--- name: financial-planning description: Plan and manage the finances of a solopreneur business. Use when creating budgets, forecasting revenue and expenses, building a P&L, planning for cash flow, setting financial targets, or preparing for financial decision-making. Covers budgeting frameworks, cash flow management, profit margins, expense tracking categories, and financial dashboards. Trigger on "financial plan", "budget my business", "cash flow planning", "P&L", "profit and loss", "financial projections", "how much do I need", "business finances", "financial forecast". --- # Financial Planning ## Overview Most solopreneurs avoid financial planning until something goes wrong — a surprise tax bill, a month where expenses eat all revenue, or a decision made without understanding the numbers. This playbook gives you a lightweight but rigorous financial system that takes 30 minutes to set up and 15 minutes per month to maintain. No accounting degree required. --- ## Step 1: Set Up Your Financial Reality Baseline Before planning, know where you actually stand right now. **Gather these numbers (estimate if you don't have exact figures):** - Monthly revenue (average of last 3 months if you have history; projected if pre-revenue) - Monthly fixed expenses (rent/co-working, tools/subscriptions, insurance, hosting, internet — things that don't change month to month) - Monthly variable expenses (marketing spend, contractor payments, per-transaction fees, travel — things that fluctuate) - One-time expenses coming up in the next 6 months (equipment, legal, conferences, annual subscriptions) - Personal income need (the minimum you need to pay yourself each month to cover personal living costs) **Write these down. This is your baseline. Everything else in this playbook builds on it.** --- ## Step 2: Build Your Monthly Budget A budget is simply: how much money do you plan to spend in each category, and how much do you plan to bring in? **Budget structure:** ``` MONTHLY BUDGET ============== REVENUE Product/Service Revenue: $________ Secondary Revenue Streams: $________ TOTAL REVENUE: $________ EXPENSES — FIXED Hosting & Infrastructure: $________ Tools & Software: $________ Insurance: $________ Legal / Professional Services: $________ Other Fixed: $________ TOTAL FIXED: $________ EXPENSES — VARIABLE Marketing & Advertising: $________ Contractor / Freelancer: $________ Payment Processing Fees: $________ Travel & Events: $________ Education & Learning: $________ Other Variable: $________ TOTAL VARIABLE: $________ TOTAL EXPENSES: $________ (Fixed + Variable) GROSS PROFIT: $________ (Revenue - Expenses) OWNER SALARY (your pay): $________ NET PROFIT (retained in business):$________ (Gross Profit - Owner Salary) ``` **Rules:** - Marketing budget should be 10-20% of revenue (or a fixed dollar amount if pre-revenue — treat it as an investment with expected ROI). - Owner salary should be set first, then expenses fit around it. If expenses + salary > revenue, something must be cut or revenue must grow. - Always budget a 10-15% buffer for unexpected costs. Unexpected things always happen. --- ## Step 3: Cash Flow Forecasting Revenue on paper is not cash in your account. Cash flow timing is what actually keeps a business alive. **Monthly cash flow forecast (do this 3 months ahead):** ``` CASH FLOW FORECAST ================== Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 Starting Cash: $________ $________ $________ + Revenue In: $________ $________ $________ - Expenses Out: $________ $________ $________ = Ending Cash: $________ $________ $________ ``` **Cash flow timing rules:** - Revenue often comes in AFTER the work is done (invoices have Net-15 or Net-30 terms). Budget for this lag. - Some expenses are lumpy (annual subscriptions, quarterly contractor payments). Spread these into monthly equivalents in your budget so you're not surprised. - Keep a cash reserve of 2-3 months of expenses. This is your runway buffer. Without it, one bad month can threaten the business. **Cash flow danger signals:** - Ending cash drops below 1 month of expenses → urgent. Cut spending or accelerate collections immediately. - Revenue is growing but cash is flat → you're spending everything you earn. Examine variable expenses. - Revenue is lumpy (big months, dead months) → smooth it out with recurring revenue models or build a larger cash reserve. --- ## Step 4: Set Financial Targets Targets give you something to measure against and decisions to make when you're off track. **Set targets at three horizons:** **Monthly targets:** - Minimum revenue to cover expenses + salary - Marketing spend cap - New customer acquisition count **Quarterly targets:** - Revenue growth rate (e.g., 10-15% quarter over quarter) - Profit margin target (aim for 30-50% net margin as a solopreneur) - Cash reserve target (build toward 3 months of expenses) **Annual targets:** - Total annual revenue - Total annual profit - Owner salary / total compensation target - Business milestones (launch date, customer count, revenue milestone) **When you miss a target:** Don't panic. Analyze why. Was it a bad assumption? An external factor? A controllable mistake? Adjust the plan, not just the target. --- ## Step 5: Track Monthly (The 15-Minute Review) At the end of every month, spend 15 minutes on this review: 1. **Actual vs. Budget:** Compare every line in your budget to what actually happened. Where did you overspend? Underspend? 2. **Revenue vs. Target:** Did you hit your revenue target? If not, why? 3. **Cash position:** What's your current cash balance? Are you above or below your reserve target? 4. **One action:** Based on this review, identify ONE financial action for next month. (e.g., "Reduce contractor spend by $500", "Raise prices on new customers", "Collect overdue invoice from Client X") **Tools for tracking:** A shared Google Sheet is sufficient for most solopreneurs. Dedicated tools (QuickBooks, FreshBooks, Wave) add value once revenue exceeds $5K/month or you have complex expenses. Wave is free and handles basic bookkeeping well. --- ## Step 6: Tax Planning (Integrated, Not Afterthought) Tax is an expense like any other. Budget for it monthly — not just once a year in a panic. **Solopreneur tax budget rule:** Set aside 25-30% of every revenue payment into a separate "tax savings" account. This covers: - Self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare) - Federal and state income tax - Quarterly estimated tax payments (due Jan 15, Apr 15, Jun 15, Sep 15 in the US) **If you're outside the US:** Tax rules vary enormously by country. The percentage may differ but the principle is the same — set aside a fixed percentage of revenue immediately, before you spend it. **If you haven't been doing this and owe back taxes:** Calculate the total owed, divide by the months until the deadline, and set that aside each month. Do not ignore it. --- ## Financial Planning Mistakes to Avoid - Treating revenue as profit. Revenue minus expenses = profit. Many solopreneurs conflate the two. - Not paying yourself a salary. If you don't pay yourself, you don't know if the business is actually profitable for YOU. - Ignoring taxes until April (or your country's equivalent). Tax surprises are the #1 financial crisis for solopreneurs. - Budgeting optimistically. Budget conservatively on revenue (assume less), aggressively on expenses (assume more). Positive surprises are much better than negative ones. - Never revisiting the budget. A budget set in January is stale by March. Update monthly.