|
Written by John
|
|
Friday, 18 July 2008 |
More than half of Britain's small businesses collapse because of cash-flow problems. For some businesses, insolvency is the only option and companies are often wound up or partnerships bankrupted. Writings on the Wall
The UK Insolvency Helpline's commitment to market research and ongoing customer feedback has enabled us to publish the most up-to-date and fully comprehensive list of reasons for business failure.
The below list of reasons for business failure have been taken from the last 65 cases we have dealt with.
1. Failure to focus on a specific market because of poor research 2. Failure to control cash by carrying too much stock, paying suppliers too promptly and allowing customers too long to pay 3. Failure to control costs ruthlessly 4. Failure to adapt your product to meet customer needs 5. Failure to carry out decent market research 6. Failure to build a team that is compatible and has the skills to finance, produce sell and market 7. Failure to pay crown taxes (PAYE and VAT) 8. Failure of businesses need to grow. Merely attempting stability or had even less ambitious objectives, businesses which did not try to grow didn't survive 9. Failure to gain new markets 10. Under-capitalisation
11. Cashflow problems 12. Non-payment by customers 13. Poor sales & marketing 14. Fatal leasing agreements 15. Loss of financial backing 16. Tougher market conditions 17. Poor management 18. Directors aiming to find new markets, but not making a single sale 19. Companies diversifying into new, unknown areas without a clue about costs 20. Companies finding that staff set up as rivals and stealing the business 21. Company directors spending too much money on frivolous purposes thus using up all available capital 22. Loss of market 23. Tax liabilities 24. A lack of working capital 25. Bad debts are the cause 26. Personal extravagance 27. Fraud 28. Legal disputes 29. Falling property values 30. Poor management 31. Unsuitable people starting small businesses without the skills or resources they need to succeed 32. A lack of orders 33. A lack of control over cash flow 34. Lack of good management 35. Bad management of the capital available 36. Marketing problems 37. A failure to plan ahead, beyond the day-to-day running of the business 38. Marketing problems 39. General rise in costs 40. Bad financial management 41. Poor forward planning 42. Too heavy reliance on grants 43. Poor collection of debtor book such as greater than 45 days 44. Extended lines of credit 45. Rising work-in-progress that is not billed on time 46. Diminished cash balances 47. Purchase orders being made by expanding payment periods, not by cash 48. Over-reached overdraft facilities 49. Poor cost control with too many people responsible for purchasing 50. Lack of long-standing relationships with suppliers 51. The business widening its range of suppliers simply to make more credit available 52. Rising stock levels and static sales 53. Contract disputes 54. Final demands and writs being received 55. The business being reliant on one or two customers which do not pay as well as they used to 56. Borrowings being increased just to keep the business running 57. Outstanding debtors or potential bad debts seem to have rising suddenly 58. The business is unsure how much it owes and how much it is owed 59. The business is more than one month adrift in payments to the Inland Revenue or Customs and Excise 60. The bank is calling the business to say it has exceeded its overdraft limit 61. Under pricing 62. Over trading 63. Poor quality of product or service 64. Bad labour relations 65. Niche businesses - These suffered from narrow customer and supplier bases and an inability to react to changes in the market |