Cash Flow · by Natasha Wentink
Cash Is Not King, Cash Flow Is: How to Avoid the Financial Pitfalls That Kill Growing Businesses
Many growing businesses fail not from lack of customers or profits, but from running out of cash. Poor cash-flow management undermines even profitable enterprises — the timing and movement of money determines survival and growth.
Introduction
Many businesses don't fail because they lack customers or profits. They fail because they run out of cash — often suddenly, and avoidably.
At Pumpkn, we've seen this repeatedly: growing businesses with full order books, strong margins and profit on paper, yet unable to pay suppliers or make payroll. Why? Poor cash-flow management.
Why Cash Flow (Not Just Cash) Is What Really Matters
Cash is static. Cash flow is dynamic — the real-time movement of money in and out of your business. The timing and pattern of these flows determine your ability to survive and grow.
- You can have R200,000 in the bank today and still fail if large outflows are due next week and your receivables won't arrive for 60 days.
- You can be profitable on paper but suffer cash starvation if your working-capital cycle isn't tightly managed.
Healthy cash flow = predictability, resilience and readiness for growth.
The 5 Hidden Traps That Derail Cash Flow
1. Delayed Payments from Customers
- Offering 30-day terms, but customers pay at 60 or 90 days.
- Large buyers stretch your receivables cycle. Keep customers in check — don't dig a hole.
- No follow-up process for collections. Build a relationship with the people responsible for paying you.
Revenue is booked, but it's not in your bank — leading to a liquidity crunch.
2. Mismatch Between Income and Expenses
- Revenue is seasonal (e.g. harvests), but costs like salaries, rent or utilities are monthly.
- Long payment cycles but upfront supplier demands.
You're constantly bridging the gap with overdrafts, late payments or borrowing.
3. Sudden Cost Shocks
- Price increases in inputs (fertiliser, packaging).
- Equipment breakdowns or emergency repairs.
- Load-shedding disruptions raising operational costs.
4. Overtrading
- Rapid growth without sufficient working capital.
- Taking on large orders without upfront deposits.
- Hiring or investing before cash flow stabilises.
Growth eats cash before it generates it.
5. Debt Repayments Poorly Aligned to Cash Flow
- Balloon repayments with no buffer.
- Fixed monthly instalments when revenue is lumpy.
- High debt-service ratio leaving no room for error.
What You Need to Track (Monthly)
- Cash Flow Forecast: Can you meet obligations over the next 4–8 weeks?
- Receivables Ageing: Who's late?
- Payables Schedule: Are you timing payments to match inflows?
- Burn Rate: How much are you spending each month?
- Working Capital Cycle: How long is your cash tied up before coming back in?
Use a rolling 13-week cash-flow tracker. Even a simple spreadsheet gives visibility and time to act.
Strategies to Strengthen Cash Flow
- Negotiate better terms — ask suppliers for 30-day terms and offer early-payment discounts.
- Invoice immediately — delays mean delays in getting paid.
- Automate follow-ups with reminders and systems.
- Build buffers — aim for 1–3 months of operating costs in reserve.
- Structure repayments smartly — align schedules with revenue patterns.
- Use short-term financing only to close timing gaps.
Final Word: Cash Flow Is the Pulse of Your Business
Profit looks good on paper. Cash feels good in the bank. But cash flow is what keeps you alive and able to grow.
At Pumpkn, we don't just fund businesses. We help them stay fundable by building better cash-flow habits.
Need funding to grow?
Pumpkn provides fast, responsible working-capital and PO finance to South African food & agri SMEs.