin expected similar growth in 2011. The Interface Financial Group (IFG), a 39-year-old set of franchises that buys small numbers of invoices straight from business owners, said that volume was up between 10% and 12% in 2010. And a new PayPal-backed business aimed at guaranteeing payments from consumers, BillFloat, attracted 100 businesses within six months of its launch. What financial executives at small and midsize firms want is a source of liquidity that can bolster their shortterm cash flow while addressing their concerns about affordability and allowing them to approach their customers with sensitivity. One reason for the spike is that banks remained loath to lend to small and sometimes young companies. “In normal times, the businesses referred to us by banks would be one, two, or three years old,” says David Banfield, president of IFG. “Now we’re seeing all of those plus more mature companies with five to seven years in business being referred to us. There’s no indication that will change in the near future.” The relative ease and speed of the programs are also appealing. IFG, which says it can get cash into the business owner’s hand within four days of its first discussions with the company, conducts a standard credit check on the business, as well as verifies that the company’s customer has received the product and is satisfied with it. “It’s a much more streamlined process than factoring all your receivables,” says Banfield. IFG’s typical client has CFO PUBLISHING 49 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG between $400,000 and $4 million in annual revenue and needs about $30,000 to $60,000 for a given transaction, he says. On The Receivables Exchange, sellers must register and meet certain criteria, such as being in business at least two years and having at least $2 million in annual revenue. But there are no rules on which invoices they can put up for sale or how much they can ask. Buyers, however, can see if the seller has a history of invoices that were not paid. “Companies usually sell their best invoices, because they want to establish a track record and reduce their cost of funds,” says Perkin. The exchange had about 1,450 registered sellers by early 2011. A different approach, and one that requires even less effort or risk, is to offer customers an easy way to finance their outstanding balances. NewWave Communications, a Midwestern cable operator, introduced BillFloat on its website, giving its 100,000 customers an online way to borrow money to cover their bill rather than just ignore it. “There’s no cost to us, and we’re getting payments before their due dates rather than late,” says Kathy Klipfel, NewWave billing and credit director. “Even if we did offset some revenue associated with late fees [currently $7 per month], it’s still worth it to deal with our aging accounts,” she says. The terms of such deals can vary quite a bit. Banfield says IFG will pay anywhere from 91% to 96% of an invoice’s value, depending on its age. On The Receivables Exchange, sellers set their own terms. In both cases, sellers are ultimately responsible for nonperforming invoices. With BillFloat, however, a company such as NewWave gets its money free and clear. As alluring as such easy fixes sound, some point out that prevention is still the best cure for aging receivables. Such services cost “10 to 20 times what it would cost you to do internally,” estimates Pam Krank, president of The Credit Department, a credit-management outsourcing firm. “If you’re liberal on credit, you need to be conservative on collections. It just takes a little discipline up front: you set up terms and you stick to them.” She also advocates taking a second look at extending credit at all. “If you have to offer terms, you must make sure the risk makes sense,” she says, and perform some type of credit check to make sure the client doesn’t have other unpaid invoices or outstanding liens. 50 CFO PUBLISHING CFO Summary • In a challenging economic environment, CFOs must consider a variety of financing options. • For many small and midsize company SFEs, factoring is traditionally a “last resort” because of its high cost and detrimental effect on customer relationships. But now businesses are less likely to rule factoring out as they look for ways to cash in sooner. UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT SUPPLY CHAIN FINANCING SHORING UP THE SUPPLY CHAIN TO SUPPORT GROWTH I n order to improve working capital and strengthen supplier relationships, a large number of respondents to a CFO Research survey conducted in December 2010 report that their companies already participate in supply chain finance (SCF) programs (66%), or at least are considering starting them (17%). SCF is intended to link buyers, their suppliers, and financial institutions through a web-based platform where suppliers can view their buyerapproved receivables and choose early payment on them for a small discount based on the strength of the buyer’s credit rating. The goal is to reduce suppliers’ costs and working capital requirements, as well as improve their cash flow. The buying organization may then build on these supplier benefits to support better supplier relationships and a range of supplier initiatives, including harmonizing or extending payment terms. The SCF solution provider may also support these efforts with payment-terms benchmarking or other procurement-related services. Even in a buyer’s market for goods and services, finance executives recognize that key components of the working capital equation run through the supply base. Finance executives in our 2010 report CFO PUBLISHING 51 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG expressed concern with how well their companies were managing their supply chains, with 73% saying that supplier relationships are a top priority. In response to an open-ended question, a treasurer from the construction industry explains, “In order to reduce inventory on hand, we need to shorten the supply chain to ensure that, when business needs increase, the inventory is quickly available.” Similarly, a director of finance in the energy industry cites the need to “optimize the supply chain network, make it more flexible to external shocks and crisis in supply.” The survey was conducted at a time when finance executives appeared to be looking cautiously ahead for renewed growth for their companies. Credit remained both tight and expensive—especially for midsize and smaller companies— and the path to economic recovery looked like it would be a long and gradual slope upward. In this environment, cash very much remains king, and effective management of both working capital and supplier relationships gains added value. Finance executives reported that they were looking to improve all components of working capital— DSO, DPO, and DIO. In these efforts, maintaining and strengthening working relationships with vendors and suppliers will be important. In other words, businesses have a vested interest in how their suppliers are doing. Yet volatility within the supply base presents challenges for strengthening supplier relationships and managing working capital. Few respondents from our survey said they expected their companies to make no changes in their supplier base over the next year. Some anticipated their companies would diversify the supply base, while others expected to add key suppliers or rationalize and consolidate suppliers. Further complicating supply chain and working capital management, respondents also say that their companies have had to deal with a range of supply chain problems over the past two