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Operations 103 Financial Health, Class 6

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Page 1: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Operations 103Financial Health, Class

6

Page 2: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Today’s Topic

This class will examine both internal and external reporting mechanisms.  We will examine the efficient use of financial resources and a comparative analysis to other churches.  Along the way we will examine options for financial indicators and methods for determining the financial health of your church.  This will help you assess the financial strength and health of your church.  You will able to compare benchmarks of other churches to your church.  This type of data will improve your financial stewardship, allow for strategic decisions and identify areas for improvement.

Page 3: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Stan Reiff

Stan is a Principal with CapinCrouse, serving as the National Director of Outsourced Financial Services and as a member of the firm’s national consulting services team.  He has over 20 years in ministry operations, public accounting, government accounting, and missionary work.  He has been the COO for a large financial ministry. This leadership experience provided him the opportunity to oversee the day-to-day operations and sustainability of the ministry, which encompassed human resources, technology, sales and marketing, global presence, volunteer involvement, and funding.

Page 4: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Performance MeasurementsStan Reiff, CPA, CGMAPartnerNational Director, Denominational & Church Services

Page 5: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Overview

• Common issues affecting churches• Things to be aware of• Ratios

Cash flow and reserves Asset ratios Debt ratios Income ratios Expense ratios

Page 6: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6
Page 7: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Common Issues Affecting the Church

• Contributions have been down• Attendance may be up• Attendees needs have increased• Debt incurred in “good times” has fixed

consequences• Credit is not readily available

Page 8: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Measuring Financial Health

• How do the financial resources of the church compare with other churches?

• What are the most appropriate key performance indicators for the church?

• Does the church have adequate financial resources to accomplish its mission?

• Is the church accomplishing its strategic goals

Page 9: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Dashboard Data

Category Measures

Finance Cash, debt, contributions

Accounting Timeliness, checks, JEs

Information Technology Downtime, backups, space

Human Resources FTEs, turnover, satisfaction

Ministry Decisions, baptisms, volunteers, number of new members

Facilities Maintenance, capacity

Demographics Attendance, donors, visitors

Website Hits, visit duration, viewers, giving

Page 10: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

“Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts

cannot necessarily be counted.”

— Albert Einstein

Page 11: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Every Church Should be Aware of

Monthly giving trends: Impacts budgeting Impacts when expenses are planned Determine need for EFT giving (or other creative options) Shows reliance on reserves or a line of credit

Consider tracking contributions per attendee or per giving unit

Page 12: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Every Church Should be Aware of

Debt covenant requirements Financial statement deadlines No other debt (leases, etc) Debt coverage ratios Other ratios

Page 13: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Every Church Should be Aware of

Cash availability Cash less payables and temporarily restricted Not how much cash, but whose cash

Cash reserve ratio Cash/(expenses/12) Reserves are critical especially where services could

be disrupted (blizzards)

Page 14: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Ratios – Cash flow and reserve

• Expendable reserves ratio – how many days of operation are currently available

• Coverage ratio – number of days of operation available from cash flow and LOC

• Liquidity ratio – how current cash investments covers cover liabilities

• Net cash availability – cash available for items after current liabilities and temporarily restricted net assets

Page 15: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

2008 2009 Average0

50100150200250

241

14.734.1

Expendable Reserves Ra-tio

# of Days

Benchmark: 30-60 Days

2008 2009 Average0

50100150200250300

54

291

122

Coverage Ratio

# of Days

Benchmark: 120-180 Days

2008 2009 Average02468

1010

2.1

4.7

Liquidity Ratio

Liquidity

$(400,000) $(200,000)

$- $200,000 $400,000 $600,000 $800,000

$1,000,000 5.325 Mil

-240,228

-133,047

Net Cash Availability

Cash Available

Benchmark: 5.0 Benchmark: >0

Page 16: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Ratios – Asset Ratios

• Assets per attendee

• Average age of facilities

• Assets per FTE

Page 17: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

2008 2009 Average $-

$2,000 $4,000 $6,000 $8,000

$10,000 $12,000 $14,000 $12,722 $12,796

$8,265

Assets Per Attendee

Assets

2008 2009 Average02468

1012 10.7

11.6

6.9

Average Age of Facilities

Age

2008 2009 Average $-

$100,000 $200,000 $300,000 $400,000 $500,000 $600,000 $523,411

$432,950 $401,650

Assets per FTE

Assets

Page 18: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Ratios – Debt Ratios

• Debt to unrestricted support – debt is how many times the annual unrestricted support?

• Debt to fixed assets – how leveraged are the assets (from a cost perspective)?

• Mandatory debt service to unrestricted contributions – is it manageable?

