What Profit Measures—and What It Misses
Profit recognizes revenue when earned and expenses when incurred, matching effort to outcome. That’s great for judging performance, but it creates illusions: you may ‘earn’ revenue before receiving cash, or ‘spend’ via depreciation without paying today. Useful for strategy, dangerous for liquidity.
What Profit Measures—and What It Misses
Your income statement might shine, yet payroll looms and the bank account says otherwise. Paper profit includes receivables that may arrive late, or never. Cash flow translates accounting victories into survival reality. If the two disagree, believe the bank balance—and act accordingly.