The Frugal Founder’s Dilemma
Today, I chatted with an entrepreneur who owns a retail company about what can be done to grow sales. One of the projects mentioned was improving the functionality of its website. The entrepreneur views money spent that way as a cost and wants to spend as little as possible. This perspective got me thinking.
Entrepreneurs should keep a close eye on costs. The old saying, “If you watch the pennies, the dollars will take care of themselves,” is true. The best entrepreneurs keep costs under control.
However, expenses and investments are different. An expense is a cost to operate a business that generally covers only a year. Think insurance, taxes, rent, salary, etc. An investment creates an asset that produces revenue (and hopefully profits) for years. An investment should generate a return.
The entrepreneur I was talking with today was thinking of money spent on an ecommerce website as an expense, but I think it’s an investment. A website is an asset that, if properly built, can drive revenue and create a return on the money invested for years.
Entrepreneurs have a dual role. They should manage the costs of the company to ensure short-term profitability. But they’re also capital allocators who must invest profits in ways that will help the company grow long term. Treating investments as expenses will improve short-term profitability at the expense of long-term viability.