White Whale field notes

Financial knowledge without the fog.

Practical guides for better tax decisions, cleaner financial systems, stronger cash management, and more confident leadership.

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Start with the question on your desk.

01Business basics

Seven numbers every owner should know

A short list of financial signals that turn a stack of reports into a usable management view.

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  • Cash on hand and operating runway
  • Monthly revenue and gross margin
  • Operating profit and owner compensation
  • Accounts receivable aging
  • Upcoming tax obligations
  • Break-even point
  • One leading indicator tied to your growth plan

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

02Tax strategy

Why December is too late for a tax plan

Tax strategy works when you still have time to change timing, structure, documentation, or cash decisions.

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  • Schedule a midyear tax projection
  • Update income assumptions quarterly
  • Document business purpose as expenses occur
  • Plan major purchases for business need—not only a deduction
  • Set aside cash as income is earned

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

03Bookkeeping

A monthly close you can actually maintain

Consistency beats a heroic cleanup. Use a repeatable monthly rhythm to keep the books decision-ready.

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  • Reconcile every bank and credit account
  • Resolve uncategorized transactions
  • Review receivables and payables
  • Compare actual results to your plan
  • Record open questions and assign owners

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

04Cash flow

Profit is not cash—and that matters

A profitable organization can still run short of cash when timing, debt, inventory, taxes, or receivables pull in different directions.

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  • Build a rolling 13-week cash view
  • Separate committed and optional spending
  • Track receivable collection timing
  • Include taxes and debt payments
  • Update the forecast with actual results

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

05Nonprofit finance

Board reporting beyond the budget

Give board members a compact story: what changed, why it changed, and what decision or oversight is needed.

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  • Financial position and liquidity
  • Budget variance with short explanations
  • Restricted-fund visibility
  • Grant and program performance
  • A forward-looking risk and decision list

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

06CFO perspective

When bookkeeping is no longer enough

Accurate history is essential. A growing organization also needs forecasts, scenarios, KPIs, and structured decision support.

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  • You are making hiring or pricing decisions
  • Cash feels unpredictable despite growth
  • Reports arrive but do not guide action
  • Funders or lenders expect stronger planning
  • Leadership needs one shared financial view

Use this as a conversation starter—not a substitute for advice based on your specific facts.

Need specific guidance?

General knowledge is useful. Your facts are decisive.

If a field note raised a question about your own finances, bring it to a focused conversation.

Book a clarity call