Is your business profitable on paper but struggling to pay the bills? You’re not alone, and the sooner you spot the warning signs, the sooner you can fix them.
Cash flow is the lifeblood of every business. You can have a full order book, loyal customers, and growing revenue and still find yourself unable to make payroll or pay suppliers on time. In South Africa, where SMEs face rising costs and unpredictable market conditions, cash flow problems are one of the leading reasons businesses fail.
The tricky part? Cash flow issues don’t always announce themselves with flashing lights. They creep in quietly, and by the time most business owners notice, they’re already in crisis mode.
Here are five warning signs that your business may have a cash flow problem and what you can do about each one.
If you spend more time following up on invoices than doing actual work, that’s a red flag. Late-paying customers are one of the most common causes of cash flow problems for small businesses in South Africa. You’ve delivered the product or service, but the money hasn’t landed – and meanwhile, your own expenses keep piling up.
What to look for:
What to do about it:
Tighten your payment terms and enforce them consistently. Consider requiring deposits upfront, offering early payment incentives, or using invoice factoring to access cash tied up in outstanding invoices. If a particular client is a repeat offender, it may be time for a difficult conversation – or to reconsider the relationship. Need to bridge a cash flow gap while you wait for payments to land? Short-term funding can help.
This is the classic cash flow juggling act: using money earmarked for one expense to cover another. Maybe you delay a supplier payment to cover payroll. Or you dip into your VAT savings to cover an emergency repair. It feels like a temporary fix, but it’s a cycle that gets harder to escape each month.
What to look for:
What to do about it:
If you’re constantly shuffling funds, the issue isn’t timing – it’s a structural gap between what’s coming in and what’s going out. Map out your fixed monthly obligations and compare them to your actual cash inflows. You may need to renegotiate payment terms with suppliers, cut non-essential expenses, or secure a short-term funding solution to bridge the gap and break the cycle. Understanding how working capital keeps your business running smoothly is a good place to start.
Here’s an irony that trips up many business owners: your business is doing well, but you can’t afford to grow. A big order comes in, but you don’t have the cash to buy stock. A potential contract lands on your desk, but you can’t hire the staff to deliver on it. Growth costs money upfront, and if your cash is locked up in debtors, stock, or overheads, opportunity knocks and you can’t answer the door.
What to look for:
What to do about it:
This is where strategic business funding can drive growth when you need it the most. Rather than watching opportunities pass you by, a well-structured business loan can help you invest in stock, equipment, or capacity – and pay it back from the revenue that investment generates. Learn more about how to scale a business that’s working with the right funding partner.
Revenue is up, but somehow there’s less money at the end of the month. Sound familiar? Shrinking margins are often a slow-burn cash flow killer. Rising costs – fuel, electricity, raw materials, wages – eat into your profits without a single dramatic event to point to. And if you haven’t reviewed your pricing in a while, you may be absorbing costs that should be passed on to customers.
What to look for:
What to do about it:
Conduct a margin analysis on your products or services. Identify where costs have increased and whether your pricing still makes sense. Sometimes the fix is as simple as a price adjustment. Other times, you may need to renegotiate with suppliers, streamline operations, or phase out low-margin offerings that drain resources without contributing meaningfully to the bottom line. For practical tips, read our guide on how to make more profit in your business.
Concentration risk is a silent cash flow threat. When one or two clients make up the majority of your income, you’re one late payment, one lost contract, or one client going under away from a serious cash flow crisis. It’s a vulnerable position, and it limits your negotiating power too – you can’t push back on unfair payment terms if you can’t afford to lose the client.
What to look for:
What to do about it:
Diversification takes time, but it starts with intention. Allocate time and budget to acquiring new clients, even when your current book is full. Explore adjacent markets or service offerings that can open new revenue streams. Having a solid plan for business growth will help you reduce dependency on any single client. And in the meantime, make sure you have a cash reserve or access to funding that can carry you through if a major client relationship changes unexpectedly.
Cash flow problems rarely fix themselves. The longer you ignore the warning signs, the fewer options you have. But the good news is that most cash flow issues are solvable, especially when you catch them early and take decisive action.
If your business is exhibiting any of these warning signs, it may be time to take a closer look at your finances and explore your options. Sometimes, all it takes is the right funding at the right time to turn things around and get your business back on track.
Not sure where to start?
Learn how to prepare your business for funding so you’re ready when the time comes.
Genfin offers flexible business funding from R100K to R3 million, with offers in 24 hours and no hidden fees. Apply now or get in touch with a dedicated business funding analyst who can help you find the right loan solution for your business.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor for guidance specific to your business.