years. The survey revealed a lengthy list of supplier challenges that finance executives said they were dealing with during the recession. Several of these issues are related directly to payables, such as increases in suppliers’ product pricing, inflexibility of suppliers in negotiating terms, or supplier demands for faster payment. But many issues with suppliers flow out of the suppliers’ own difficulties in coping with the economic downturn. The poor financial condition of suppliers is cited by about 4 out of 10 respondents as one of the issues their companies had to deal with. These respondents are much more likely than others to cite additional supplier issues, such as the inability of suppliers to respond to changes in production requirements or the poor quality of suppliers’ products. Substantially more of these respondents than others in the survey say that their companies lack alternative sources of supply, and more than half report that their companies have had to support key suppliers financially. These companies, in particular, seem to have a compelling reason to improve working relationships with their suppliers. SCF programs typically are designed to offer the potential for improving supplier relationships and ease the financial strain on suppliers while supporting the buyer’s working capital initiatives. In fact, 82% of finance executives in the survey conducted in 2010 believed that SCF could be used to improve a company’s working capital efficiency. The benefits of SCF are widely recognized by the finance executives participating in our survey. More than 70% of respondents think that SCF is either moderately or very effective in delivering each of the specific benefits we asked about: • Strengthening working relationship with suppliers • Improving the financial health of suppliers The survey revealed a lengthy list of supplier challenges for finance executives during the recession. Several of these issues are related directly to payables, such as increases in suppliers’ product pricing, inflexibility of suppliers in negotiating terms, or supplier demands for faster payment. But many issues with suppliers flow out of the suppliers’ own difficulties in coping with the economic downturn. 52 CFO PUBLISHING UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT • • • • • • • Improving working capital efficiency Improving the efficiency of accounts payable Lowering the cost of goods sold Extending supplier payment terms Increasing early payment discounts Supporting low-cost-country sourcing Helping to move suppliers from Letter of Credit to Open Account payment terms Importantly, respondents recognize the mutual benefits of SCF for suppliers as well, with 72% saying that SCF is effective in improving the financial health of suppliers and 78% saying that these programs strengthen working relationships with suppliers. As one vice president of finance writes, the “mutual commitment to work together for better results for both sides” is one of the most important changes his company can make. However, unusually large numbers (typically 6070%) of finance executives who are not planning on using SCF also indicate that they do not know enough about any of its benefits to comment on them. In addition, less than 20% of the companies represented in the survey employ structured competitor benchmarking to determine supplier payment terms, relying instead on largely ad hoc negotiations to agree on terms. The pieces are in place to take advantage of SCF. Two-thirds of all respondents agree that the technology to implement an SCF program is readily available. Further, two-thirds of respondents view the ability to involve multiple banks in their SCF programs through a single, open SCF platform as a requirement for success, and an equal number of respondents see services provided to assist in supplier outreach as critical. As companies cast about for every advantage to help them manage through a sluggish recovery, it will be important to be able to make informed decisions on the role that SCF might play in a broader supplier management strategy. CFO Summary • Supply-chain financing (SCF) programs link buyers, suppliers, and financial institutions through a web-based platform where suppliers can view their buyer-approved receivables and choose early payment on them for a small discount based on the strength of the buyer’s credit rating. Keep up with the latest findings and insights from CFO Research. Visit cfo.com/research • The goal: reduce suppliers’ costs and working capital requirements while improving cash flow. • Improving working capital requires maintaining and strengthening working relationships with vendors and suppliers. SCF programs have the potential to improve these relationships. CFO PUBLISHING 53 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG MANY HANDS MAKE LIGHT(ER) WORK GETTING YOUR ORGANIZATION ON BOARD W hile CFOs of small and midsize businesses have to learn to live with the imbalance between their employers and customers, it’s a reality that makes them want to exert control where they know they can do so effectively—over internal processes. What other obstacles do midsize companies face 54 CFO PUBLISHING as they work to improve their cash and workingcapital management? We asked respondents to evaluate a wide range of potential barriers. The ubiquitous “lack of bargaining power” surfaces as the most-often cited problem. But survey results reveal that organizational and cultural issues— including lack of coordination, internal pressure to accept unfavorable terms, and lack of a shared organizational mandate for improvement—follow close behind. Indeed, as barriers to cash and working-capital improvement, organizational and cultural matters edge out both process weakness and technological inadequacy by a narrow margin, and they far outstrip financial matters like weakened credit ratings, credit constriction, or lack of access to affordable financial products and services. (See Figure 1 on page 55.) Because organizational and cultural problems emerge as some of the most substantial barriers to better cash and working-capital performance, we might expect midsize firms to make cultural and organizational change a centerpiece of their improvement efforts. But survey results show something different: when asked to assess four major improvement categories, respondents most frequently report that process improvement will play a “major” or “supporting” role in their plans (84%), followed by increased automation (71%). Cultural and organizational change follow distantly (55% and 50%, respectively). (See Figure 2 on page 56.) Viewed together, these results suggest some UNDER PRESSURE WORKING CAPITAL AND CASH MANAGEMENT intriguing questions: are respondents relying on process change as a precursor for organizational or cultural adjustment? Put another way, are better, more streamlined and standardized processes seen as a useful (or even necessary) framework for further change? Can process improvement serve as a mechanism to influence company culture or organization (as opposed to a mere expression of a firm’s culture and organization)? Or is process improvement simply a worthy—but also a lesschallenging and more-comfortable—substitute for tackling amorphous (and recalcitrant) cultural and organizational problems? For now, however, perhaps the main conclusion to draw from these survey results is this: effective cash and working-capital management is the work of the whole company—not the work of finance alone. Coordinated, cross-functional effort— especially among finance and account-relationship holders