Profitable but Broke: Why Cash Flow Catches Founders Off Guard
It is one of the most counter-intuitive truths in business: you can be profitable on paper and still unable to make payroll. Profit is calculated when you earn revenue and incur costs. Cash is about when money actually moves. The gap between those two timings is where founders get caught.
Where the gap comes from
You invoice a client in March, but they pay in May. You buy inventory now and sell it over the next quarter. You pay salaries every month regardless of when customers settle. Each of these creates a timing mismatch - the business is healthy, but the bank balance tells a scarier story.
The warning signs
Watch for growing receivables, rising inventory, and lumpy revenue. Fast growth can actually make cash flow worse, because you are funding more work upfront before the cash comes back. Many businesses hit their tightest cash position right after their best sales month.
How to stay ahead of it
Build a rolling 13-week cash flow forecast. It is short enough to be accurate and long enough to see trouble coming. Update it weekly, track expected inflows and outflows, and you will know about a crunch with weeks to plan, not days.
Tighten the cycle
Invoice the moment work is done, automate payment reminders, and make it easy for clients to pay. On the other side, negotiate sensible terms with suppliers. Shortening the gap between paying out and getting paid is the cheapest source of cash you have.
Cash discipline is not glamorous, but it is what keeps good businesses alive long enough to become great ones. If your numbers are clean and your forecast is current, cash stops being a surprise and becomes something you control.

