Essential Financial Tools for Enhanced Business Decision-Making
19 Feb 2016
Taken together, the balance sheet and profit and loss statement represent a complete financial picture of a company and provide valuable “decision-relevant” information. Ratio analysis, in particular, is a useful management tool that can help improve your understanding of how well your business is performing financially and can be used to spot trends over time.
When working with their accountant, business owners are able to use ratio analysis to pinpoint strengths and weaknesses in the company. This in turn leads to more confident decision making when it comes comparing and weighing up different improvement strategies.
There is a common misconception that all financial accounting tools for business decision-making are complicated. However, a ratio is nothing more than one number in relation to another. They have the very practical property of reducing a relationship to a single number no matter the size of the two numbers involved. For example, the ratio of 2:1 can be derived from the number 20 divided by 10, or 200 divided by 100, or 200,000 divided by 100,000. The ratio does not take into consideration size; it is the relationship that is important.
Great examples of ratios can be seen on the sports field. Take cricket for example, where the strike rate of a batsman means the number of runs he scores per 100 balls faced. This allows us to compare the effectiveness of a relatively new batsman with one that has been around for many years.
The big question that arises is “which relationships to measure?” There are many possibilities and some will be more relevant in certain situations and businesses than others.
For example, in the case of a business seeking further investors, the long term earning power of the company becomes important. Meanwhile a bank will be more interested in liquidity because they want to ensure payback of their short-term debt.
The four ratio categories
There are four ratio categories:
- Balance sheet ratios
- Profitability ratios
- Overall efficiency ratios
- Specific efficiency ratios
How to use ratios to aid business decision making
Generally speaking, there are there are two key ways your business should be using ratios to evaluate the health of your business:
- Compare your business’ current performance to your performance in prior years (trends)
- Compare your business’ current performance to others in your industry (benchmark)
Remember you operate and manage your company with limited resources, management, capital and time. You can’t fix current problems or spot developing ones unless you know where to look. This process we’re describing is merely an efficient, effective method to keep your finger on the pulse of your company. The important thing to remember when working with ratios is to only calculate enough information to get the job done, but not so much as to make analysis overly confusing. You need avoid paralysis from analysis.
Passionate About Business
World-class advisory services. Get in touch with us today.
Contact UsOur Latest Insights

The Evolving Role of Chief Financial Officers
The role of CFOs is rapidly evolving beyond finance. Today’s CFOs are strategic leaders, driving growth, innovation, and resilience—especially vital for New Zealand businesses navigating complexity and planning for sustainable success.

How Automation is Transforming the Accounting Industry
Automation is rapidly reshaping the accounting industry, streamlining routine tasks and enabling real-time insights. This article explores how technology is transforming finance functions and what it means for New Zealand businesses and accountants.

Financial Health Check for your Business
A financial health check is like a Warrant of Fitness for your business. Learn how to assess key financial indicators, manage risks, and unlock strategic opportunities to support growth and long-term success.

Business Valuations: Why the Right Advice Matters
Getting the right professional advice can make or break a business valuation. In this final article of our series, we explore the experts to engage, when to involve them, and how they add value.