across the organization—is one of the most reliable paths to improvement. Those working in sales and operations have tremendous influence over the day-to-day decisions that can have a profound impact on a company’s working-capital position. At the same time, it comes as little surprise that the daily demands of closing deals and filling orders can sometimes edge out working-capital considerations in resource-strapped sales and operating units. But the finance executives who participated in this study agree that encouraging decision makers to factor working-capital into their thinking can make a difference. “Don’t underestimate the benefits to be realized from educating those in the organization who have customer or vendor contacts on the importance of cash and workingcapital management,” writes the CFO of a midsize professional services firm in response to an openended question. Ultimately, say executives, the issue is one of Figure 1. What stands in the way of cash and working-capital improvement at small and midsize companies? A lack of bargaining power, combined with internal problems with coordination and alignment, surface as the most prominent obstacles. 34% 11% 11% Weak credit rating after recent financial crisis Lack of access to cost-effective products and services to support cash and working-capital management 20% Lack of coordinated effort to support collections and 29% Process weakness 34% 40% 25% Internal pressure to accept less favorable terms to close sales Lack of bargaining power 11% Difficulty selling Lack of access to financing/Constriction excess inventory in credit markets 6% Other 20% Organizational fatigue Inadequate technology systems Note: Respondents were asked to choose up to four barriers. 32% Lack of shared organizational mandate to improve cash and working capital management CFO PUBLISHING 55 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG finance leadership: creating a cash-conscious culture, setting expectations, measuring progress, and insisting on accountability. “Implement a ‘cash is king’ philosophy across the board,” writes the controller of a midsize manufacturing company. “Hold key management personnel accountable for their operations.” Senior finance executives know that there’s no magic bullet for cash and workingcapital improvement. But when it comes to cash and working-capital discipline, following fundamental management principles—like ensuring that those who have control over cash and working-capitalrelated decisions are also accountable for the consequences of those decisions—can work some magic of its own. CFO Summary • SFEs most often cite “lack of bargaining power” as their biggest obstacle to working-capital improvement, but organizational and cultural issues follow closely behind. • Instead of tackling these organizational and cultural barriers, SFEs most often tell us they expect process improvement to play a “major” or “supporting” role in their plans. • Effective cash and working-capital management is the work of the whole company—not the finance function alone. • How can you take the lead? Create a cashconscious culture, set expectations, measure progress, and insist on accountability. Figure 2. What broad types of cash and working-capital improvements will small and midsize firms pursue? Process improvement outpaces other broad improvement categories, including increased automation and cultural and organizational change. Supporting role in improvement n Major role in improvement n 45% 47% 30% 31% 39% Process improvement 24% 25% Increased automation Cultural change 19% Organizational change Sources for Under Pressure: Working Capital and Cash Management: “Bridging the Liquidity Gap,” CFO Research, November 2010. “Cash and Working-Capital Discipline: CFOs at midsize firms face their top financial challenges,” CFO Research, March 2012. “Fast Cash for Small Firms,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, February 25, 2011. “Strengthening Supplier Relationships Through Supply Chain Finance,” CFO Research, December 2010. 56 CFO PUBLISHING FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE “Experts say fast-growing companies are particularly prone to having their 401(k) plans get off track in one way or another. The combination of fluctuating asset levels, executive overload, and complex IRS rules means CFOs need to keep a close watch.” CFO PUBLISHING 57 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG STAYING ON TRACK 401(K) CONSIDERATIONS FOR GROWING COMPANIES T he headlines about 401(k) plans vaunt the perils of employers offering employees too few investment choices, or too risky ones, or ones with fees that are too high. But none of those are Chris Beck’s problem. Instead, Beck, CFO of BirdDog Solutions, a private-equity-backed logistics provider, is now sifting through a list of the more than 50 investment options that are currently in his company’s plan for about 160 employees with $3 million in assets. As BirdDog has made three acquisitions in Beck’s two-and-a-half-year tenure, and merged 58 CFO PUBLISHING new employees into its 401(k) plan, “we’ve tried to be very accommodating by adding a fund here or there,” says Beck. That courtesy has now yielded a volume of options he considers overwhelming. “We’ve got bright people but they’re not financial types; people kind of shut down when they have to decide if they want to be in the energy fund, or international emerging markets,” or other highlyspecific individual investments. As a result, more than half of the plan assets are in the lifestyle and lifecycle funds, effectively prepackaged portfolios that change over time. The task now: “We are going through to find the best of breed in individual funds,” says Beck, who is working with advisers, with plans to drop the rest. Fast-growing companies are particularly prone to having their 401(k) plans get off track in one way or another, say experts. The combination of fluctuating asset levels, executive overload, and Internal Revenue Service rules that are structured in a way to almost ensure closely held companies will violate them means that CFOs at those companies need to keep an especially close watch on them, at least at a high level. “You’d think I’d be most focused on the finance aspect [of the 401(k) plan], but that’s secondary,” says Gene Lynes, CFO of energymanagement consultancy Ecova, which has rapidly grown its plan assets in the past few years to close to $15 million. “Being a good employer, we’re trying to protect people for the future and create high morale”—no easy task these days. The move toward fewer 401(k) options is one that has gained a lot of fans from companies both small and large in recent years. J.P. Morgan, for one, recently proposed a winnowing down, or at least an aggregation, of investment options to make things easier for participants. And such FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE screening is a hallmark of plans that are targeted at smaller businesses. At Sharebuilder 401(k) (a division of ING Direct), for example, “our investment committee manages the fund lineup, and takes on the fiduciary responsibility,” giving everyone a fairly slim menu of 16 ETFs or one of five model portfolios, says Stuart Robertson, head of the division, which is aimed at plans with 250 employees or less. While there is still some choice and education involved, “we try to make it hard for participants to get off on the wrong foot,” he says. That philosophy is extending to other parts of the plans, as well. Vanguard recently announced a new offering aimed at plans with under $20 million in assets, with standardized