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Avoid the Christmas cost hangover

The cost of living has eased over the past year, but consumers are still under pressure. For business, planning is the key to managing Christmas volatility. Learn how to avoid the Christmas cost hangover.


What makes or breaks Christmas?

The countdown to Christmas is on, and we’re in a headlong rush to maximise opportunities before the Christmas lull. Busy period or not, Christmas causes a period of dislocation and volatility for most businesses. It is not ‘business as usual’, and volatility can create problems for many. 


Added to this dislocation are cost-of-living pressures impacting consumers. Employee households are the most brutal hit, experiencing mortgage–fueled increases spiked by the rollover of fixed-rate loans to higher variable-rate loans. While there has been some relief from energy subsidies and a reduction in fuel prices, underlying inflation remains persistently above the RBA’s target rate. Services inflation - the cost of your rent, insurance, hairdresser, etc. – is around 5%.


With the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Board keeping rates on hold for now and hinting that it will be some time before they are comfortable reducing rates, consumers want a reason to spend based on value for money. The irony is that if we all spend significantly, which a recent Roy Morgan poll suggests we are, there is a risk this elevated spending will further delay rate cuts. But, while we might spend more, some of this increase compensates for inflation - we need to spend more to buy at the same level as in previous years.


The discounting trend

Consumers expect a bargain and can generally find one. If you choose to discount stock (or the market forces you to), it’s essential to know your profit margins to determine what you can afford to give away. A business with a 20% gross profit margin that offers a 15% discount needs a 300% increase in sales volume to maintain the same position. The worst-case scenario is that a business trades below its breakeven point and generates losses. 


Increased sales from discounting can be great if you know your numbers, have excess or older stock that needs to be moved, generate demand, or drive new customers to you.


Also, think about how you create value; it does not always have to be a direct discount on a product. Packaging might be a better option than a straight discount if you can increase sales of multiple items, and even better if you can combine higher demand with lower demand stock. Quantity discounts and value-added are also options.


The Christmas cost hangover

Costs tend to go up over Christmas. More staff, lower efficiency, downtime from non-trading days, and increased promotional costs all increase the cost of doing business. It’s great to get into the Christmas spirit if you don’t end up with a New Year hangover, but cost control is essential.


Many businesses also bring in casual staff. You must pay staff at the correct rates and meet your Superannuation Guarantee obligations. 


Check the pay calculator to make sure you have it right.


New Year cashflow crunch

The New Year often leads to a quieter trading and tighter cash flow period. The March quarter is usually the most brutal cash flow quarter of the year. You will need a cash buffer. Don’t over-commit yourself in the run-up to the end of the year and start the New Year with a problem.


Take a lesson from Scrooge.

If you work with account customers, start your debtor follow-up early. If your customers are under cash flow pressure, the Christmas period will only exacerbate it. The creditors that chase debt hard and early will get paid first. Don’t be the last supplier on the list; the bucket might be empty by then.


Christmas is an excellent time of year. Don’t get caught up in the rush and forget the basics.


Trading stock headaches

If business activity spikes over Christmas and you sell goods, then there is a temptation to increase stock levels. That makes sense as long as you don’t go too far. There is too much stock after Christmas, and you will either carry products out of season or have too much cash tied up in trading stock. Try to work with suppliers that can supply on short notice. 


Managing your trading stock is not just about controlling costs. If your customers are in your store but can’t find what they need, have an in-store online option to take the sale. 

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