495: How To Make An Extra $100k This Year By Optimizing Your Financial Stack With Bill D’Alessandro
You're listening to the MyWifeKitter.job podcast.
The place where I bring on successful bootstrap business owners
until deeply into what strategies are working
and what strategies are not with their businesses.
Today I have my good friend Bill Dallas-Sandro back on the show.
And in this episode, Bill is going to teach us
how we can make an extra $100,000 per year
with just a couple of small changes to our financial stack.
Now I didn't know about one of these tips
and it's already made me over $40,000 this year.
But before we begin, I want to give a quick shout out
to Chase Diamond for sponsoring this episode.
Chase is my go-to guy when it comes to email marketing
and he runs a successful email marketing agency
over at Structured Agency,
which caters to many eight and nine figure e-commerce brands.
Now for those of you who can't afford to hire an agency,
Chase offers a pretty good email marketing course
if you want to learn how to do email yourself.
This course can be found over at MyWifeKitter.job.com slash Chase.
Once again, that's MyWifeKitter.com slash CHASE.
I also want to thank Emerge Council for sponsoring this episode.
If you saw on Amazon or run any online business
for that matter, the most important aspect
of your long-term success will be your brand.
And this is why I work with Stephen Weigler
and his team from Emerge Council
to protect my brand over at Bumblebee Linnons.
Now what's unique about Emerge Council
is that Steve focuses his legal practice on e-commerce
and provides strategic and legal representation
to entrepreneurs to protect their IP.
For example, if you've ever been ripped off
or knocked off on Amazon,
then Steve can help you fight back and protect yourself.
The students in my class have used Steve
for cooperating their designs,
policing against counterfeits and knockoffs,
vendor agreements, brand registry, you name it.
So if you need IP protection services,
go to EmergeCouncil.com and get a free consult.
And if you tell Steve that I sent you,
you'll get a $100 discount.
That's EMERGECOUNSEAL.com.
Now onto the show.
Welcome to the MyWifeCutor.com podcast.
Today, I'm thrilled to have Bill Dallas-Sandro
for I believe the third time.
He's the founder of Elements Brands
where he acquires and sells consumer brands.
He is also the host of the Acquisitions Anonymous Podcast.
Does a bunch of consulting and coaching?
And he's spoken at my annual e-commerce conference
to sell or submit a bunch of times now.
I can't even keep track.
I know the man for about nine or 10 years at this point
and he always has a ton of knowledge to share.
And in this episode,
we're gonna talk about managing your finances
as you run your e-commerce business.
And I thought I knew a lot of these things
just to be upfront with you guys
until I chatted with him recently.
And I wanted Bill to share his knowledge with all of you.
And with that, we'll come back to the show Bill.
How you doing, man?
I'm great, I'm glad to be back.
I said that seller someone had lost count
of the number of times I had attended
and I've also lost count of the number of times
I've done your show.
So good to be back for the who knows how many of the time.
So how's it going?
I've noticed you've been just popping out a lot of kids lately.
Yes, we're working on our third at the moment.
So I got two.
So I had my first kid in March 2020,
like right when the pandemic started.
And then we just went for it.
So now our third child will be born in January 2024.
Congratulations.
Three, one, four.
Thank you.
You guys done a three or you're gonna put a basketball table?
I think so.
My wife is lobbying for four already.
We don't even have three.
I'm like, it's enough for me.
So it seems to me and I've known you for a long time.
It seems like the bill of just maybe four, three or four years ago
has changed dramatically since having a family.
Have things changed?
Yeah, well, before you have a family, it's just you.
And I know that sounds obvious,
but you can go really hard before you have a family, right?
You know, you can work nights, you can work weekends,
you know, you can have an erratic schedule.
But once you have kids, you can't,
that's a luxury you just don't have anymore.
So I have gotten much more structured.
So I have like a really blocked week now,
which is awesome.
So like Steve, you scheduled this with me.
This is in like my external meetings block.
This block is for meetings with people
that don't work at elements brands.
And it's like just today and tomorrow.
And that's it.
Otherwise, wait till next week.
So I've been much more structured with my time.
And we've also sold a bunch of our brands.
I simplify my life a lot.
So we have kind of one big brand now
and a natural dog company.
We kind of 80, 20 of the whole portfolio.
So like more chill now.
Yeah, so just one company to worry about,
not like you had like five or six before, right?
Eight.
In fact, eight.
Oh my God, that's crazy.
Yeah, it was crazy.
Cause like, I mean, I love a lot of people
listening to Happy Commerce Businesses.
And Steve, I know you have a new commerce business.
In any commerce business,
something goes catastrophically wrong like once a year, right?
Like your Amazon, your main Amazon listening
gets suspended.
Your Facebook ads go completely off the rails.
Something happens like really bad once a year.
And when you have eight brands,
that means something happens like catastrophically bad
like every six weeks.
You know, it's terrible.
It was terrible, right?
And so like it was a tough life.
And we can talk a lot about whole co's
and why whole co's are tough.
And you know, whole brands is tough.
But that was what my life was.
And then in 2022, we basically just said,
this is bananas.
We have one brand and natural dog
that can be really, really big.
Let's just go all in on that.
Nice.
Nice.
That's like Spencer Jan's philosophy.
He sold off all his other brands,
except for the main one.
Solo Stove.
And then he turned that into a billion dollar business.
Yeah, that would work for me.
Right?