record-keeping and administration to help keep fees and hassle low. For example, there’s a prototype plan document that plan sponsors are asked to adopt that “has less flexibility than the standard one, but still has everything you need to operate the plan,” says Kathy Fuertes, who leads Vanguard’s new effort. Testing 1, 2, 3 While the marketplace for smaller 401(k) plans may be getting richer, the new plans are no panacea for the antidiscrimination test violations that take many CFOs by surprise. Such tests include the actual deferral percentage (ADP) test, the actual contribution percentage (ACP), and the topheavy test. Their aim is to ensure that highly paid executives and owners of the firm aren’t reaping disproportionate benefits relative to rank-and-file employees, so they cap the amount that executives can contribute based on the amount that employees contribute. Violations, even unwitting ones, can wreak havoc on corporate cash flow and executive taxes. One of the easiest tests to fail is the top-heavy test, which looks at the ratio of the accumulated plan assets of key employees (usually the executive team, and possibly others with ownership) to those of rank-and-file employees, says David Wray, president of Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of America. If key employees have more than 60% of the plan’s assets, the plan fails. Many smaller companies “unsuspectingly walk into the experience” of failing, says Wray, because closely held companies with low employee participation and/or high employee turnover will almost certainly fail within several years. “When you first set up the plan, it’s not top heavy, but it doesn’t take more than four years before it becomes that way,” he says. “And it’s a dagger into the heart of small companies where cash flow is very uncertain.” The ADP and ACP tests are also easy to fail for rapidly-growing companies, but the problem is not without a solution, notes Joseph S. Adams, an attorney with McDermott, Will & Emery in Chicago. “You can basically buy your way out of the discrimination tests by setting up matching safe harbors,” he says. There are three options to achieve safe-harbor status, and they largely involve employers committing to match at least 3% of employees’ contributions, vesting the contributions faster, and One of the easiest tests to fail is the top-heavy test, which looks at the ratio of the accumulated plan assets of key employees (usually the executive team, and possibly others with ownership) to those of rank-and-file employees. If key employees have more than 60% of the plan’s assets, the plan fails. in some cases, automatically enrolling employees in the plan, says Adams. A profit-sharing contribution is also an option and protects against all violations, but is typically more expensive. A company can elect to change its safe-harbor status from year to year, but cannot change midyear. Not surprisingly, many companies elected to drop the safe-harbor status in the depth of the recession, when 401(k) matches were one of the few sources of cash left. Both Ecova’s Lynes and BirdDog’s Beck say they have run into problems with these tests based on decisions made before their tenures. “Prior to my arrival, the company went through CFO PUBLISHING 59 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG some tough times and had to pull back, which may be why they didn’t use a safe harbor,” says Lynes. Unfortunately, that resulted in failing one of the tests and executives having to make 401(k) withdrawals, which he says “was a bad scenario,” carrying some severe tax consequences for those who were affected. Now Ecova has increased its level of match and changed the vesting time frame to qualify for a safe harbor, a decision Lynes doesn’t expect to revisit any time soon. Beck has a similar story. To resolve issues related to a failed test a few years ago, BirdDog set up automatic enrollment and boosted its matches as required for a safe harbor. “It’s better for recruiting and budgeting anyway,” says Beck. Now, “we’ve taken the philosophy that we’re committed to the 401(k) plan, and to the extent we run into a blip we’ll manage it in ways outside the retirement plan.” Fees Freezer All that being said, it’s still worthwhile for CFOs to consider the basic task of negotiating on fees as the assets in the company plan grow. “It’s very important to renegotiate fees every five years,” says Wray. The metric to track is average account balance, rather than total assets, he notes, since that’s where profits come from. “The economies of scale here are just so enormous, and the use of technology [makes a big difference]; you should have a lot of leverage.” 60 CFO PUBLISHING CFO Summary • Growing companies can easily face 401(k)-plan perils because of fluctuating asset levels, executive overload, and complex IRS rules. • Companies are moving toward fewer 401(k) plan options to simplify matters for both employer and employee. • Keep in mind potential antidiscrimination test violations when determining your company’s 401(k) plan structure, and consider achieving safe-harbor status to avoid this pitfall. • Renegotiate 401(k) fees as your company’s plan assets grow. FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE COVERING COSTS HEALTH CARE ADVICE FOR GROWING COMPANIES W ant to save money on health-care insurance? Try this strategy: stop buying it. While self-insurance is nothing new to large companies—some 90% of those with more than 5,000 employees have been doing it for years—a growing number of smaller companies are self-insuring to cut costs. According to data collected by PricewaterhouseCoopers, the percentage of employers with fewer than 1,000 people in their health-care programs that self-insure has almost doubled, from 29% in 2008 to 48% in 2010. “In my view, self-insurance is a way for a company to save money, because you typically spend less on claims and reinsurance than you would on premiums,” says Ariann Lawhorn, human-resources manager for Mid-City Supply, a privately held wholesale distributor of plumbing and heating supplies in the Midwest. The 95-employee company (with a total of 250 people covered by insurance, including dependents) has been using self-insurance “on and off” since the mid-1980s, says Lawhorn, and during her entire six-year tenure with the firm. Conventional wisdom has long held that selfinsurance works best for larger populations, because the claims tend to be more consistent across bigger groups of people. The rule of thumb has been that it takes a minimum of 1,000 “covered lives,” or employees and their dependents, to make the strategy work. Now, though, smaller companies are reevaluating this rule, in part because they want to take more control over rising health-care costs. “The reality is that companies with below 1,000 lives do experience more fluctuation [in cost] than [larger] ones,” says Michael Thompson, a principal in PwC’s human-resource services group, “but insurance companies don’t necessarily protect them any better, because they just base their rates on their past experience.” And while self-insured companies will still have to comply with the mandates of federal health-care reform, they may be able to avoid a layer of other regulations that fully insured companies face. The basic principle of most self-insurance programs is this: the company agrees to pay for employees’ claims (minus whatever co-pay, co-insurance, or deductible is built into the arrangement) as they happen, rather than paying a preset, monthly per-employee premium to an insurance company. A self-insured company may still rely on