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Tip #1 — The Golden Rules

Don't Spend What You Haven't Earned

You opened a small cafe. You are doing well — people love your coffee, your sandwich is the best on the block, regulars know your name. At the end of the month, you look at your numbers: $8,000 came in. Eight thousand dollars.

You feel proud. You should. You earned every cent of that with early mornings, long hours, and a smile even on the bad days.

But here is the thing nobody told you on day one — and once you understand this, you will be ahead of most business owners out there:

That $8,000 is not your money. Not yet. And knowing WHERE it goes is your secret weapon.

Level 1 — The Basics Everyone should know this from day one

Let us follow the money together.

Out of your $8,000: you spent around $3,200 on ingredients — coffee beans, bread, meat, milk, everything that goes into what you sell. That is normal. In the food business, ingredients usually eat up about 30-40% of your revenue.

So you have $4,800 left. That is your gross profit. Sounds good, right? It is! But we are not done.

Rent: $1,200. Electricity, water, gas: $400. Your one employee: $1,500. That is $3,100 in fixed costs — things you pay whether you sell one coffee or one thousand.

$4,800 minus $3,100 = $1,700 left.

That is YOUR money, right? Almost. Keep reading.

But first — congratulations. If you understood everything up to here, you already know more about your business than a LOT of people who have been running one for years. Seriously. Most people never sit down and do this math. You just did.

Level 2 — The Hidden Stuff This is where most business owners get caught off guard

Out of your $1,700 profit, you still owe: taxes (depending on where you live, somewhere between 10-25% of your profit — let us say $300), maintenance ($200 — your coffee machine WILL break eventually), and the little things you forget: cleaning supplies, napkins, to-go cups, receipt paper ($150 a month).

$1,700 - $300 - $200 - $150 = $1,050

One thousand and fifty dollars. That is your real profit from an $8,000 month.

Now — IS THAT BAD? No! Here is why: $1,050 clean profit means your business is HEALTHY. That is a 13% net profit margin. For a small cafe, that is solid. Many restaurants operate on less. You are doing FINE.

The danger is not that the number is small. The danger is spending like it is $8,000 when it is really $1,050. THAT is what kills businesses.

The most dangerous sentence in small business: "We had a good day today." No. You had a good REVENUE day. You don't know if it was a good PROFIT day until you subtract everything.

The good news? Now that you SEE these numbers, you are in control. You can look for ways to reduce ingredient costs by 5% — that is an extra $160 in your pocket. Negotiate your rent next year. Find a cheaper supplier for cups. Small improvements, big results over time.

Knowledge is not scary. Knowledge is POWER. The business owner who knows they make $1,050 is in a much better position than the one who THINKS they make $8,000.

Level 3 — Call Your Accountant No shame — this is where professionals earn their money

Depreciation, tax deductions, inventory accounting, cash vs. accrual — these are real tools that can SAVE you money. A good accountant doesn't cost you — they pay for themselves by finding money you didn't know you had.

Our advice: find an accountant who explains things in words you understand. If they can't explain it simply, find a different one. And if you can't afford one yet? That is what our tools are for — we are building simple calculators to help you see YOUR numbers clearly, until you are ready for the real thing.

Every successful business owner learned this lesson. Some learned it from a mentor. Some learned it from a book. Some learned it the hard way. You just learned it from a cafe that makes really good coffee. And the best part? You learned it before it cost you anything.