So I am curious,
just the environment still isn't that great
in general with the economy.
How are you putting your businesses money right now?
Are you just T-billion and chilling?
T-billion and chilling.
Yeah.
So I mean, I use money market funds.
I don't buy the T-bills directly.
But yeah, and I haven't like just to be clear,
like I haven't like bailed out of the market.
I haven't like sold everything or anything like that.
I'm just kind of accumulating excess cash
in T-bills and interest yielding instruments.
I'm doing a friend of mine also raised a debt fund
that invests in like fixed and flip homes
across the whole portfolio.
You would like 10%.
So I'm invested in that.
So I'm looking for more kind of interest bearing stuff.
Yeah, so one thing you said at Cellar Summit
was you were gonna guarantee that everyone listening
was gonna make $100,000 after listening to your talk.
That's right.
And there was one thing that you mentioned
which I want you to talk about
where I was just sitting on like a pile of cash
just sitting in like a checking account.
And then you said something, I was like,
okay, well, he just made me maybe $40,000 right there.
You want to share it?
You want to share it?
Cause I thought that's cool.
I didn't even know these existed.
Yeah, so several people by the way, Steve,
came up to me after my talk and said
that I did legitimately make them a hundred grand.
Oh, all right.
So I'm the Cellar Summit next year.
So but I'll spill the beans here.
Also, you don't need to come to Cellar Summit next year
for this, but you should.
So the big thing that everybody's got to be doing
that people have kind of taken their eye off the ball
for the last 10 years is earning cash,
earning yield on your cash
on your business's cash, right?
So for the last decade, interest rates have been effectively zero.
So you didn't have to optimize
where you parked your business's cash.
But now interest rates are in the high fours,
as we record this in July 2023.
And if you park a million bucks
in an interest yielding account,
you're gonna make 50 grand a year
just for doing nothing.
And there's these new banks that have popped up
that will let you earn yield on your operating cash.
There's two of them that I really like.
One is called Mercury, and one is called Hybeam.
Mercury's been around for a while.
They were focused on SaaS companies,
but they've recently started pushing into e-commerce.
And then Hybeam was founded, I think,
last year or two years ago,
and they specifically focus on e-com.
But both of them will give you like 4.8% yield
on your business's idle cash.
Just straight up free money.
So here's the thing, Bill.
During the whole bank scare,
my wife became paranoid.
And what she did is she started opening bank accounts
like crazy because of the FDIC limit.
Yep.
And so now we were the proud owner of like
a bunch of bank accounts,
which I hate keeping track of.
One thing you left out was the insurance limit
on these companies that you just named.
Oh yeah, cool.
Yeah, it's cool.
So right, everybody's freaked out.
We don't want to keep our cash over the FDIC limit.
The FDIC limit is $250,000.
If you have more than $250,000 in account,
your bank goes belly up, you may not get all your money back.
But the cool thing about both marketing and high beam
is what they actually do is spread your money around
what's called a sweep network.
So it looks like you only have one account with them.
But behind the scenes,
they open accounts for you at lots of different banks
and distribute your cash.
And make sure each individual kind of phantom account
is always below $250,000.
So no bank, you're always fully FDIC insurance.
So both of them high beam and mercury
have $5 million of FDIC insurance
because they divide your money across 20 different accounts.
And that is the bomb.
So we are closing those, a bunch of those accounts now.
And you wouldn't, I don't know if you've ever tried to do this,
but keeping track of all those accounts is a pain the butt.
I have this spreadsheet now.
Yeah, whenever I want to log in,
I don't even know how much money we have.
My wife could just run off right now
and I would have no idea.
And if you were one, that's $250,000.
Oh, we forgot about the Steve Chu community bank
in Mississippi, oops.
It reminds me of Bitcoin.
Like you lose your wallet, it's gone.
Yeah, it's also gone even if you don't lose your wallet
in crypto.
That's true.
The other value add that I had a number of people come talk to me
about regarding your talk was just optimizing your spend.
One of the biggest bonuses of running an e-commerce business
or any business for that matter is that you can get points
and that sort of thing.
A lot of people aren't optimizing that.
So what is your strategy there?
So yeah, so the first half of Make 100 grand
by listening to this podcast is park your business cash
in an interest-yielding checking account.
The second half of Make 100 grand by listening to this podcast
is optimize your fricking credit card spend.
If you are running, if you want an e-commerce business,
like I know everybody's read all the blogs about points
and you go, oh, this sounds so complicated.
Maybe it's not worth dealing with.
I'm here to tell you this absolutely worth dealing with.
Myself and other people I know take home six figures a year
just on credit card cash back and points.
Just on points, I fly first class pretty much everywhere I go.
I don't pay a penny for it.
It's just points from the business.
This is absolutely worth figuring out.
So here is like the 80, 20, the simplest possible
e-commerce credit card stack.
So you don't have to like do all the points brain damage.
So you need two credit cards.
So first start with an AMX gold.
It earns four X points on advertising and shipping.
And if you're an e-commerce, you know, advertising and shipping
are basically the whole cost structure.
So you get an AMX gold, the first $150,000 you rent
with an AMX gold are going to make four X,
you'll get 450,000 AMX points.
Then any spend that's not ads are shipping,
put it on a Capital One Spark business card.
It earns 2% cash back on everything.
If you just do those two things, right,
that's like the most basic e-commerce stack.
If you are spending more than $150,000 a year
on ads and shipping and here's the big secret,
you can have more than one AMX gold on the same EIN.
