The 7 Most Common Cash Flow Problems. And Their Root Causes
Cash flow problems look like a money problem. They are almost always a timing problem, a pricing problem, or a systems problem. Understanding which type you have determines which fix actually works.
| Problem | Symptom | Root cause | Fix category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slow receivables | Profitable but no cash | Net-30/60 terms, no follow-up | AR systems + collection process |
| Seasonal revenue | Feast-and-famine cycles | Revenue concentrated in certain months | Reserve building + retainer offers |
| Rapid growth | More sales, less cash | Inventory/labor spend ahead of collections | Working capital financing |
| Underpayment to self | No cash cushion | Owner draws create unpredictable outflows | Fixed salary structure |
| Overextended credit to customers | Large AR, tight cash | Too-generous payment terms | Tighten terms + deposits |
| High fixed costs | Breakeven too high | Overhead not scaled to revenue base | Cost restructuring |
| Tax surprise | Quarterly bill empties account | No tax reserve account | Automatic tax withholding |
Diagnosing Your Specific Cash Flow Problem
Pull your bank account balance for each of the last 12 months: the actual daily low balance, not the month-end balance. Plot it. Most small businesses will see one of three patterns: a steady low balance (structural underpricing or overhead problem), a cyclical dip at predictable intervals (seasonal or payroll-driven), or random dips tied to large unexpected outflows (tax underpayment, equipment failure, bad debt).
Each pattern has a different solution. Structural underpricing requires raising prices or cutting costs. Cyclical patterns require advance cash reserves or a credit line. Random large outflows require insurance, emergency funds, and tax withholding systems. Treating a structural problem with a line of credit is a temporary mask, not a fix.
Immediate Actions for a Cash Flow Crisis
If you are in an active cash shortage right now, the priority order is: stop discretionary spending immediately (cancel non-essential subscriptions, defer non-urgent purchases), accelerate receivables (call every client with an invoice over 15 days old today, offer a small discount for immediate payment), negotiate payment terms with your largest vendors (most will accept a 30-day extension with a phone call and a clear repayment plan), and contact your bank before you miss a payment (proactive communication almost always gets better outcomes than reactive silence).
Once immediate pressure is relieved, the fix requires addressing root cause. That means a 13-week forecast, a collection system, deposit requirements for new work, and a credit line established during a strong period: not the next crisis.
Ready to build a system-level approach to cash flow management?