The 3 Cash Leaks Most Businesses Don’t See (And How a CFO Fixes Them)
Profit is an opinion. Cash is reality. Most businesses don’t “run out of money” because sales are bad — they run out because cash silently leaks through process gaps. Here are 3 leaks that a Virtual CFO catches early — before they become a crisis.
A CFO doesn’t only track “cash balance”. They track timing, leakage, and predictability.
Cash Leak #1: “Working Capital Drift” (Receivables + Inventory quietly eating cash)
This is the most common hidden leak: you are selling more, but cash feels tighter. Why? Because growth increases your need to fund: credit to customers and inventory in the pipeline.
Symptoms
- Sales ↑ but bank balance stays flat
- Receivables ageing increases (more 60/90-day outstanding)
- Stock looks healthy on paper but movement is slow
- Discounting increases to push inventory
How a CFO fixes it
- Credit policy: customer limits, approval rules, stop-supply triggers
- Collections engine: weekly follow-up cadence + dispute workflow + escalation
- Inventory dashboard: slow-moving & dead stock, reorder rules, min-max
- Working capital KPI: DSO + DIO + DPO tracked weekly
Discounts, returns, rejections, and unbilled work often don’t show up clearly until it’s too late.
Cash Leak #2: “Margin Leakage” (discounts, returns, rejections, unbilled work)
A business may show decent gross margin on paper but still feel cash stress because the real margin is leaking through operational realities: credit notes, quality rejections, rush shipping, excessive discounts, and untracked wastage.
Symptoms
- Gross margin looks fine, but cash doesn’t accumulate
- Frequent credit notes / returns
- High “urgent” freight / courier costs
- Projects/services where work is done but billing is delayed
How a CFO fixes it
- Margin bridge: Sales → Gross margin → “leakage buckets” → Net cash margin
- Discount governance: approval limits, reason codes, customer-wise tracking
- Return analysis: reasons, responsible department, recovery plan
- Unbilled revenue discipline: weekly WIP review + billing triggers
Cash Leak #3: “Forecast Blindness” (no 13-week view → surprises become emergencies)
Many businesses track bank balance daily — but that’s not a forecast. A CFO builds a 13-week cash forecast to answer: “Will we be safe in the next 90 days?”
Symptoms
- “Sudden” cash crunch every few months
- EMIs, tax, GST, vendor payments collide unexpectedly
- Dependence on last-minute borrowing
- Overtrading: growth without sufficient cash planning
How a CFO fixes it
- 13-week forecast: weekly inflow/outflow planning
- Cash buffer policy: minimum cash days, escalation triggers
- Scenario testing: sales drop, collections delay, cost spike
- Decision cadence: weekly cash review (15–20 minutes)
Quick Cash Leak Audit (2 minutes)
Check the boxes that are true for your business.
Want a CFO to find and plug your cash leaks?
We set up working-capital dashboards, 13-week forecasts, collections cadence, and control systems so your business stops reacting late and starts planning early.