So you just apply for another one
and that one has a separate $150,000 cap.
You can have up to 10 AMX golds.
So you can earn four X AMX points
on up to one and a half million dollars a year
of ad and shipping spend.
So that's like, and then everything else
besides ad and shipping, put it on a Capital One Spark.
That's the simple like 80, 20 e-commerce credit card stack.
I don't really spend money on flights or hotels anymore
because of this, but I don't fly first class.
I guess that's the only difference.
You could.
We're sitting on millions of points, actually.
We could.
I'm just a frugal guy, Bill.
Even if it's imaginary, imaginary.
But they do disappear.
The value of them does depreciate.
They do value them over time.
So the strategy on points is like earn and burn
because they're not a good investment.
Like holding them, the credit card companies
are just looking for ways to slowly make them worse and worse.
Yeah.
I think the philosophy though is,
unless the points that we're getting
is a good deal for the ticket for the points,
we tend not to use them, which requires
a little bit of planning, right?
But are you planning your trips
so that you can take these first class
without blowing a bunch of points, or?
Yeah, I tried.
So for example, my wife and I just went to Italy
for 12 days.
We flew first class both ways on points.
And I don't remember how much it was in points,
but it was not.
Well, first of all, I would never pay cash for these.
No way.
I would never flow to international first class.
It would have been like $20,000 or something insane.
So no, I would have never done it.
But on points, it was like the equivalent,
I got something like five to 10 cents of value per point,
which is like, you know, base value on a point
is like one to two cents, right?
So when we redeem for first class international,
the points just go a lot farther.
I just wanted to let you know
that tickets for the 2024 seller summit
are now on sale over at seller summit.com.
The seller summit is the conference
that I hold every year that specifically targets
e-commerce entrepreneur selling physical products online.
And unlike other events that focus on inspirational stories
and high level BS, mine is a curriculum-based conference
where you will lead with practical and actionable strategies
specifically for an e-commerce business.
Every speaker I invite is deep in the trenches
other e-commerce business, entrepreneurs
who are importing large quantity of physical goods
and not high level guides who are overseeing their companies
at 50,000 feet.
I personally hate large events,
so the seller summit is always small and intimate.
Every year, we cut off ticket sales at around 200 people,
so ticket sell out fast,
and we've sold out every single year for the past eight years.
If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur
making over 250,000 or $1 million per year in revenue,
we also offer an exclusive mastermind experience
with other top sellers.
The seller summit's gonna be held in Fort Lauderdale, Florida
from May 14th to May 16th of 2024.
Right now, this is the cheapest the tickets will ever be.
From our information, go to seller summit.com.
That's s-e-l-l-e-r-s-s-u-m-m-i-t.com or just Google it.
Now back to the show.
Okay, so now that we've put out the candy for this episode,
let's talk about the guts that are gonna really make
the big difference for an e-commerce business.
One of the, I guess the downsides
of running an e-commerce business is that's a cash flow
heavy business.
So I wanna get down to the nitty gritty now
and just talk about how to manage cash flow.
Because you've done this for so many,
eight e-commerce brands at one point,
and it can get into a headache.
So what are some of your main principles?
Yeah, so the problem, right?
And I think everybody around an e-commerce business felt this.
Even if your business is doing well and growing,
you, you know, my business is doing well
and then it's time to buy inventory again.
And you're like, I need to buy $200,000 with inventory
and I have $100,000 worth of cash.
Where is all my cash going?
My income statement says that my business is profitable,
but I never have any cash.
Why is my bank balance not going up?
What the hell is going on?
But I'm sure a lot of people listening have felt that.
And what the hell is going on
is that all of your cash is tied up in inventory.
It is all on the shelves that you're 3PL.
Because as your inventory balance goes up,
that is a use of cash, right?
So if you had $500,000 of inventory last year,
and this year you have a million dollars worth of inventory,
you have plowed in an incremental half million dollars
into inventory.
So if your business made a half a million dollars,
well guess what, you don't have any more cash.
You have a bunch more inventory,
but you don't have any more cash.
So I've seen so many entrepreneurs get pinched by this
and then what do they do?
They go for one of these quick cash flow loans,
you know, like the parkers or the eight figs
or the clearcoes or way flyer or all these things, right?
And they pay absurd interest rates.
And it's just attacks on people
who can't forecast their cash flow.
So I've got a couple of kind of like easy rules of thumb
to make sure that you have enough cash
to buy your next inventory order.
Okay.
It's really only two.
For one, it is maintain a weekly cash flow log.
And I don't mean an income statement.
I mean a cash flow log.
I mean, when you think about an income statement, right?
So like you sell a product for a dollar,
you have 20 cents a cost of goods in it.
You have all the other expenses down the P&L
and you've got maybe 20 cents a profit, right?
But there's a couple of expenses in that P&L
that are not cash.
And the biggest one is cogs, cost of goods.
Like yeah, you had 20 cents a cost in it.
But when you sold it, you didn't pay 20 cents.
You already paid the 20 cents.
It's been on the shelf, right?
So you generated as far as cash flow from that order,
whatever your net income is, plus your cogs,
because the cogs is a phantom cost.
Right.
So when you build a cash flow model,
you need to build it based on deposits.
And the deposit that you get from Shopify
is gonna be, you know,
it doesn't have cogs taken out.
Right.
So build a cash flow, weekly cash flow log.
