If you are a business owner who took time to set business goals for this year, it’s crunch time. The fourth quarter of the year starts October 1, and you officially have 3 months left to meet those goals. It’s a rare person who checks in on their progress against their goals at this stage of the year, but if you do, you have a real opportunity to reach them.  

Step 1 to Reaching Your Yearly Business Goals: Run Projections 

The first thing to do is look at your sales pipeline and project your revenue against the goals you set for the quarter and for the year. Run projections to see what your cash position and your tax liabilities will be. You do this now to ensure you have the time to adjust and end the year well (or at least better than you would have). It is particularly important to take time in October/November to project your tax liability. That way, if it is higher than you expected, you still have time to reduce that liability or make plans to cover it.  

NOTE: If your finance department cannot deliver these reports to you, you’ve just uncovered a significant weakness that is hindering your performance as a business. You will need to address this right away, because you cannot make good decisions without timely accurate data.   

Step 2: Compare Your Projections to Your Goals 

Now compare these numbers to your goals for the year. Ask the following questions:  

  • How close are we to each goal?  
  • If we are behind on one or more of our business goals, why is that? Did something unexpected happen or were our expectations off? 
  • Is this something we can make up? Consider the effects of seasonality if that is relevant to your business. 
  • If yes, how? What do you need to do and in what time frame?

Step 3 to Reaching Your Yearly Business Goals: Take Action

Some of the actions you can take could include:  

  • Increase your business expenses by spending more on the business 
  • Reduce your profits by contributing more to your retirement plans. 
  • Mitigate business losses by delaying business expenses to the next year 
  • Increase revenues by:

✔️ Focusing on collections and getting invoices paid

✔️ Running a sale (which also can decrease stale inventory)

✔️ Offering incentives for potential customers to buy sooner

✔️ Creating contests to encourage sales team to be more proactive with their prospects

What If You Didn’t Set Goals? 

As mentioned already, you can always run projections on expected sales and expenses, even in the absence of goals. Doing so at the beginning of the fourth quarter gives you time to make adjustments that allow you to end the year in a better place than you would have.  

We also recommend taking some time to set goals for the next year. In our next article, we’ll talk about how to set goals, what different types of goals you may want to consider, and how to measure your progress against those goals.  

Related Articles

The Formula for an Effective Exit Plan 

Ask a business owner over the age of 50 when they plan to transition or exit their business, and you’ll get one of two answers:
– a blank stare, or
– “I’ll work another 5-10 years and call it quits.”(And if you ask this person again in another 5-10 years, you’ll likely get the same answer!)

The bottom line is the same – most business owners lack a plan for leaving their business. Read the article to learn what goes into an exit plan.

The Benefits of Planning for Life Outside of Work 

How long has it been since you did something just for the fun of it? What is on your list of “Things I’ll Do Someday When I Have Time”? You may think that you need to wait to start checking things off that list, but that’s a mistake.

There’s more to life than work, and it’s the things you enjoy in your leisure time that make you a well-rounded and happy human being. In this article, we invite you to start exploring and experimenting to find enjoyable and fulfilling activities outside of work and give some practical suggestions for how to do it.

One of the Biggest Barriers to a Successful Exit: YOU

It can be a self-perpetuating cycle: a business owner tells me she knows she needs to delegate so she can create bandwidth to plan ahead. But she can’t hand anything off because she hasn’t documented her processes which would allow someone else to follow the same steps and get similar results. Why hasn’t this happened? Because she doesn’t have time because she has so much on her plate.

Read the article to learn how to break this cycle and get out of your own way.

Need Fresh Eyes On Your Business?

We offer complementary consultations to help you identify the areas where you could most quickly and easily improve your business’s performance, value, and profitability. Request one today.