Financial Analysis That Actually Makes Sense
Most businesses drown in spreadsheets but starve for insights. We dig through your numbers to find what's working, what's costing you, and where you're leaving money on the table. Three months of our analysis work typically uncovers patterns that save clients between $18,000 and $47,000 annually.
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We Found $31,200 Hidden in a Client's Payroll Structure
Last November, a Castle Hill retailer came to us frustrated. Revenue looked okay, but cash flow felt tight. After analyzing six months of transactions, we spotted something odd in their casual staff rostering.
They were scheduling shifts that triggered overtime rates three days earlier than necessary. Simple pattern, expensive mistake. Over a year, those extra penalty rates added up to $31,200.
We restructured their roster template. Same staff coverage, same service quality, but now those penalty rates only kick in when actually required. The owner called it "finding money in the couch cushions, except the couch was on fire."
That's what we do. Look at your actual operations and find the patterns costing you money.
Three Areas Where Money Vanishes
After analyzing dozens of Australian businesses, we see the same patterns. Here's where profits typically leak out.
Supplier Contracts Nobody Reviews
You signed that agreement in 2022. Market rates dropped in 2024. But you're still paying 2022 prices because nobody's checking. We found seven clients paying 12-18% above current market rates for services they use daily.
Inventory That Sits Too Long
Stock sitting on shelves costs money in three ways: storage space, tied-up capital, and eventual markdowns. One client had $67,000 worth of inventory that hadn't moved in eight months. That's cash doing nothing useful.
Processes That Waste Time
Your team spends 40 minutes daily on a task that could be automated. That's 3.3 hours weekly, 172 hours yearly. At $45 per hour, that's $7,740 annually on unnecessary manual work. Multiply by team size for the real cost.
Clear Pricing for Business Analysis
We charge based on complexity, not company size. Small operation with messy books might need more work than a larger business with good systems.
Most clients start with our standard analysis. If you've got multiple entities, international transactions, or complicated ownership structures, we'll quote the comprehensive option.
Standard Analysis
$3,850- Complete financial review covering 12 months
- Cost structure breakdown and efficiency assessment
- Supplier and vendor rate comparison
- Cash flow pattern analysis
- Written report with specific recommendations
- Two follow-up consultations included
Comprehensive Analysis
$6,990- Everything in Standard Analysis
- Multi-entity structure review
- Industry benchmark comparison
- Scenario modeling for growth planning
- Quarterly review sessions for six months
- Direct access to your analyst