I decided for my last two years of owning Pegasus Books that I'd stick to a strict budget per week for product. It occurred to me the other day that there should be a way to keep track of this. The term "running average" came to mind and out of curiosity, I looked it up.
Turns out, there's something called a "rolling average," exactly what I was looking for.
Now I've tried to stick to budget for 40 years and never really succeeded. The way I did it was set the budget, write it down, and subtract until it was gone. But that only accounted for that week. Any time I spent less or more, slid under the radar.
And of course, I often spent more (and sometimes less) so that way of accounting didn't really work.
The rolling average is such a simple concept, I'm stunned that I didn't think of it years ago. (I realize how stupid this makes me sound...)
My point is: how much don't I know? What simple formulas am I missing?
For instance, would I have ever figured out the Break-Even point equation on my own? (Fixed overhead divided by profit margin. duh.) I was sort of doing this crudely when I was handed the equation by the guy up at COCC. I've used that equation ever since.
So I'm sure there are plenty of useful business tricks that I simply don't understand. It took me years to figure out how to measure cash-flow for instance. I mean, I sort of understood it instinctively, but never really put all the parts together. Basically, you can say this about everything I know about business. I understand a hazy intuitive version of the truth which is enough to help me survive, but not the precise mechanisms to make it easy. At least, not at first.
Such stuff seems utterly obvious in hindsight, but I have had to figure them out all by myself. (One of the first things I had to learn was that just because everyone else seemed to be doing something didn't mean it would work for me.)
Would taking business classes or reading business books have helped? Based on my experience with business books, I doubt it. Sure, every 100th idea would be applicable to what I do, but I wouldn't know which idea works until I've already experienced it.
I had that experience with the only business book I ever felt helped me: "Growing a Business," by Paul Hawken. But even then, I only understood the book's value because I'd already experienced many of the pitfalls he was pointing out.
The business guy up at COCC said I had a "primitive sophistication." I think this figuring stuff out on my own stuff is exactly that. But I don't know what I don't know.
My basic approach has been to to simplify everything as much as possible. When I look out at the world of bookstores, it seems like everyone else is taking the opposite approach. I'm comfortable with what I'm doing and it's working well--the last five years have been the best years by far.
I'm an old dog, and I'm not really looking for new tricks now. But I really wish someone out there could cut through all the BS that business books and classes put out and give newcomers the simple equations and procedures that would help them survive.
My guess is that not enough small business owners would buy such a book.
Because we're all "Mr. Know-it-Alls."