And then in the future, you can start going,
when do I think I'm gonna have to buy more inventory?
And you put a bogey out there, you know, in two or three months
of, oh, it's gonna cost me a hundred grand.
And then I go, how many days between now and then,
do I have a cash coming in?
Am I gonna have a hundred grand?
And you go, okay, how much money should I save
to make sure I have a hundred grand buy
whenever it's time to, or inventory?
Easy rule of thumb, put away in a separate account
on the side, whatever your daily cogs were, right?
Because that phantom cogs expense,
it's phantom, you're getting that cash.
If you blow the cash, you won't have it
to buy inventory again.
So kind of think of it as replacement costs.
When you sell a unit that costs you 20 cents, right?
You kind of, you're gonna need to replace that unit
essentially, eventually, right?
So take 20 cents and put it aside.
Every time you sell something, you know,
that cost you 20 cents.
And then when it's time to order more,
you should have cash in the bank to do it.
This sounds just like profit first, kind of,
but for inventory.
But for inventory, exactly.
Are you implying that there's literally separate bank accounts
for each of these things, like for a month?
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, I find it's super helpful
to have a separate bank account.
I just call it reserve cash.
And it's basically, we move money into it every week.
And that's what we save up.
And we know that reserve cash is gonna get spent down to zero,
you know, in three months and four months,
or whatever, when we have a big inventory bullet, right?
But then we know it's there.
And so then we're basically, we borrow from ourselves,
our reserve cash, rather than having to go borrow money
from a lender.
So this happens every week or every month?
We do it weekly.
Yeah, I find if you do it monthly, it's too late.
Like you will have spent three weeks of the cash, right?
Right, right, right.
Because business owners tend to operate
on what's in their bank account, right?
They're like, oh, wait, the bank account
has a lot of money in it.
And then they'll spend the money
or they'll take it out of the business.
But then a month later, the big bill shows up.
And they got to order more inventory
than don't have the cash.
It's funny how that psychology works.
Someone just gave me an analogy the other day.
Like you know, in the beginning, when you have a big
fresh tube of toothpaste, you slather your toothbrush.
Yeah, yeah.
And when it gets out in the little bit,
you're just putting this little tiny dot on there.
Humans are like that.
When there's money, they spend it, so.
Yes, 100%.
So it's really important to build a cash flow forecast.
So what happens if you're doing this forecast?
And there's no way in hell that you're
going to actually make enough money
to pay for your next inventory order.
What are your options?
So, well, so you have lots of options.
But before we get into the options,
if that is the case, you need to fundamentally
change something about your business, right?
Your margin profile is not good enough.
If you are running your business,
and it's not generating enough cash
to pay for your next inventory by,
there's something wrong with your business, right?
You're either spending too much on ads.
Your gross margin isn't high enough.
You have too much overhead.
Something is fundamentally broken.
So first, let me just say, don't just put a bandit
on the thing and figure out how do I get the cash
to pay for the next inventory by,
because that's what everybody does.
And then they call me and they're like,
Bill, we're totally screwed.
And I go, yeah, but you've been just looking
for the next hit and you didn't fix
the thing that was wrong in your business.
So first thing, fix was wrong with your business.
You're margin profile.
What if you're growing just so fast, though?
And you want to just keep fuel to the fire.
And if you really have the math and the spreadsheets
to show that you're profitable, you have good margins,
and it is simply because you're growing too fast,
proceed to the next step.
Which is what we'll talk about.
Can you throw some numbers out there?
Like, what is a healthy company
in order to throw fuel in the fire?
Yeah, so I mean, first of all,
are you net income positive, right?
I mean, if you are not venture backed,
you need to be net income positive, period.
That's like the lowest bar, right?
The higher bars, I think, and I'll credit this
to Taylor Holliday on Twitter, he basically says
that your returning customers should pay for your overhead
and your new customers should be break even, right?
So you can basically run your ads at break even
and then look at how much money you make
from your recurring customers
and that should cover the overhead of your business.
If you do that, you can't possibly lose money, right?
That's a break even business.
That's another way to describe a break even business, right?
The returning customers pay for overhead,
so that segment breaks even.
And then the new customers are break even
because you spend on ads to acquire them
and that parts break even.
You can't go out of business, you're break even.
I would think sort of a, so if you're running
a really fast growing e-con business,
low single digit e-bidom margins are okay
because you're probably plowing money into ads.
But if you're doing that,
you better have frickin' good cash flow forecasting
because one or two percent the wrong direction
and you're losing money.
So you gotta be focused on it really, really tight.
So that also implies then that you have
more than one product, right?
Because if you're one in done, you're pretty much screwed.
With one product is tough.
I mean, hero products are great.
Like successful companies have hero products,
power skews that push big volume
and you can order in big quantities.
And you know, I mean, all else being equal, right?
I would love to have one product that does a hundred
million dollars versus a million products
that do one dollar or, you know, whatever.
That is right.
So fewer products is obviously easier in every way.
So you want to cultivate power skews.
There's nothing wrong with a power skew.
But if you are a single skew business,
you probably have a massive opportunity
to build a product family around that single skew.
Yeah.
Okay, I like that.
I've never heard that before.
Maybe I should follow this guy on Twitter.
Yeah, Taylor's really right.
He runs Common Fact Correct Collective.
He's a really smart, smart guy, tweets a lot too.
So a lot's of good content.
Okay.
