The balance sheet of an enterprise is a snapshot in time of the financial value of an enterprise. The comparison of balance sheets over time delivers a picture of the value creation, or destruction, of the enterprise over time.
The ‘Financial trio’ Balance sheet, Profit & Loss, and cash flow, together generate a picture of the performance of an enterprise, and are the foundations of performance management.
However, these are not enough for a thoughtful management.
To build a clear picture of the intrinsic value of a business, we need to look beyond the financial accounts, to the ability of the business to create sustainable value for customers. In other words, provide solutions to problems that cost less than the amount customers are prepared to pay for those solutions.
Therefore a closer look at the parameters of value may be useful.
Value cycles.
When the return on capital exceeds the cost of that capital in a given period, value has been created. Looking at the cycles in isolation can give a distorted picture, driven by seasonal sales mix, competitive activity, operational changes, product launches, and many other factors. These cycles always have in them a mixture of the short term challenges faced, and the longer term factors almost always driven by trends external to the business, such as technology adoption, regulatory changes, and the emergence of new competitive business models. Understanding the cycles of value creation and consumption can assist not only in smoothing them out, but doubling down on the good times, hunkering down in the bad, and ensuring that your strategic thinking is tuned to the evolution of the external environment.
Where is value created or consumed.
This can be pretty granular to geographies, product lines, market segments, brands, and so on. Understanding the variations, and applying pressure to them can dramatically increase the average value creation by isolating areas where it is routinely being destroyed, and fixing them. In many instances, the value destruction in the short term is deliberate in an effort to build value for the future. However, often the destruction is unseen in the mix of activities in every business. Innovation is in the short term generally a value destroying activity, but essential to the long term value creation, and this is a delicate balance that requires a strategic framework to be consistently applied to the allocation of resources.
Why is value created.
Linking the creation or destruction of value to specific assets and capabilities, again delivers the opportunity to optimise the investments you make. What makes you sufficiently different that you can create value? Is it short term or is it longer term, and how do you maintain the momentum, as superior value creation always attracts competitive capital in time.
How is value created.
Very simple to say, but hard to do. Value creation always comes down to solving a problem, or creating an advantage, for an individual, group, or enterprise.
Market position and long term decision-making obviously play a key role in value creation, and none of this happens by accident or over a short term. It is tangled up in your relative market position, the evolution of the market you are in over the lifespan of the market, and your competitive position in that market.
This sort of analysis enables a complete picture to be put together. If you have enough information to make judgement about your major competitors, those that might emerge from the pack, and those from the sidelines which are usually missed, this will inform the decisions you make that will impact on future value creation.
The root of all this is strategy.