• Debt average per attendee – good comparison between organizations

Page 19: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

2008 2009 Average0

0.5

1

1.5

2

1

0.1

1.6

Debt to Unrestricted Support

Debt Ratio

Benchmark: <or = 3.0

2008 2009 Average0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.31

0.04

0.45

Debt to Fixed Assets

Debt Ratio

Benchmark: < .35

2008 2009 Average0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%10.90%

3.80%

14.00%

Mandatory Debt Service to Unrestricted Contributions

Percentage

2008 2009 Average $-

$1,000

$2,000

$3,000

$4,000 3,980

464

2,847

Debt Average per Attendee

Debt

Benchmark: < 30%Benchmark: $11,167

Page 20: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Ratios – Income Ratios

• Net income ratio – amount of net income as compared to total unrestricted revenue

• Contributions per attendee – this information is a good trend to watch (or use giving units)

• Unrestricted giving per FTE – when compared to other churches this provides you an idea of appropriate staffing levels based on the budget

Page 21: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

2008

2009

Averag

e

-2.0%-1.0%0.0%1.0%2.0%3.0%4.0%

3.7% 3.8%

-1.7%

Net Income Ratio

Percentage

2008 2009 Average$0

$1,000 $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 $5,000 $4,087 $3,860

$2,608

Contributions Per Attendee

Amount

2008 2009 Average $-

$20,000 $40,000 $60,000 $80,000

$100,000 $120,000

$117,578 $116,780

$97,797

Unrestricted Giving per FTE

Amount

Benchmark: Positive Benchmark:$1,200 Good$1,500 Above Average>=$2,000 Strong

Page 22: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Ratios – Expense Ratios

• Salaries and benefits as a percentage of income and/or expense – good comparison with other churches to determine appropriateness of compensation

• Missions as a percentage of total expense• Facilities as a percentage of total expense• Expenses per average attendee – what is the total

cost per person in your church?

Page 23: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

2008 2009 Average36.00%38.00%40.00%42.00%44.00%46.00%48.00%

40.50%

43.50%

46.30%

Salaries & Benefits

Percentage

2008 2009 Average0.00%2.00%4.00%6.00%8.00%

10.00%12.00%

1.40% 1.10%

11.30%

Missions

Percentage

2008 2009 Average0.00%2.00%4.00%6.00%8.00%

10.00%12.00%14.00%

10.80%12.00%

13.10%

Facilities

Percentage

2008 2009 Average $-

$2,000

$4,000

$6,000

$8,000 5,980 5,464

2,847

Expenses per Average At-tendee

Amount

Benchmark: 40-50% Benchmark: 10-25%

Benchmark: Maximum 15%

Page 24: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6
Page 25: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Church Financial Health Index™

• Days of expendable reserves

• Percent of operating cash on hand

• Net cash provided (used) by operations

• Coverage ratio

• Liquidity ratio

• Net cash availability

Page 26: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Church Financial Health Index

• Property and equipment per attendee

• Average age of facility

• Assets (including PPE) per FTE

• Assets (excluding PPE) per FTE

Page 27: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Church Financial Health Index

• Debt to unrestricted support

• Debt to total support

• Debt to property and equipment

• Current ratio

• Debt per average of attendees and giving units

• Debt coverage

Page 28: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Church Financial Health Index™

• Net income ratio

• Total contributions per average attendees and giving units

• Percent of median household income given

• Unrestricted giving per FTE

• Revenues per accounting FTE

Page 29: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Church Financial Health Index™

• Salaries and benefits as a percent of contributions

• Average salaries and benefits per FTE

• Personnel and mandatory debt service payments as a percent of total expenses

• Interest expense as a percent of contributions

• Facility expense as a percent of contributions

Page 30: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Performance Dashboards

“Like a magnifying glass, a performance dashboard can focus people and teams on the

key things they need to do to succeed. It provides executives, managers, and workers timely and relevant information so they can

measure, monitor, and manager their progress toward achieving key strategic objectives.”

— Wayne Eckerson, Performance Dashboards

Page 31: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Questions

Page 32: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Stan Reiff, [email protected]

m

Thank You!

Page 33: Operations 103 Financial Health,  Class  6

Questions from the Reading by Chris Calvert

Chapter 11: Legal Matters1) What legal issues discussed in Chapter 11 do you find the most

confusing or hard to keep track of? What have you found to be the best source of help in areas of confusion?

2) Do you use a payroll company? What are some of the advantages or disadvantages of using a payroll company?

Chapter 12: Debt3) In your opinion, should a church aggressively work to pay off their

debt or rather just chip away at it while financing other ministry areas instead? Why do you think so?

4) How have you seen attitudes toward "good debt" (debt on appreciating assets) change over the years? What would you say is the prevailing attitude toward it in your church these days?