So if you feel comfortable
that you're not spending on ads irresponsibly
and that your business is structurally okay,
but you need money for growth, you have a couple options
from best to worst.
One of the cheapest ways, if you sell on Amazon,
the Amazon Marcus lines of credit
are really, really inexpensive.
They're like 10% interest, they're true interest,
we're talking about the difference between true interest
and a fee in a minute, but they're true interest
if you go for the Amazon Marcus loans.
The Amazon paraffin loans, they have partnerships
with Marcus and with paraffin.
The paraffin ones are phenomenally expensive
and avoid them like the plague.
The Marcus ones are reasonably priced.
Another thing you can do is go to your local bank
and get a line of credit.
A line of credit is basically like a big credit card
that you can draw down on and then pay back.
And they're usually priced in today's interest rate
environment, they'll be in the low teens.
They'll be 10, 11, 12, 13%, which is pretty cheap money
considering that T-bills are paying 5%.
So the banks only make it a 7%-ish risk premium
to lend to you.
Very reasonable, they charge true interest.
When you pay them back, it stops charging interest, right?
You pay them to zero and it stops charging interest,
which is different than some of the other products
we're gonna talk about here in a minute.
So a line of credit at your bank is a great place to start.
Can we go back to the Amazon loans real quick?
I've actually never taken money from Amazon before.
What is the difference between a Marcus and a paraffin
just logistically?
Yeah, so these are just to be clear,
Marcus and paraffin are third party companies
that Amazon has partnered with on the loans
and then Amazon facilitates you getting the money.
Got it, okay.
So you'll see a Marcus logo or a paraffin logo
inside of Sell or Central.
Okay.
The Marcus one, the terms will be something
the effect of like it's a $100,000 loan,
it's 12% true interest, you know, and it's due in a year.
Okay.
It's something like that, right?
And you will, the key though is if you borrow the hundred grand,
it's 12% interest.
If you pay it back tomorrow, you know,
you only have the money for one day,
you would only pay 1,365 times 12%,
you would pay functionally no interest,
because you only have the money for a day.
Okay.
Right?
And because it's a true line of credit
that shows there's true interest
and that's how it would be too
if you went down your local bank.
It was reasonable,
this is the way money should be lent,
this is the way money is lent,
all the time to large businesses and normal.
Let's now go to the next, the other type,
which is these merchant cash advances,
the wayfliers of the world,
the paraffin side of Amazon lending,
eight fig, like all these.
And people, I will invariably tweet you after
this episode comes out and me and they'll go,
well what about this one?
If they frame it as a fee,
if they use the word fee,
and what they'll say is borrow $100,000,
pay a 10% fee
and you'll pay it back as a fraction of sales,
or you'll pay back $1,000 a day,
or whatever until the loan is paid back,
run the other way.
And here's why.
If you borrow that same $100,000,
what will happen is they will immediately just increase
your loan balance to $110,000.
They will just put the fee right on your loan balance.
If you try to pay it off tomorrow,
you will owe them $110,000.
You would have paid the full year of interest
and only have the money for one day.
And that is the huge difference
between these merchant cash advances
and a true line of credit.
Is that the merchant cash advance charges you
all of the interest for the entire duration of the loan
right up front.
And then on day one, you pay back a little fraction.
On day two, you pay back a little fraction.
On day three, you pay back a little fraction.
Well, the problem is that money you pay back on day one,
you had it for one day,
and you paid the fee on that money for the whole time, right?
You had the next money on day two,
you had that money for two days,
but you paid the full 10% fee on that money.
And so on and so forth.
I have a whole calculator and article about this.
If you go to buildda.com,
b-i-l-l-d-a.com slash debt,
I kind of spell it all out
because verbal math is hard on podcasts.
All right, buildda.com slash debt,
and you can kind of break down the math.
And so what is the effective APR
then on one of these loans, assuming you're paying back?
Yeah, the way these loans work,
I guess what people listening is,
they literally take the money out of your revenue
directly from your Amazon account
and then pay you the difference
after subtracting their fee.
So how does the math work?
What does it end up coming out to?
So let's say you get a traditional loan and it's 10%,
but a 10% fee from one of these companies,
what is the equivalent?
So, and this is sort of what these companies are based on,
you can't, is very hard to do the math without a spreadsheet.
Right, upfront.
But I will tell you,
having done the math on a lot of them,
they usually pencil out to between 40 and 60% interest.
Wow. Even though it looks like a 10% fee,
they usually pencil to about 40 to 60% true interest
because you pay the money back so fast.
So you've paid a 10% fee on money you had
for days or weeks.
So think about this way, if you pay a 10% fee
and you have the money for a month,
what's the real APR?
Right, it's 1210, 120%, right?
So that's why these things are so,
they're hidden expensive,
but people can't do math
because this math is very complicated
if you don't have a finance degree.
And that's kind of what these companies are rely on.
I was just always wondering why so many of these
popped up all of a sudden.
Like I get emails from these types of companies,
probably like every other day,
wanting to sponsor something or whatnot.
So I guess they're just making a ton of money
handover fists then.
Well, that should tell you, right?
If somebody is like desperately trying
to get you to take their money,
you should be asking, why am I so lucky?
Right, like if they can afford to email the crap out of,
like does Bank of America email the crap out of you every day?
Does Chase Bank, you know,
does your local credit union like no?
Because they're lending money
at reasonable rates of interest, right?
These guys who are lending money
at insane rates of interest,
what are they?
