4 Key Areas of Your Business You Should Be Tracking Weekly
4 Key Areas of Your Business You Should Be Tracking Weekly
Four
Key Areas of Your Business You Should Be Tracking Weekly
We all recognise the
importance of knowing how much money is being made and spent and what’s being
sold, but often this analysis comes at the end of the month, resulting in weeks
of lost opportunity to make changes and get back on track.
The fast-paced nature of
business today, combined with the huge leaps in data and tech, mean that we’re
able to access meaningful data much more frequently, which means you can keep
on top of opportunities and red flags before they pass you by.
Don’t wait until the end
of the month to start getting into data and figuring out why some things are
working and some things aren’t. Weekly reporting makes it easier to connect
with the key people in your business, and to understand the flow of the
business, which enables you to take proactive steps to improve or make changes,
the very next day, not the next month.
Recently Kounta hosted a Masterclass on
how you can use our Insights tool to make reporting quick and easy, and in it
we highlighted the four key areas that should be reported on weekly. Being
across your data all the time enables you to connect with your team daily, so
you can identify wins and opportunities, reward great behaviours and jump on
problems sooner.
Weekly
reporting essentials
1. More
than just the top line.
When it comes to
reporting, tracking how much money’s coming in the door is pretty obvious. But
as much as knowing how much you’re making is important (and fun!), there’s a
lot of value to be found by digging a little deeper. It’s not enough to simply
know the numbers, you have to understand what they mean to your business and
how they represent levers you can pull to affect change.
Breaking down your sales
by hours of the day, or your transactions by days of the week, and looking at
this data weekly (if not daily) is going to give you tangible things to discuss
with your team and a much better picture of trends and forecasts.
2. What
your customers are buying and why.
Having the ability to
regularly track what your customers are buying from you (and what they aren’t),
is a really important step. Using our Insights reporting tool, you’re able to
track top-selling POS categories to see what’s not performing as well as it
could be, and so you can think about how to support your team to sell more of
whatever it is they’re struggling to move.
You can also break your
reports down into different product groups, most improved products and most
popular. This dive into the detail lets you really see the true story of your
business on a day-to-day basis – it’s important to identify where you’re
getting value and what lessons you can apply to other areas of the business.
We
chatted to Green Beacon venue manager,
Charles McKay, who said that by far the report that helps him most is tracking
individual product revenue each week.
“When we release a new
product, we watch the demand closely. Naturally, new items pull sales of other
products down, but eventually, the effect wears off and things even out. If one
product sells too fast or slows sales of another, we’ll need to make a change.
Without Insights, staying on top of all these fluctuations is very difficult”.
3.
People power.
There’s no denying that
people are a key indicator of your business’s success. Without a killer crew
and loyal customers, you’re not going to get far. For this reason, your reports
need to focus on breaking down how your staff are performing and who your best
customers are.
Internally, you should be
looking at the contribution your staff make to revenue and their average
transaction value. By looking at what these top performers are doing well, what
behaviours they exhibit, and how they deal with customers, you can extrapolate
learnings that can be applied to the rest of the team, as well as reward that
team member for their excellent results.
From a customer
perspective, you should be using regular reporting to identify who your
high-value customers are, so that you can celebrate them and really nurture
that relationship so they keep coming back.
We chatted to dynamic
duo, Fleur
Caulton and Josh Emett, from NZ’s Rata and Madam
Woo, about how they use their reports to keep their customers happy.
“It just means constantly
understanding what your customers want – what they’re using, as far as our
product, what they’re buying, and then understanding what their buying patterns
are. Then, giving them the things that they like rather than the things that
they don’t.”
4.
Cashing in.
At least once a week you
should be reporting on how money is coming into your business and really
digging into this data. Are less and less people paying with cash? Are integrated payments on the rise? Are more people using ordering apps such as HeyYou?
The question you’re really
asking is, how do people want to pay? If you get more customers ordering the
way they want and paying the way they want, you’ll inevitably keep them coming
back. Being on top of these payment trends means you can take a critical view
of how you’re payment processes are set up and think about whether they’re
serving you the best they can.
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