Most small businesses do not fail because of one bad month, they fail because they had no buffer when the bad month came. A budget that survives a slow stretch is built on three habits.
1. Separate fixed from variable
Know exactly what you must pay every month no matter what, rent, payroll, software, versus what flexes with sales. The fixed number is your survival line.
2. Build reserves on purpose
Aim for three months of fixed costs in a separate account. Get there by treating reserve contributions as a fixed expense, not whatever is left over, because there is never anything left over.
3. Watch cash flow, not just profit
Profitable businesses still go under when cash arrives later than bills are due. Track the timing of money in and money out, not just the totals.
A tool that helps
Our BudgetWorks spreadsheet is built for exactly this, fixed-versus-variable tracking, reserve scenarios, and a dashboard that shows trouble before it arrives. You can start with the free version in the Learning Hub.
A budget is not about restriction. It is about being able to absorb a slow month without panic, which is what lets you make calm, good decisions instead of desperate ones.

Helps owner-operators build budgets, manage vendors, and bring order to multi-department operations. Sample contributor profile showing how a guest author appears.
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