6 Red Flags Your FP&A Team Doesn’t Understand Cash Flow
Everyone in finance loves to say: “Cash is king.”
But here’s the problem — most FP&A teams still treat cash flow like a reporting afterthought, not the strategic driver it really is.
If you want to know whether your finance team truly understands cash, watch for these six red flags:
1. Cash Flow Reviewed Only Monthly
If your FP&A team looks at cash once a month, you’re already behind. Cash bleeds daily, not in month-end bundles.
2. Cash Treated as Backward-Looking
Cash flow isn’t history — it’s trajectory. If you’re only reporting actuals, you’re blind to the future.
3. Profitability Confused with Liquidity
Plenty of “profitable” companies run out of cash. Profit is theory. Liquidity is survival.
4. Forecasts Built on Average Payment Terms
Customers don’t pay on averages. They pay late. They pay early. They pay whenever they feel like it. Forecasting on averages is gambling with payroll.
5. Scenarios Ignore Cash Impact
A 10% revenue miss isn’t just a P&L issue. It changes working capital, burn rate, and runway.
6. Cash Not Modeled as Strategy
Cash isn’t only about avoiding bankruptcy. It’s about offense — funding bold moves your competitors can’t afford.
Why This Matters
Cash is the oxygen of business. When FP&A treats it as a side note, the blind spot threatens not just liquidity, but survival.
At The Schlott Company, we help CFOs and finance leaders build FP&A decision-systems where cash isn’t just monitored — it’s weaponized. Our cash flow forecasting frameworks turn liquidity into strategy, giving companies the ability to seize opportunities while others scramble for survival.
Because businesses don’t die from running out of profits. They die when they run out of cash.