an insurance carrier for some administration of the benefits, notes Thompson, and may also purchase stop-loss insurance through CFO PUBLISHING 61 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG the carrier to cap its potential cash outflows. (Stoploss insurance typically kicks in to cover claims above a certain amount, up to a preset limit.) Among the immediate benefits of going the self-insurance route: avoiding state taxes on premiums that insurers pass along to clients, which run between 2% and 3% of premium costs; and avoiding certain state benefits mandates, which can add anywhere from 0.5% to 4% of premium costs, depending on the state. Using self-insurance also eliminates the profit and risk cushions that insurance companies build into their rates. Companies that use self-insurance also tend to be wiser about plan design, Thompson says, looking harder for ways to control underlying medical costs. Mid-City, for example, has saved about 16% by creating higher co-insurance levels for using out-of-network providers, and another 10% by using a co-pay structure rather than a deductible with prescription benefits. Other progressive approaches include offering special incentives for employees to use medical facilities that have proven to excel in certain areas, and hiring company doctors. Lawhorn says self-insurance is also a good way for companies to better target the benefits to participants. Her company, for example, covers some prescription drugs, such as growth hormones, that wouldn’t normally be covered by an insurance company. Mid-City maintains some cash reserves to cover spikes in claims, and as a backup uses stop-loss insurance that kicks in both when an individual reaches a certain limit and when the aggregate volume of claims hits a larger limit. “We’ve never hit the aggregate limit, but it helps you sleep better at night knowing it’s there,” says Lawhorn. Stop-loss insurance can be proportionately pricey for a small company, so some are looking at purchasing it as a consortium. The notion of a group stop-loss program is attractive to Jim Knutson, risk manager at Aircraft Gear Corp., a self-insuring carparts maker in Illinois with about 100 employees Among the immediate benefits of going the self-insurance route: avoiding state taxes on premiums that insurers pass along to clients, and avoiding certain state benefits mandates, which can add anywhere from 0.5% to 4% of premium costs. 62 CFO PUBLISHING and 300 covered people. “We have not had stop-loss for several years, but with new possibilities in the market, we expect to have it again soon,” he says. To be sure, self-insurance does not completely shield a company from the ups and downs of medical-market trends. After five years of holding medical expenses flat, Lawhorn is expecting to see an increase of more than 25% in the coming year and following years, thanks to higher reinsurance rates and higher charges from health-care providers. “There’s so much uncertainty about health-care reform, [both insurers and providers] are trying to capture as much revenue as possible in the next four years [before the full impact of reform kicks in],” she says. On average, stop-loss rate increases were “running in the upper teens to low 20s this spring” before adjustments that would somewhat lower the effective rates, says Carl Austin, assistant vice president at A.M. Best, which provides credit ratings for insurance companies. So far there’s “no firm evidence” that the increases will abate, although most carriers expect “the worst is over,” he adds. Still, Lawhorn says, “I think self-insurance is the one thing that’s helping us, by allowing us to be more strategic with plan design and the costsharing structure.” Occasionally, insurers will offer great deals to entice companies they deem as good risks back into their pools, says Thompson, something that can make switching an attractive option in the short term. Over the long run, though, self-funding will beat any deal insurers can offer, he says. “The question is, can the company absorb the risk in the short run?” says Thompson. Which companies should not consider selfinsurance? Those in industries where cash flows are scarce or unpredictable, for starters. Companies with big changes in the works, such as a major layoff or acquisition, should also refrain, since reshaping the employee group can change the cost dynamics. Smaller companies without a substantial, experienced human-resources team may risk overlooking some fundamental requirements for complying with health-care-related laws and regulations. The firms might get away with such an oversight for a while, but could be subject to significant fines if they’re randomly selected for an audit. Even something as simple as maintaining required plan documents—a technical document that details plan compliance with Employee Retirement Income FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE Security Act (ERISA) rules for such things as claims procedures and eligibility provisions, as well as a summary plan document for participants—can fall through the cracks. “These documents have been required since the 1970s, yet many of my clients think they are in compliance because they have insurance contracts. In 99% of the cases, that is not enough to meet ERISA’s standards for plan documents,” said Benjamin Lupin, director of compliance at healthcare program broker Corporate Synergies Group, at one of CFO’s recent Leadership Summits in Orlando. Evidence that insurance contracts aren’t sufficient showed up in an audit letter from the Department of Labor that some of Lupin’s clients received. The letter specified that the DoL would be looking at plan documents and contracts with insurance carriers. Not supplying such documents within 30 days of a written request from an employee can result in a fine of up to $110 a day. “This is an unnecessary liability,” said Lupin. “Putting these documents in place is not that costly.” Smaller companies also may fail to retain planrelated documents—including amendments to original plans and open-enrollment materials—for enough time after a plan year ends, Lupin noted. ERISA requires that employers keep them for at least six years. But some states, like Texas, have longer statutes of limitation on claims against health-benefits plans. Corporate Synergies recommends that clients hang on to documents for 8 to 10 years. Failure to file Form 5500 each year can be even costlier. The form, required for plans with more than 100 participants, contains basic information such as the number of people covered under the plan, the amount of assets in the plan, and identification of plan providers. The fine for noncompliance is a maximum $1,100 a day. Lupin pulled data showing that in Florida alone, between 2000 and 2012, 10 employers paid between $50,000 and $100,000 for Form 5500 noncompliance, and 46 employers paid between $10,000 and $50,000. “And those were just the unlucky ones that were audited,” he pointed out. “It doesn’t mean everyone else was compliant.” Meanwhile, the DoL is becoming more vigilant about enforcing compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). The department started a pilot program in which it’s auditing 150 randomly selected employers. Auditors come to a company’s offices for 3 to 10 days and go over its HIPAA documentation with whomever is responsible for monitoring compliance with standards under the law. Penalties are up to $2,500 per incident of noncompliance per standard. In a high-profile case in 2009, CVS Caremark was fined $2.25 million for violating standards of privacy for participants in