Precision acquires SaaS Academy

Read more

5 Important Elements of a Financial Business Model

Matt Verlaque·October 31, 2016·3 min read
5 Important Elements of a Financial Business Model

Have you ever felt stupid?

I have.

For pretty much my entire teenage existence I felt like I didn’t understand the world around me.

When I got into business at 17 it was no different.

I’d watch these “businessmen” talk and I had no clue what they were saying….

… but over time I decided to learn.

I put in the time to study books on marketing, finance, leadership, design, etc..

After a while, I could understand what they were saying and actually challenge some of their views.

Once you learn business, it’s really not that complicated.

It comes down to 5 core elements that need to be understood.

Some people call them models, but it’s really just 5 areas.

That’s what I break down in today’s video… the 5 elements of a financial business model.

How To Create a Simple Financial Model For Your Business - YouTube

Photo image of Dan Martell

Dan Martell

2.48M subscribers

How To Create a Simple Financial Model For Your Business

Dan Martell

Search

Watch later

Share

Copy link

Info

Shopping

Tap to unmute

If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.

More videos

More videos

You're signed out

Videos you watch may be added to the TV's watch history and influence TV recommendations. To avoid this, cancel and sign in to YouTube on your computer.

CancelConfirm

Share

Include playlist

An error occurred while retrieving sharing information. Please try again later.

Watch on

0:00

0:00 / 6:49

•Live

Any business out there can be described and discussed using these 5 financial models:

1) Revenue Model: Who will buy? How often? How soon? At what cost? How much from each customer.

2) Gross Margin Model: How much revenue will be left after you paid the direct costs of what you have sold?

3) Operating Model: Other than the costs of the goods or services you have sold, what else must you spend money on to support the sale?

4) Working Capital Model: How early can you get customers to pay? Do you tie up money in inventory waiting to be sold? Can you push back paying suppliers till after your customers have paid?

5) Investment Model: How much cash must you spend up front before enough customers give you enough business to cover your operating costs?

What I love about constraints – not having enough money – is that you get creative about how you deliver value to your customers.

That’s what I want to hear from you!

Leave a comment letting me know how constraints brought creativity into your business model to allow you to compete against the big guys.

Did you run your operations out of your garage?

Did you partner with local organizations to promote your services? Let me know.

There’s no need to feel stupid in business.

Every day is an opportunity to push our understanding and refine our business to run better.

I hope these models serve you in a big way, and the story I shared (as embarrassing as it was) helped ground them in a way that you could integrate into your thinking.

Have an incredible day!

Book a Growth Session

Get a free, no-obligation session where we'll identify your #1 growth bottleneck and give you a clear plan to fix it.