They're actually sales and marketing companies.
They call Steve Chu every day and say,
we need a sponsor of the podcast.
We need a sponsor seller sound.
We need to be in front of all these sellers.
They have huge marketing budgets
because they are trying to get their money out
because when it goes out, they get 50% APR on it.
It's the best deal going.
So I guess one of the value ads that they advertise
is that you get approved in like a day
and you can get your money the next day.
Whereas if you apply for a line of credit at a bank,
for example, what do they need from you?
A full-procology exam, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, a lot, right?
And so this comes back to my strong recommendation
for a cash flow forecast.
Okay.
Spending a paying a really high interest rate
is a tax on not realizing you need the money
until you need it tomorrow, right?
When you realize that, oh crap, I need the money
in 48 hours, your only option is expensive money.
And by the way, that's why the money is so expensive
because they don't frickin' underwrite you.
They're like, oh, hi, Steve Chu, off the street.
Here's $200,000.
Does that sound normal to anyone?
Like, no, they're taking a ton of risk.
They don't underwrite very well.
And so as a result, they have to charge really high APRs
to the people that do get the money
because it has to cover defaults
because when they lend that fast,
they can't underwrite that thoroughly.
So that should be another tip.
If someone is just trying to shove you the money
and doesn't even know you,
you should start asking questions.
Plus, you know, they're taking it directly
from your Amazon earnings
and they look at your track record.
I mean, they get access to the money first.
They're the intermediary between your earnings
and your bank account, actually.
So they always get paid.
Yeah. They get paid first.
Yes. And I've seen businesses just choked by these things.
You know, they've got two or three of them
and none of the money's making it to their bank account.
And then they got a buy inventory
and what they don't even cash the way they do.
They get another one.
It's a horrible slippery slope.
I've seen it kill businesses.
All right, so let's talk about logistically
keeping track of your inventory.
I mean, you mentioned a separate bank account.
But I'm just thinking like cost of goods,
it's kind of complicated
because it comes in a different times.
You're getting everything at different prices.
Like, is there a nice logistical way
to organize all this?
Yeah, so this is hard.
And it's kind of like much in accounting.
If you guys have ever done,
try to do accounting for your business
or talk to your accountant.
You will pretty quickly realize that all accounting
is a trade-off between speed and accuracy.
Like so many things in life.
Right.
Of course, in the inventory side,
you could keep track of literally every unit
and you could keep them all in little piles
based on how much money you paid for them.
If your cost from your supplier is changing
and you could keep them all in little piles
because the freight is different each time
you bring it all in, right?
And then you could be very sure
which pile you sold each one out of
and you could make an entry for every single one
and your accounting would be perfect, right?
But that's just not reasonable, right?
Like we all use three pls,
the three pls won't keep inventory in little piles.
Right.
You know, it's just, it's not feasible.
So I find sort of the best like 80-20
for most econ businesses.
It was called landed average cost.
So let's say you make our math really easy.
You're gonna buy a hundred units from China
and they each cost a dollar a piece, right?
So that's a hundred dollars in inventory, right?
A hundred units dollar a piece, a hundred dollars in inventory.
You're also gonna pay $20 to ship them, right?
So many businesses will expense the $20 that they pay
to ship it and then stick a hundred dollars
in inventory in the balance sheet
and debit it $1 at a time as they sell everything.
I think the better way to do it is to take that $20
you pay for shipping and what's called capitalize it.
Put it on the balance sheet in your inventory account as well.
So you have $120 of inventory
because that's really what it costs you to get it
to your 3PO, a landed cost.
So you got a hundred units at a dollar of hard cost
and 20 cents each of shipping cost.
Meaning the landed price of that unit is a $1.20.
And by doing it this way, like thinking about the $1.20
is also essentially the replacement cost of that unit, right?
If when you need to buy another one,
it will cost you a $1.20 all in to get it to your 3PO, right?
To get it landed in the state.
So you should be putting away to the side
a $1.20 per unit, right?
So when you buy again, you pay a hundred dollars
to your factory and $20 to your freight border
and you have a hundred more units.
So that is what's called landed cost
is the $1.20 versus the $1.
So that's landed cost.
Then average cost is if you pay 90 cents this time
and a $1.10 last time, you just carry it at a dollar.
Like you put them all in one giant pile
and the value of everything in the pile
is the weighted average of everything
that's gone into the pile, right?
If that makes sense.
Yep, yep, yep.
And that's just the easiest 80-20 way to do it.
And then once a year or twice a year
depending on how much you care about,
you count everything and you re-value it.
So basically, you know, if your prices have gone up
and now you're paying your supplier, you know, $1.20 or whatever,
you just count how many things are in the pile,
you multiply by $1.20 and you go,
that's the new cost and you take a charge or a benefit
on your income statement one time
and you re-value your inventory.
I find that's like the easiest.
So you use average, landed average cost
and then like once or twice a year,
you just give it a sanity check and say,
am I holding this at the proper value?
So I had Kevin Stecco on the show a while back
and he does this for everything.
He calculates overhead per unit, advertising cost per unit
and he lumps that all into one cost
that he subtracts out when he makes a sale.
Is that something that you guys do also?
I think there are limits to this.
So like, I take some issue with putting advertising cost
in the cost of goods in the per unit
because like, for example, for us,
we can sell a unit on the .com,
we can sell a unit on Amazon
or we can sell a unit through pet code
and the advertising cost is very different
right through all those channels.