health-care plans after the company’s human-resources leader left a laptop computer loaded with customers’ HIPAA-protected information in a taxicab. CVS was also required to submit to an audit of its health-care program every other year for 20 years. Lupin also addressed some aspects of the twoyear-old health-care reform law that are relevant to 2012. For one, starting in 2013 employers with at least 250 employees must report on each person’s Failure to file Form 5500 each year can be even costlier. The form, required for plans with more than 100 participants, contains basic information such as the number of people covered under the plan, the amount of assets in the plan, and identification of plan providers. The fine for noncompliance is a maximum $1,100 a day. Form W-2 all prior-year costs for health insurance paid by both employer and employee. “That might not seem like a big deal if you have a fully insured plan, because the cost is essentially just the premium dollars you’re spending,” he said. “But here’s the problem: things happen. Say an employee joined a company in February. He gets married in March and adds his wife to the plan. She has a baby in November and now they go to a family plan. That’s got to be tracked, and the numbers have to be accurate.” Reporting the information incorrectly will subject the employer to the same $200 fine per Form W-2 that already applies for CFO PUBLISHING 63 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG errors on the form. Although the information is to be reported on a tax form, the plan costs will not be taxable—for now, at least. Many observers have suggested that the government will use that information to identify companies subject to the “Cadillac tax” for lucrative plans that is scheduled to take effect in 2018. Second, a new plan document is required for plan years with open enrollment taking place after September 23 of 2012. Called Summary of Benefits and Coverages (SBC), it’s a mini-summary plan document. Failure to provide the SBC may result in an excise tax equal to $100 per plan participant per day of noncompliance. Should the DoL deem the noncompliance to be “willful,” an additional $1,000 fine per violation may be assessed. “All these things may not be high priorities for CFOs,” said Lupin. “But they should not be an afterthought. For years the DoL focused mostly on retirement plans. But now, because of health-care reform and other issues, health-benefit plans have become much more of an issue.” 64 CFO PUBLISHING CFO Summary • A growing number of smaller companies are cutting costs by becoming self-insured. Companies then pay for employees’ claims as they happen instead of paying preset, monthly per-employee premiums to an insurance company. • Self-insured companies typically spend less on claims and reinsurance than they would on premiums. Another immediate benefit: avoiding state taxes on premiums that insurers pass along to clients. • Be careful: self-insurance does not completely shield your company from medical-market trends. Self-insurance may not be right for industries with unpredictable cash flows or companies without an experienced human resources team. • Consider the necessary paperwork. Make sure to retain plan-related documents, even after a plan year ends. If your plan has more than 100 participants, you must file Form 5500 each year, or face fines for noncompliance. FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE NAVIGATING COMPLEX WATERS TAX ADVICE A s tax season approaches, many small and midsize companies turn to temporary tax accountants for help. But one executive at a prominent finance and accounting staffing firm says these companies might be taking the wrong approach. First, companies chronically underestimate the availability of such workers, contends Andrew Reina, managing director of Accounting Principles. Among the many types of positions the firm fills, tax people are in the scarcest supply. Yet every winter, the firm is flooded with requests for them just as tax season begins, or even worse, later on as IRS or internal-reporting deadlines loom and companies realize they’re short-handed. “Almost all the tax people are already working,” Reina says. “There never seems to be a shortage of tax need out there.” Those with tax degrees are gobbled up quickly coming out of school by public accounting firms, and after they’ve completed a couple of years of work there, corporations grab them just as enthusiastically. Plus, tax professionals tend to be fairly conservative careerwise, staying with employers longer than their counterparts in other finance and accounting disciplines. And it’s not like the pool is big to begin with. Tax work is specialized, technical, and demanding; subject to an unending stream of new rules and regulations to absorb; and perceived as less sexy than some other finance roles. All of that serves to dampen interest in pursuing the field. One would think that after a company encounters a shortage of tax talent one year, it would be aware the next. But some of Accounting Principles’s procrastinating clients make the mistake repeatedly. “They’ll literally call the week before their tax provision work is supposed to be done and say they need somebody tomorrow,” says Reina. Also, companies routinely take on such workers, CFO PUBLISHING 65 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG give them a one-day orientation, and expect them to be fully up to speed on the organization and its systems. There needs to be a better support system, Reina urges, with seasoned professionals available to answer additional questions. “Companies should expect high-quality work from anybody they bring in, but it’s not fair to compare those folks to employees who have been there for years. There need to be goals and expectations that are challenging but achievable.” Companies between $100 million and $500 million are most likely to need temporary tax help, “There needs to be a better support system, with seasoned professionals available to answer additional questions. Companies should expect high-quality work from anybody they bring in, but it’s not fair to compare those folks to employees who have been there for years. There need to be goals and expectations that are challenging but achievable.” Reina observes. Larger ones have deeper internal tax departments and use the tax services of large public accounting firms, and smaller companies often have less-complicated tax situations. Tax Rules to Take Advantage Of The language of tax rules is often considered dense, confusing, or downright off-putting. Indeed, the complexity of understanding and qualifying for tax incentives often leads small companies with limited resources to avoid them altogether, says Karen Kurek, national leader for manufacturing and distribution at McGladrey. “I think that few mid-small manufacturers really take advantage of these [incentives] because they perceive that they are too complex and too costly, or they think they don’t have the internal resources to devote attention to them,” Kurek says. But small 66 CFO PUBLISHING businesses that count themselves out could be leaving much-needed money on the table, she says. Here are three tax incentives that experts say small companies often overlook, and should consider. 