When it comes to business financial terminology, it’s easy to confuse cash flow with profit. After all, both terms mean you’re making money, so what exactly is profit vs cash flow?
While they are related — and you certainly want both of them to be in positive territory (“in the black”) — they are actually very distinct measures of your small business’s success. And knowing the difference is important to understand your business’s true financial performance.
Cash flow and profit are both important to a business’s health. The difference between cash flow and profit includes unique ways of assessing your performance and can help you determine how you look at your total financial picture in a given time period.
Cash flow, for instance, is how much money (cash and cash equivalents) your business has available to it at any given time.
Measuring your cash flow balance involves subtracting your outflows of cash from your inflows. It gauges how much cash is available to your business at one particular time.
Profit, on the other hand, looks at the total financial gain or loss a business experiences over a more extended period — not simply one moment in time. It measures how much money is left after all expenses are deducted from business revenue.
For example, a small business may be incredibly profitable because, say, it developed a product that it’s selling for a hefty financial gain — such as double the product’s manufacturing cost. However, the business also might be swimming in debt and using every dollar of free cash it has to pay off that debt and cover its expenses. In other words, profits are high, but cash is low. So, is cash flow profit? In this case, no.