The Cash Conversion Cycle: From 180 Days to Negative
Traditional consulting waits 90-180 days to get paid. Platform businesses collect annual fees in January and spread costs over 12 months. The same dynamic as insurance, SaaS, and gym memberships.
Here's a number most consultants have never calculated: how many days pass between spending a dollar and getting it back?
For a typical consulting practice, the answer is somewhere between 90 and 180 days. You spend weeks on business development. You deliver the engagement. You invoice the client. The client pays in 30-60 days — if you're lucky. You've been funding the work from your own pocket for three to six months before a single dollar returns.
Verne Harnish, in Scaling Up, calls this the Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC), and he identifies it as one of the four most critical decisions in any business. Not revenue. Not profit margin. Cash — the timing of when money moves in and out. Because a profitable business with a bad CCC can still go bankrupt.
The insight that transforms service businesses: your CCC doesn't have to be positive. It can be zero. It can even be negative — meaning you collect cash before you incur the costs of delivery. Insurance companies do this. SaaS companies do this. Gym memberships work this way. And any service business that restructures around annual billing and prepaid subscriptions can do it too.
The shift from a 180-day CCC to a negative CCC doesn't require new clients, new services, or new markets. It requires restructuring when you get paid.
The Traditional Consulting CCC
Why You're Funding Your Clients' Projects
Let's trace the cash flow of a typical consulting engagement:
Week 1-4: Business development. Networking, proposals, discovery calls. You're spending time — which has a real cost — with no revenue in sight.
Week 5-12: Engagement delivery. You're working full-time on the client's project. Materials, travel, preparation — all costs you're absorbing before you see a cent.
Week 13: Invoice sent. The work is done. You've earned the money. But the client's accounts payable department has a process, and that process takes time.
Week 17-25: Payment arrives. Net-30 terms that stretch to Net-60 or Net-90 in practice. Some clients are faster. Many are not.
Total CCC: 90-180 days. You funded the entire engagement from personal reserves. And the moment the check clears, the cycle starts over.
Now multiply that by every engagement in your pipeline. If you have three concurrent projects, each with a 120-day CCC, you're carrying the cash burden of three projects simultaneously. Your bank account isn't reflecting your profitability — it's reflecting your clients' payment habits.
"A consulting practice with a 120-day CCC and 30% margins needs to fund four months of costs from reserves — just to stay solvent while profitable work is delivered and awaiting payment."
This is why so many consultants feel cash-poor despite having strong revenue numbers. The revenue is real. The profit is real. But the cash is always somewhere in the pipeline, waiting to arrive.
The Platform CCC: Cash Before Costs
How Annual Billing Inverts the Equation
A platform business with annual certification fees works on completely different economics:
January 1: Practitioners pay their annual certification fee. Cash arrives. The full year's revenue is in the bank before you've delivered a single day of value.
January through December: You deliver value over 12 months — methodology access, community calls, training updates, platform maintenance, annual summit. Costs are spread evenly across the year.
Total CCC: Negative. Cash arrived before costs were incurred. You have use of the full annual fee for the entire delivery period. That cash funds operations, development, and growth — without borrowing a cent.
This is the same dynamic that makes three very different industries extraordinarily profitable:
- Insurance companies collect premiums upfront and pay claims later. The time difference creates "float" — Warren Buffett's favorite business model.
- SaaS companies collect annual subscriptions and deliver software access over time. The negative CCC funds product development without venture capital.
- Gym memberships collect monthly or annual fees whether the member shows up or not. The cash arrives regardless of delivery cost.
Your certification business can operate on the same model. Practitioners pay annually for access to your methodology, tools, community, and brand. You deliver value continuously, but the cash is in hand from day one.
Harnish identifies shortening the CCC as one of the highest-leverage financial moves a founder can make. Even reducing it by a few days can fund growth without external investment. Going negative transforms the financial dynamics of the entire business.
Seven Structural Changes to Shorten Your CCC
From Billing After Delivery to Billing Before It
You don't have to become a pure subscription business overnight. There are practical steps that move your CCC toward zero — and eventually negative — without restructuring your entire model at once.
1. Require deposits on all engagements. A 50% deposit before work begins immediately halves your CCC. The client has skin in the game. You have cash to fund the delivery. Most professional services clients accept deposits without pushback if you frame it as standard practice, not a special request.
2. Implement milestone billing. Instead of invoicing at the end, bill at defined milestones — diagnostic delivery, roadmap presentation, implementation checkpoint. Cash flows in as value is delivered, not after the entire engagement wraps.
3. Convert retainers from arrears to advance billing. Many advisory retainers are billed monthly in arrears — work first, bill later. Switch to advance billing: the retainer fee for March is due February 28. Same service, dramatically different cash flow.
4. Offer annual prepayment incentives. A modest discount (5-10%) for annual prepayment versus monthly billing. The discount is small. The cash flow benefit is enormous. You receive 12 months of revenue on day one instead of chasing monthly payments for a year.
5. Bill certification fees annually. This is the big structural shift. When your practitioners pay an annual fee for methodology access, the CCC for that entire revenue stream goes negative immediately.
6. Collect assessment fees at booking, not delivery. The diagnostic assessment fee is charged when the session is booked, not when the report is delivered. This shifts the cash receipt forward by 2-4 weeks per engagement.
7. Automate renewals. Auto-renewal with credit card on file eliminates the gap between renewal date and payment date. The cash arrives on time, every time, without chasing invoices.
Implementing even three of these changes can shift your CCC from 90+ days to near zero. Implementing all seven puts you in negative CCC territory — where cash funds growth instead of growth consuming cash.
The Five Financial Metrics to Track Weekly
Cash Management as a Leadership Discipline
Harnish insists that cash must be on the CEO's desk, not delegated to accounting. These five numbers, reviewed weekly, tell you the financial health of your business in under five minutes:
- Cash in bank. Not revenue. Not receivables. Cash. How many months can you operate at current burn rate? The minimum: 3-6 months of fixed costs. Below that, you're one bad quarter from crisis.
- Revenue per active partner. The single economic denominator that drives the engine. If this number is growing, the ecosystem is healthy. If it's declining, something is broken.
- Certification renewal rate. Retention is your product-market fit indicator. 80%+ annually means the model works. Below that, you're losing partners faster than you can replace them.
- Assessments completed this week. The leading indicator of pipeline health. If assessment volume is growing, revenue will follow. If it's declining, trouble is coming.
- Accounts receivable over 60 days. Cash collection discipline. If more than 5% of revenue is stuck in AR beyond 60 days, your billing structure needs attention.
Simon's research reinforces the focus on pricing: a 1% price increase yields approximately 10% profit improvement. A 1% volume increase yields only about 3%. A 1% cost reduction yields about 7%. The highest-leverage financial move isn't chasing more clients — it's optimizing what you charge and when you collect.
Cash is oxygen. Revenue is nutrition. They're not the same thing. A business can starve on good nutrition if it can't breathe. Restructure your billing to breathe first. The nutrition follows.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.