1. The Research and Experimentation (R&E) Tax Credit The R&E credit reduced companies’ cost of doing new qualified research by an estimated 6.4% to 7.3% in 2005 (the last year available), according to a 2009 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report. But many small companies don’t take advantage of the credit, because they don’t consider what they do to be “research and experimentation,” says Dean Zerbe, national managing director at alliantgroup and former tax counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance. “Small and medium businesses often think they need to have a laboratory full of scientists wearing white coats to qualify,” Zerbe says. In reality, improving a product or a process that already exists can also count as research and development, he says. One example: a company that Kurek worked with implemented a process-improvement initiative on its factory floor and took an R&E tax credit for many of the costs of redesigning its production flow, she says. Companies that improve or extend the life of a product can also qualify for the credit, she adds. For instance, consider a company that manufactures automobile engines and redesigns a valve to make it compatible with five kinds of engines. Even though that valve currently only works with one engine, the redesign could still qualify for R&E tax consideration, Kurek says. The R&E credit was envisioned as a temporary measure, but has been continually renewed over the years. In 2012, however, President Obama has proposed making it permanent. 2. The Interest-Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation (ICDISC) Another often overlooked incentive, the IC-DISC can save small and midsized companies as much as 20% on income from exports. The provision enables companies that manufacture and ship products or services abroad to reduce their tax bill by creating separate tax entities called IC-DISCs that are taxed at the capital gains rate, a lower rate than income taxes. Here’s how it works. A company pays a tax- FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE deductible commission based on its export income to this separate entity, its IC-DISC. The IC-DISC then pays dividends to the exporter that may be taxed at a capital gains rate of 15%, a lower rate than the ordinary income tax rate, which could be as much as 35%. Parts manufacturers can also qualify for this, for example. Thus, a company that builds tires for cars that are shipped overseas could take the credit, says Zerbe. And architectural and engineering firms can take the credit if they design buildings in the United States that are then built in other countries. The downside: the provision that allows companies to pay tax on these IC-DISC dividends at the capital gains rate will expire at the end of 2012, unless it is extended. Companies must therefore consider carefully whether it is worth the cost of setting up an IC-DISC right now. 3. The Energy Efficient Commercial Building Deduction Small businesses can take this deduction, which expires at the end of 2013, if they build or retrofit their offices, warehouses, or factories or other commercial buildings to be energy efficient. Such buildings must have 50% lower energy and power costs than buildings that adhere to 2001 federal energy standards for lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation, and hot water. Architectural or engineering firms can also tap into this benefit if they design energy-efficient buildings for the government, such as dorm rooms for public universities. Qualifying for this deduction isn’t very difficult. That’s because many companies must already comply with state energy-efficiency laws that are stricter than the federal standards, Zerbe says. Businesses can also partially qualify: If they don’t hit the target percentage, they can still receive a tax credit that comes out to “a very significant savings,” he says. In addition, companies that take this credit may save on energy costs in the long run. But there’s a cost to qualifying, since companies must hire an independent engineer to evaluate the buildings. The deduction may thus not offer much return on investment for buildings smaller than 50,000 square feet, he cautions. CFO Summary • Don’t wait until the last minute to retain temporary tax help. • Create a support system for temporary tax accountants to turn to seasoned professionals at your company if they have additional questions after orientation. • Don’t leave money on the table. Many smaller companies avoid taking advantage of tax incentives because of intimidating tax rules. • Your company may qualify for the Research and Experimentation (R&E) tax credit if you have improved a product or process that already exists. • The Interest-Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation (IC-DISC) incentive can save your company as much as 20% on export income. • The Energy Efficient Commercial Building Deduction may apply if your company has built or retrofitted your offices or commercial building to be energy efficient. CFO PUBLISHING 67 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG AN ADDITIONAL TECHNOLOGY CHALLENGE SECURITY Y esterday’s hackers, whose exploits were often designed to earn bragging rights within the hacker community, have given way to far more sophisticated cyber criminals in pursuit of cold, hard cash. Some penetrate databases to steal the personally identifiable information (PID) of employees and customers. Others steal intellectual property and business data. Some use it, while others sell it to other criminals. Which companies are hackers targeting? “The main focus of hackers seeking PID is midsize companies,” says Paul Viollis, CEO of Risk Control 68 CFO PUBLISHING Strategies (RCS), a security and investigative firm. Why? “They’re perceived as the path of least resistance.” Midsize organizations with up to 100 employees and $100 million a year in revenue “lack the security budgets of their big-business peers,” explains Tim Matthews, director of product marketing at Symantec, a leading security systems provider. A recent Symantec survey of more than 2,000 small and midsize enterprises found that 73% had been victimized by cyber attacks, and the cost cannot be measured by dollars alone. “There’s always FROM TAX TO TECH THE BACK OFFICE the risk of customers no longer conducting business with you,” Matthews says. “Once your reputation is tarnished, shutting down becomes a very real possibility.” Breaking and Entering Midsize enterprises are vulnerable to a variety of exploits, including “phishing,” in which employees are lured to phony Websites through e-mail or IM; SQL injection attacks that invade operating systems to gut the contents of poorly designed websites; bots that take over machines, turning them into “zombies” that criminals can control—the list is long. Legacy systems that haven’t been diligently patched or upgraded to guard against new threats are particularly vulnerable. Social engineering—the art of tricking people— has caused more security breaches than all external attacks combined, according to 403 Web Security, a web-application development company. Social engineering was behind a March 2011 data breach at security firm RSA. Employees received an e-mail and an attached spreadsheet with the subject line, “2011 Recruitment Plan.xls.” Once opened, the spreadsheet installed a backdoor in RSA’s system that compromised the code of RSA’s SecurID token. Estimates of what RSA’s parent, EMC, spent to clean up the fallout have run north of $66 million. “We’ve estimated that a data breach costs companies an average of $214 per compromised record, and this excludes litigation and reputationrelated issues that are difficult to measure,” says Larry Ponemon, founder of the Ponemon Institute, which focuses on data-protection practices. Ponemon agrees that today midsize enterprises are in the crosshairs. “Why hack into a major retail bank that has