
Favorite Books: Brewery Finances
07/24/20 • 18 min
There are so many good business books out there that can help you improve financial results in your brewery business. Here are three of my favorite business books of all time:
Cash Rules: How to Learn and Manage the 7 Cash Flow Drivers for Your Company's Success, by Bill McGuiness
The book provides practical instructions to measure, monitor and improve cash flow in your business. The primary drivers of cash flow: Sales, Margins, Operating Expenses, Accounts Receivable, Inventory, Accounts Payable and Capital Expenditures.
I've taken this concept and modified it to be useful for craft breweries. Check out the Ultimate Guide to Cash Flow for more details.
80/20 Rule: The Secret to Achieving More with Less, by Richard Koch
You've probably heard of the 80/20 rule, otherwise known as the Pareto Principle. Essentially, it states that 20% of efforts create 80% of results. So, there's 20% of what you do that makes 80% of the difference. The challenge is trying to figure out what the 20% is so that you can do more of these things, and spend more time on efforts that really make a difference.
In the beer business you can use 80/20 to identify your most profitable customers and products (brands/SKUs). Run the analysis and you'll see that 80% of sales comes from 20% of your customers. And 80% of sales come from 20% of your brands. Then use this insight to improve financial results in your brewery.
Financing the Small Business, by Robert Sisson
Every brewery should have a financing strategy. A game plan so that you have access to capital when you need it. In good times, and in tough times, a good financing strategy will keep your brewery on solid financial footing.
The book covers how to approach banks, how to create loan proposals, how banks make lending decisions, and more.
Don't forget to Sign Up for the World Famous (and Free) Craft Brewery Financial Training Newsletter.
There are so many good business books out there that can help you improve financial results in your brewery business. Here are three of my favorite business books of all time:
Cash Rules: How to Learn and Manage the 7 Cash Flow Drivers for Your Company's Success, by Bill McGuiness
The book provides practical instructions to measure, monitor and improve cash flow in your business. The primary drivers of cash flow: Sales, Margins, Operating Expenses, Accounts Receivable, Inventory, Accounts Payable and Capital Expenditures.
I've taken this concept and modified it to be useful for craft breweries. Check out the Ultimate Guide to Cash Flow for more details.
80/20 Rule: The Secret to Achieving More with Less, by Richard Koch
You've probably heard of the 80/20 rule, otherwise known as the Pareto Principle. Essentially, it states that 20% of efforts create 80% of results. So, there's 20% of what you do that makes 80% of the difference. The challenge is trying to figure out what the 20% is so that you can do more of these things, and spend more time on efforts that really make a difference.
In the beer business you can use 80/20 to identify your most profitable customers and products (brands/SKUs). Run the analysis and you'll see that 80% of sales comes from 20% of your customers. And 80% of sales come from 20% of your brands. Then use this insight to improve financial results in your brewery.
Financing the Small Business, by Robert Sisson
Every brewery should have a financing strategy. A game plan so that you have access to capital when you need it. In good times, and in tough times, a good financing strategy will keep your brewery on solid financial footing.
The book covers how to approach banks, how to create loan proposals, how banks make lending decisions, and more.
Don't forget to Sign Up for the World Famous (and Free) Craft Brewery Financial Training Newsletter.
Previous Episode

Best Practices: Brewery Insurance
In today's podcast, we hear from Steven Quish from Cross Insurance. Cross has 40 office locations and 1000 employees. They work with over two dozen brewery clients, so they understand the beer industry.
Steve shares his perspective on insurance issues facing beer industry today. Topics range from Business Income Interruption insurance, to Workers' Compensation, and how to prepare a COVID impact statement.
What's a COVID impact statement? Why do you need this? Listen in to learn more.
We also discuss day to day insurance considerations for breweries. For example, certificates of insurance, hold harmless agreements and how to use a safety program to help reduce workers' compensation premiums.
Resources
Contact Steve Quish from Cross Insurance: [email protected]
Learn more about Cross Insurance
Don't forget to sign up for the World Famous (and Free!) Craft Brewery Financial Training Newsletter. Financial Intel for Breweries, Delivered Weekly.
Next Episode

Open Book Management for Craft Breweries
Today we talk about open book management for craft breweries. Open book management (OBM) is a system where financial information is shared with employees so that they can make better decisions.Better decisions lead to better financial outcomes, and better financial outcomes lead to a stronger brewery business for everyone.
In this podcast we dig into the Evaluation Stage of open book management. We talk about what open book management is, and what it is not. We cover the key things you should consider to determine if OBM is right for your brewery. And we review three books which are required reading if you want to implement OBM in your business.
Resources + Tools
Learn more about the Online Course: Open Book Management for Craft Breweries
Sign up for the World Famous and Free Craft Brewery Financial Training Newsletter
Craft Brewery Financial Training Podcast - Favorite Books: Brewery Finances
Transcript
Welcome to the craft brewery, financial training podcast, where we combined beer and numbers to provide you with tips, tactics, and strategies, so that you can improve financial results in your brewery. I'm your host, Kerry Shumway, a CPA CFO for a brewery and former CFO for a beer distributor. I've spent the last 20 years using finance to improve financial results in our beer business. Now I'm helping other craft breweries to do the same. Are yo
If you like this episode you’ll love
Episode Comments
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/craft-brewery-financial-training-podcast-8574/favorite-books-brewery-finances-7267376"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to favorite books: brewery finances on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy