Growing companies rarely fail because the team isn’t working hard. They fail because decisions are made with partial information.
Your numbers move quickly. A couple of pricing decisions, a hiring change, or a client delay can shift profit and cash within weeks.
A monthly finance pack gives you a repeatable view of performance, without digging through spreadsheets or waiting for year-end accounts.
A monthly finance pack is a short set of reports you review the same way, every month. It answers three questions:
·Are we making money the way we think we are?
·Are we generating cash, or just revenue?
·What is likely to go wrong next month?
It isn’t a “big accounts file”. It’s not a drawer of exports from Xero/QuickBooks. It’s a decision tool.
The best version fits on 8-12 pages (or screens). If it needs a full afternoon to read, it’s too long.
Below is a structure that works for most service businesses, trades, agencies, and product-light companies.
This is the page you can read in 3 minutes. Include:
·Revenue, gross profit, net profit: month and year-to-date
·Cash at bank now, and expected cash in 30/60/90 days
·Headline KPIs (5-8 max)
·Red flags (late debt, margins dropping, rising costs)
If you only ever read one page, make it this.
You need three columns minimum:
·Current month actual
·Year-to-date actual
·Budget (or last year if no budget)
Add a variance column in pounds and percentage. Variance drives action.
Keep the chart of accounts simple but make sure you analyse larger categories. If “Other expenses” is large, you’re losing insight.
If you have more than one type of work, split it. Otherwise you will over-invest in the wrong area.
Examples:
·Retainers vs projects
·Installations vs maintenance
·UK vs overseas
·Product sales vs services
Your pack should make it obvious which stream is funding business growth.
Bank balance is not performance. You want to see why cash changed.
Include:
·Starting cash
·Net profit
·Add back non-cash (depreciation)
·Working capital movements (debtors, creditors, stock/work in progress)
·Tax set-asides (VAT, PAYE, corporation tax accrual)
In the UK, VAT and PAYE timing can make a profitable month feel tight. Your pack should flag cash-flow squeezes early.
This gives you a view of where money is tied up.
Include:
·Aged receivables (who owes you, how long)
·Top 10 debtors
·Creditors due in next 30 days
If one client is 30% of your revenue and their payment is 60 days late, that belongs on page one.
Choose KPIs you can control. Good examples:
·Gross margin %
·Revenue per billable head (or utilisation)
·Labour as % of revenue
·Average selling price / average job value
·Lead to sale conversion rate
·Churn (if recurring)
Avoid vanity metrics that don’t change decisions.
A finance pack only helps if you use it. The goal is a fast, disciplined review.
Suggested monthly agenda:
1.Close the month (cut-off, coding, payroll journals, accruals).
2.Produce the pack within 7–10 days of month end.
3.Hold a 30-minute review between the owner, the head of operations and the finance lead.
4.Capture actions: 3 priorities, 3 risks, owners and dates.
5.Check progress mid-month (10 minutes).
·Set a target pack length: max 8 pages.
·Add a one-page summary with 3 red flags every month.
·Put “Other” expenses under a microscope; recode to useful buckets.
·Track debtors weekly if cash is tight (not monthly).
·Add a simple VAT/PAYE/Corporation Tax Reserve line to your cash page.
A monthly finance pack reduces the lag in making decisions. It helps you understand what’s changing and make decisions about what to do next.
If you want help applying this to your numbers, book a call.

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