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What Smart Business Owners Do Before Spring to Stay Profitable 

What Smart Business Owners Do Before Spring to Stay Profitable 
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What Smart Business Owners Do Before Spring to Stay Profitable 

Spring brings momentum. Longer days, renewed energy, and often a spike in opportunity. For many businesses, it also brings higher expenses, shifting demand, and new pressure on cash flow. 

Smart business owners do not wait for spring to arrive before getting prepared. They use the late winter months to tighten systems, review numbers, and make intentional decisions so growth does not come at the expense of profit. 

If the start of the year is about setting direction, spring is about execution. Here is what financially savvy business owners do before the season changes to stay profitable and in control. 

Step 1: Review Year-to-Date Performance With Fresh Eyes 

Before planning for spring, it is critical to understand what actually happened in January and February. Many owners glance at revenue totals and move on. Smart owners dig deeper. 

Start by reviewing your year-to-date Profit and Loss statement and cash flow activity. Look for trends, not perfection. 

Ask yourself: 

  • Are margins holding steady or shrinking? 
  • Are expenses tracking where you expected? 
  • Are Profit First allocations realistic based on actual performance? 

This step pairs well with 
The Most Common Financial Mistakes Small Businesses Make (And How to Fix Them Early in the Year) 

Spring planning without this context often leads to overspending or misaligned goals. 

Step 2: Revisit Profit First Allocations Before Volume Increases 

Spring growth can be a blessing or a burden. Increased revenue often brings increased costs. Without adjusted allocations, businesses feel busier but not more profitable. 

Smart business owners review their Profit First percentages before activity ramps up. They confirm that allocations still reflect current priorities and not outdated assumptions. 

This may include: 

  • Tightening Operating Expenses slightly 
  • Increasing Profit allocation if margins allow 
  • Adjusting Owner’s Pay to reflect sustainability 
  • Confirming Tax allocations are sufficient 

If you have not reviewed your allocations since year-end, now is the time. This connects closely with 
How to Build a Financial Buffer That Actually Works 

Allocations create guardrails. Review them before the road gets busier. 

Step 3: Clean Up Outstanding AR and AP 

Spring momentum can quickly strain cash flow if outstanding invoices or unpaid bills are ignored. Smart owners clear the backlog before taking on more. 

Review your Accounts Receivable aging report. Identify invoices that are overdue or at risk of becoming uncollectible. Follow up now, not later. 

Then review Accounts Payable. Confirm which bills are due, which are recurring, and which may need renegotiation. 

This process aligns with the systems outlined in 
Year-End Reconciliation Checklist: What to Review Before You Close the Books 

Clean AR and AP give you flexibility. Messy balances create pressure. 

Step 4: Audit Expenses With Spring in Mind 

Spring often brings new marketing efforts, staffing changes, subscriptions, and operational tools. Without an expense review, these additions stack on top of existing costs. 

Smart business owners run an expense audit before adding anything new. 

Look for: 

  • Software that is underused or duplicated 
  • Vendor contracts that have not been reviewed in over a year 
  • Seasonal tools that should be paused or canceled 
  • Costs that no longer support current goals 

This step builds on 
Hidden Profit Leaks: How to Find and Fix the Quiet Money Drains in Your Business 

Profit is often protected by removing friction, not adding complexity. 

Step 5: Plan for Staffing and Capacity Changes Early 

Spring can bring hiring, schedule shifts, or increased workload. Without planning, payroll becomes reactive and stressful. 

Review: 

  • Upcoming PTO or seasonal time off 
  • Whether current staffing levels match projected demand 
  • Payroll percentages compared to revenue 
  • Contractor usage and classification 

If staffing changes are coming, model their financial impact now. This prevents surprises and helps maintain stable Profit First allocations. 

Preparation reduces panic. 

Step 6: Update Forecasts and Short-Term Goals 

Spring is a natural checkpoint for updating forecasts. Smart owners do not rely solely on annual budgets. They use rolling forecasts that reflect reality. 

Update projections for: 

  • Revenue expectations 
  • Operating expenses 
  • Cash flow timing 
  • Profit and tax targets 

Even a simple three-month forecast creates clarity. It also helps identify whether upcoming initiatives are financially viable. 

This complements the insights in 
The 3 Metrics That Reveal Your Business’s True Financial Health 

Numbers guide decisions. Guessing creates risk. 

Step 7: Strengthen Systems That Reduce Owner Load 

Profitability is not just about numbers. It is about sustainability. Owners who are overwhelmed tend to make rushed decisions and delay important reviews. 

Before spring gets busy, smart owners strengthen systems that reduce mental load. 

This may include: 

  • Automating reporting 
  • Creating checklists for recurring tasks 
  • Using planning tools to stay focused 
  • Scheduling regular financial reviews 

This approach aligns with resources like the Business Plan Journal, Quarterly Planner, and Self Care Journal

Healthy systems support healthy decisions. 

Step 8: Choose One Financial Priority for Spring 

Rather than trying to fix everything at once, smart business owners choose one clear financial focus for the season. 

Examples include: 

  • Improving cash flow 
  • Increasing net profit margin 
  • Reducing overhead 
  • Strengthening reserves 
  • Preparing for expansion 

Using the Fix This Next framework can help identify the most impactful priority. Focus creates momentum. Distraction drains it. 

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