So, and also the advertising cost,
hell, even on Facebook changes day to day.
So like, things like that,
they're so dynamic are not cogs items.
They're a different hydroelectric for those.
Okay.
So for you, it's just basically,
whatever you paid to get it in the door,
landed average across a bunch of different orders
and then you change that number once a year.
Yeah, once a year.
And it shouldn't change that much
or you change it when your supplier emails you and goes,
this is your new price,
you're getting a price increase.
Yeah.
So logistically,
is there like a plug in that does this?
Or yes, yes with asterisk.
So there's a million different ways to do this.
The biggest iron way to do it is to get an ERP,
like an ERP and enterprise resource planning
piece of software, right?
Worst acronym of all time.
This would be like a net suite or like an SAP
or like a fulfill.io.
And these things are really good if you care about accuracy
and you're a bigger business.
But they're expensive, costs like a hundred grand a year.
Yeah.
But if you're a smaller business,
the best way to do this is you should use either QuickBooks
or zero XERO accounting, one of those two.
And then there is a service called A2X,
A2X accounting.com, A, the letter A, the number two,
the letter X accounting.
And they will connect to your Amazon and your Shopify
and your QuickBooks.
And we'll see what you sold every day.
And then you will tell A2X what your average landed cost is.
You know, you'll keep track of that in a separate spreadsheet.
And then you just plug the number, $1.20,
in the case of the example we were using,
into A2X.
And every time you sell one,
it will recognize the proper cogs in your accounting.
It's pretty slick.
They've been doing it for like 10 years.
It's a good piece of software.
OK, and as for the bank account,
is there a way to automatically divvy up the revenue
that comes in to all your separate accounts?
Well, not if you have 250 of them, like you and Jen.
You get all the same, right?
If we have a separate account just for cost of goods,
ideally, when that dollar comes in to Shopify,
let's say part of it goes into your tax account,
part of it goes to your cogs account,
part of it goes into your own account.
Is there an automated way of doing that?
Not that I'm aware of.
I know Mercury Bank, who we use,
actually has some cool rules about routing money
between different accounts at Mercury.
But we just have an SOP every week, our account does it.
Yeah, I was just thinking like stuff like that
I wouldn't be good at.
Even with an SOP, you've got to still follow it, right?
You do have to follow it.
But I've found I'd take it out of my hands, right?
So it's our account and it does, or my COO does it.
I see.
OK, and they're just moving the money around for you.
Yeah, so it feels automated to me.
Yeah, yeah.
OK.
And then in the event that you find out
that you don't have enough money to fund your next inventory,
we're like, walk me through the process
of finding out what the hell is wrong.
I know that's a loaded question,
but we're just some common places to look.
So, come place to look.
I mean, just sort of walk your income statement, right?
So, number one, has your revenue fallen off a cliff, right?
So that's number one, right?
If your revenue is falling off a cliff,
you know, it's hard to fix a lot of problems
if you're not selling anything.
So, number one, look at your revenue.
I mean, everyone checks the revenue.
So, chances are that's like the obvious, right?
Yeah, sure, that's right, yeah.
So, walk down the P&L.
Your cost of goods is your cost of goods
more than 30% of your revenue.
If so, you're going to have a hard time.
In my opinion, this is maybe a hot take,
but I believe that gross margins below 70%
or any commerce are not workable.
It's, there's just not enough room to pay for ads
and shipping and profit.
So, if you're gross margin,
if you're paying 50 cents for a thing you sell for a dollar,
you got a problem.
So, you need to renegotiate with your supplier,
launch some higher margin products.
You got to get that gross margin up to at least 70%.
Then, you know, keep walking the P&L.
If your gross margin is about 70%,
what else might be the problem?
And then this is always the other thing that's a problem.
Mark Zuckerberg is taking all your money, right?
Mark Zuckerberg is taking all your money
in the form of sponsor product ads,
depending on what channel you're selling on.
So, if your ads are more than, say, 40%, even 30%.
Like, if your ads are more than 33% of sales,
you're going to want to look at that.
Yeah.
You know, you might need to grow slower
or even shrink.
You might need to do less business, but more profitably
and slow down those ads.
And then the last thing as you walk the P&L
is you got to look here overhead.
Do you really need all those employees?
Like, it's a hard thing to say,
but people are the single biggest.
It's usually COGS ads people on every P&L.
It's like almost that simple.
So, you just got to look at COGS ads people
and those are the only three buckets that,
I mean, canceling software and stuff
doesn't move the needle.
You want to move the needle?
COGS ads people period.
So, you mentioned 70% margins.
Does that imply that just selling wholesale,
which is traditionally 50% margins?
It's just not going to work these days.
Wholesale is not traditionally 50% margins.
Wholesale for the retailer.
So, for the retailer, we'll make a 50 margins.
So, like, let's give you an example, right?
So, let's say a thing sells for a dollar at the store.
The retailer is going to want to buy it
from you for 50 cents, right?
You might make it for 15 to 20 cents, right?
That's not what I meant.
I meant you as the online retailer
with the 50% margin.
No, if you're honestly, and this,
I've been saying this for a couple of years,
and people always get mad at me,
but like retail arbitrage and retail
selling other people's products is dead.
I mean, like, this is a tough business.
It's, you create no incremental value,
you know, that these, if you're buying from brands
and selling, buying wholesale and selling on Amazon,
they're just waiting to cut you out.
