Authored by Phil Cohen
Businesses run out of cash not because they are unprofitable, but because cash arrives later than expenses are due.
Profit measures success on paper. Cash determines whether a business survives. Many companies with strong margins, growing revenue, and healthy demand still face cash crises because timing, structure, and visibility break down as operations scale.
Profit and Cash Are Not the Same Thing
Profit is calculated after revenue is earned.
Cash is required before expenses can be paid.
A business can be profitable and still:
miss payroll
delay vendor payments
draw emergency credit
pause growth
experience constant financial stress
The disconnect happens when revenue is earned long before it is collected.
The Core Reason Profitable Businesses Run Out of Cash
Most profitable businesses operate with delayed payment cycles.
Common realities include:
customers pay in 30 to 60 days
expenses are due weekly or monthly
payroll is non-negotiable
growth increases costs immediately
receivables lag further behind as volume grows
Profit exists on the income statement.
Cash stress appears in the bank account.
Cause 1: Revenue Is Locked in Accounts Receivable
Unpaid invoices represent earned revenue, but they cannot fund operations until collected.
As receivables grow:
cash availability shrinks
payroll and vendor pressure increases
reliance on short-term borrowing grows
The faster the business grows, the more cash becomes trapped in receivables.
Cause 2: Growth Increases Expenses Before Cash Arrives
Growth feels positive, but it creates front-loaded costs.
Growth typically requires:
hiring
inventory purchases
marketing spend
operational overhead
technology and systems
These costs hit immediately.
Customer payments arrive later.
Without aligned cash flow planning, growth accelerates cash depletion.
Cause 3: Cash Flow Forecasting Is Backward-Looking
Many businesses rely on historical data to plan future cash.
This leads to:
optimistic assumptions
missed timing gaps
reactive decision-making
last-minute funding scrambles
Forecasting that only looks backward does not protect against future obligations.
Cause 4: Payment Delays Are Treated as Exceptions
Late payments are often treated as one-off issues.
In reality:
late payments are normal in B2B markets
approvals get delayed
disputes arise unexpectedly
internal client changes slow processing
When businesses assume “on-time” payment, cash plans fail quietly until stress appears.
Cause 5: Fixed Funding Tools Do Not Scale
Many profitable businesses rely on:
owner capital
short-term loans
These tools:
have fixed limits
require reapproval
do not grow with revenue
become bottlenecks during expansion
Profit grows. Funding stays flat. Cash strain increases.
Cause 6: Too Much Cash Is Tied Up in Operations
Cash can disappear into:
excess inventory
inefficient billing cycles
slow collections
manual processes
operational waste
Each inefficiency reduces available liquidity, even when revenue looks strong.
Why Cash Problems Appear Suddenly
Cash issues rarely appear overnight.
They build quietly as:
receivables grow
payroll increases
payment timing slips
funding limits tighten
By the time cash runs out, the business has often been profitable for months.
How to Prevent Cash Shortages in a Profitable Business
Step 1: Separate Profit Planning From Cash Planning
Profit answers: “Is the business viable?”
Cash answers: “Can the business operate next week?”
Plan for both independently.
Step 2: Forecast Cash Forward, Not Backward
Effective cash planning looks ahead.
Best practice includes:
projecting expenses before they occur
modeling delayed payments
stress-testing worst-case scenarios
updating forecasts weekly
Visibility reduces surprise.
Step 3: Speed Up the Conversion of Revenue Into Cash
Prevent cash shortages by:
invoicing immediately
billing consistently
correcting errors quickly
following up before invoices are due
Shortening the cash gap matters more than increasing sales.
Step 4: Stop Funding Operations Based on Expected Payments
Operations should be funded based on:
confirmed receivables
predictable cash availability
secured funding sources
Not on assumptions about when customers will pay.
Step 5: Align Funding With Revenue Timing
Businesses avoid cash shortages when funding:
scales with sales
adjusts automatically as volume increases
accounts for payment delays
supports growth without reapplication
This alignment removes timing risk.
Step 6: Monitor Early Warning Signals
Cash problems give warning signs:
rising receivables
increasing reliance on short-term credit
payroll anxiety despite growth
delayed vendor payments
leadership distracted by cash issues
Early action prevents emergencies.
What Happens When Cash Is Managed Proactively
Businesses that manage cash deliberately experience:
smoother operations
predictable payroll and vendor payments
reduced stress
stronger negotiating position
confidence in growth decisions
Cash stability turns profit into momentum.
Key Takeaways
Profit does not guarantee liquidity
Receivables lock up cash as growth accelerates
Expenses rise before payments arrive
Fixed funding tools break under scale
Forward-looking cash planning prevents shortages