topnotch security when you can hack into a much smaller enterprise that has access to the bank’s data?” Ponemon asks. “It’s easier to break into the side door than the front door.” And those side doors aren’t locked at many midsize organizations. Of the 761 data breaches investigated in 2010 by the U.S. Secret Service and Verizon Communications’s forensics analysis unit, 63% occurred at companies with 100 or fewer employees. Most of those breaches were not as sophisticated as the RSA hack. A recent Ponemon survey cites lost or stolen mobile devices as the greatest trending security risk. The risk doesn’t necessarily decline when the focus shifts. “Companies think because they outsource services or security they also outsource liability,” says Toby Merrill, vice president at insurer ACE Professional Risk. “They’re wrong.” “You Will Be Sued” Forty-six states have data-breach laws that require organizations to notify anyone whose personal data may have been compromised. Massachusetts’s is the toughest, stipulating penalties of up to $5,000 per violation. Multiply that by thousands of affected customers, and the potential cost to the enterprise is staggering. These laws make it clear that responsibility lies with the company that collected and stored the data. “That’s who will be sued,” Merrill says. But many midsize businesses believe the cloud offers greater security. Boloco, a $20 million chain of 18 burrito restaurants, stores customer information in the cloud via NetPOS, a pointof-sale systems provider. “No credit-card swipe lives in our system,” says Boloco CFO Patrick Renna. “Our philosophy is to leverage the security expertise of much larger companies that have resources we don’t.” Boloco requires its various software-as-a-service providers to comply with the payment-card industry’s data-security standard and with the SAS 70 auditing standard, which permits an independent auditor to evaluate and issue an opinion on the provider’s security controls. Boloco also assesses its providers’ finances. That’s smart, says Tracey Vispoli, global cyber solutions manager for the Chubb Group of Insurance Cos. If you’re suing, you want your provider to be solvent. But many midsize businesses believe the cloud offers greater security. “No credit-card swipe lives in our system. Our philosophy is to leverage the security expertise of larger companies that have resources we don’t.” Hack Counterattack What else can midsize companies do? If they had the cash, they could hire a security guru, CFO PUBLISHING 69 SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG and implement encryption, firewalls, intrusion detection, and other security tools. But today, as RCS’s Viollis notes, “how many midsize enterprises have cash to spare?” There are, however, measures that won’t break the bank, notes Alan Wlasuk, CEO of 403 Web Security. He suggests starting with a relatively inexpensive scan of your IT system to determine its vulnerabilities, educating your staff about the threat of social engineering, and keeping up with security fixes. And, since hackers aren’t the only ones breaking into databases (disgruntled employees and those experiencing tough financial times are other threats), it’s smart for CFOs to insist upon background checks for new employees and the implementation of strict data-access rules, such as making sure HR can’t access customer data and sales can’t access employee data. Other relatively low-cost measures include mandating strong passwords (at least eight characters, a mix of numerals and upper- and lower-case letters). Customer data should be kept off of laptops, smart phones, and USB drives unless encrypted or, at least, password protected. Also, it’s not smart to store unneeded data; erase it. Finally, consider buying cyber insurance. The cost has come down by more than 20% from five years ago, according to Robert Parisi, senior vice president of insurance broker Marsh. Plus, he says, insurers are tossing in freebies such as security assessments, victim breach notification, and credit monitoring. “In an era where a lot of companies have cut into IT resources, insurance can be as important as the firewall,” Ponemon says. “With cyber insurance,” ACE’s Merrill adds, sounding like a salesman, “you’re buying more than coverage; you’re buying peace of mind.” CFO Summary • Because they lack the security budgets of bigger companies, midsize companies are an appealing target for hackers seeking personally identifiable data (PID). Legacy systems are particularly vulnerable. • Data breaches are expensive, and responsibility lies with your company if you collected and store the exploited data. • To counter this risk, many companies are turning to the cloud. One CFO tells us, “Our philosophy is to leverage the security expertise of much larger companies that have resources we don’t.” • Other relatively inexpensive measures include scanning your IT system for vulnerabilities, purchasing cyber insurance, and educating your employees about risks. Sources for From Tax to Tech: The Back Office: “401(k)s: Watch Out for Speed Bumps,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, November 15, 2011. “A Lesson in Self-Reliance,” Alix Stuart, CFO.com, July 14, 2010. “Five Costly Health-Care Compliance Slips,” David McCann, CFO.com, March 14, 2012. “Hiring Temp Tax Workers: Open Your Eyes!,” David McCann, CFO.com, October 20, 2011. “Three Overlooked Small-Business Tax Breaks,” Marielle Segarra, CFO.com, February 27, 2012. “Where the Money Is, and the Security Isn’t,” Russ Banham, CFO Magazine, February 1, 2012. 70 CFO PUBLISHING SMALL AND MIDSIZE COMPANIES THINK BIG CONCLUSION MAKING THE MOST OF OPPORTUNITIES J ust as many small and midsize companies are now in a period of transformation and reinvention, so too are their CFOs. As small and midsize companies scour the economic landscape for growth opportunities, senior finance executives are acting as the navigators—delivering insight-rich data to decision makers and helping to ensure that business decisions are grounded in rigorous financial analysis. Rather than simply tracking the company’s performance, CFOs are now in a position to help drive improvements, prioritize resource allocation, and quantify the risks associated with untested opportunities and assumptions. Such duties represent a turnabout from where senior finance executives focused their efforts in recent years, when dropping demand led them to devote themselves to refining their abilities to manage costs and enhance efficiencies. Their goal stayed fixed: protecting the company’s revenues and profit margins. 72 CFO PUBLISHING As CFOs today look forward to a period of growth—no matter how plodding it may be—they will inhabit a key role in helping the executive team to pursue opportunities in a sustainable fashion, making sure that capital and cash management remains an overriding concern. Continuing resource constraints on their companies will require CFOs to elucidate the financial risks associated with specific growth initiatives. And it will be up to CFOs to help make sure that new lines of business are creating value. As growth picks up, the strategic questions will come at them furiously: Should the company expand its footprint abroad? Should it focus on organic growth or entertain acquisitions? As the company finds it necessary to broaden its portfolio of capabilities, how far will the business model stretch—without snapping? Faced with these tough questions, CFOs may not yet have all the answers, but it’s our hope that this CFO Handbook has inspired you to go beyond focusing on numbers and to start thinking big.