Yeah, I know, you might think
that you're so good at selling on Amazon.
I'm sure you are, but tons of other people are too.
This is not a sustainable business.
Either your business partner, your brand
is coming for you to cut you out,
or other sellers are coming to compete
your margin away to zero.
If you're not selling your own branded products,
the clock is ticking.
I love it.
I'm glad you said that,
because I've been saying that for like the last,
almost decade now, but it's been-
Maybe people will listen to us eventually.
Well, here's what I think.
Like, the price always erodes to the bottom, right?
You got a whole bunch of sellers,
especially on Amazon, on wholesale, right?
Not only you get to fight for the buy box,
the only way to get the buy box is to keep dropping
your price for the most part, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, and then pay more for ads also
to one penny more for ads
than the next guy who's selling the exact same thing.
It's a zero sum, zero margin game.
All right.
Let's wrap this up, Bill.
So, okay, so just switching to a bank account,
assuming you have a sizeable sum of cash
will make you between four and five percent, right?
Yep.
If you like traveling and luxury,
I think I saw the picture of you
and Natalie on Emirates.
Was that Emirates?
I was going on Emirates a couple of years ago.
Okay.
Yeah.
With just like a private bar in the back.
And then if you don't want to ever pay
for hotels or air for ever again,
get what was the MX Gold?
Get an MX Gold or multiple of them
and then get a Capital One Spark.
And I mean, you can get way more complicated than that,
but that's like the 80-20.
What I didn't know, actually, what I learned from you
was that you could get multiple MX Golds.
I didn't know that.
That's the trick.
Yes, that's the secret.
I guess you just had to be diligent
about switching it out and keeping track, right?
Yeah, so it's very easy.
If you just only put add and shipping spend on the card.
So it's very easy and MX to just go on their website.
You just go year to date spending.
And so if you spent more than $150,000 on the card,
you know you're over the limit
and to roll to the next card.
But it's way harder if you're like putting all kinds
of non-bonus spend on the card
and you got to parse it out.
So I just put only bonus spend on the Golds
and everything else on the capital ones bar.
Okay.
And then the other nugget was your repeat customers
should fund your business.
And then you can break even on new customer acquisition.
Correct.
And then the other takeaway was do not do these fee-based loans.
If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Yep.
And do cash flow forecasting so you don't have to.
So you can see your cash need coming three to four months
in advance and borrow cheap money from a bank
rather than three to four days in advance
and borrow expensive money from one of these merchant cash
advance people.
Right.
And the way you do that is you calculate your landed cost
of goods and then just put that money into a separate account
and that will fund your next inventory purchase.
Yep.
That's an easy way to think about it.
I love it, Bill.
Where can people find?
I know you coach on this stuff.
Where can people find you?
Yeah, so this is complicated.
I was trying not to do too much on our map.
If you would like this, me to help you implement
this type of stuff in your business, I do do coaching.
It's buildda.com slash coaching or just buildda.com
and you can find the coaching link.
So I only work with like three or four businesses at once
so I can get really deep with just a couple of people
and kind of help people implement a financial operating
system at their econ business.
So I've been doing this for 10 years.
I've done finances for econ based on my whole career.
So I help people install financial operating systems
in their business.
Yes, so buildda.com slash what?
It's just building slash coaching.
Okay, yep.
Well, Bill, thanks a lot for coming back on the show, man.
I should have you back more often.
I think you've only been on three times.
I should have you back more often.
Whenever you want, you know where to find me?
I'm glad to come on and just run my mouth.
And tell me about your podcast actually,
because that's relatively new, right?
Oh, yeah.
Well, actually we've been doing it for two years, believe it or not.
Oh, has it been two years already?
Good luck.
Yeah, so the podcast is called Acquisitions Anonymous.
If you are interested in acquiring a business, you know,
be it another e-commerce business,
or even a business in another industry,
what we do is twice a week,
we break down businesses that are for sale.
And we say kind of what's good about this business,
what's risky about this business.
If I were buying this business,
what are the questions I would ask in diligence?
How would I value this business?
How would I finance the acquisition of this business?
So if you're looking at buying a business,
or you, you know, for the first business of yours,
or if you want to add on a business,
maybe do a business you already own,
build a mini-holding company on Acquisitions Anonymous,
we talk about how to do that.
Dude, love it, Bill.
Thanks a lot, man.
Thanks for coming on the show.
Before we go check out that podcast.
All right, thanks for having me, Steve.
Hope you enjoyed that episode.
Now, if you haven't done so already,
make sure to optimize your bank accounts right now
and start using the right credit cards
and avoid predatory lending practices
that charge ridiculous interest rates.
For more information about this episode,
go to mywifequitter.com slash episode 495.
And once again, I want to thank
Emerge Council for sponsoring this episode.
If you saw an Amazon FBA, or your own online store,
and you want to protect your intellectual property
from theft and fraud, head on over to EmergeCouncil.com
and get a free consult.
Just mention my name and you'll get $100 off.
That's EMERGECOUNSEL.com.
I also want to thank Chase Diamond.
Chase is my go-to guy when it comes to email marketing.
And if you want to learn how to run your own
successful email marketing campaigns,
check out his class over at mywifequitter.com slash Chase.
That's mywifequitter.com slash C-H-A-S-E.
And if you are interested in starting your own e-commerce
store, head on over to mywifequitter.com
and sign up for my free six-day mini-course.
Just type in your email and send it to the course right away.
Thanks for listening.