Title: Planning for Winery Operations
1Planning for Winery Operations
- Where Has All the Money Gone
- Long time Passing
2Planning for Winery Operations
- Where Has Will All the Money Gone Go
- Long time Passing
- Next Five Years
35 Year Annual PlanAssumptions
- Limit the number of assumptions
- Operating (12)
- Production (32 including 20 Expense Lines)
- Annual property additions useful lives
- Financing (8)
- Opening balances
- Assumptions can be saved and recalled using the
Excel scenario manager
45 Year Annual PlanFeatures
- Includes - Income, Cash Flows Statements, Balance
Sheets, Production Costs, and Financial Ratios - Provides for financial variance analysis
- Two sales channels (Retail and Distribution)
- Three wine products (12, 24 and 36 month
products) - Cash flow v. growth in sales production
- Facilitates an understanding of the basic
structure and methods for preparing a financial
forecast for a winery operation.
5Built-In Assumptions
- Model is sales based, NOT production based.
Production requirement in excess of vineyard
capacity is made up with purchased grapes. - New barrels are used for one year for a 12 month
white wine product (Chardonnay?), then
transferred to the Used Barrel program. - 24 and 36 month products are red wines and used
barrel aged. - Barrel life of 5 years with split depreciation
schedule. - Case cost of wine sold is prior year production
cost not exactly correct, but close enough - Current year bottling equals next years case
sales also not exactly correct, but
6Sample Aging and Barrel Program Table
7Forecast Assumption Groupings
- Base Operating (Sales, Growth and Operating
Expenses) - Production (Cost of Goods)
- Capital Budget (Depreciation and Property
Equipment Purchases) - Financing (Interest Expense, Credit Lines and
Long Term Debt) - Opening Balance Sheet
8Base Operating AssumptionsEnter Data in
Light-Blue Shaded Cells
9Production Assumptions
10Capital Budget
11Depreciation
- Departmental allocation for depreciation expense
- Opening balances of accumulated depreciation
- Barrel additions are computed based on barrel
type (New or Used), aging and volume
- Barrel depreciation is computed using a split
schedule
12Departmental Allocations
13Financing Computations
14Balance Sheet Opening Balances
Opening Balances from the Capital Budget
15Results and Analysis
- Operating Forecast
- Analysis of Channel and Growth Effects
- Production and Case Cost Accounting
- Inventory Movement
- Gallons in Production
- Bottled Case Goods
- Cash Flows
- Balance Sheets
- Ratio Analysis
- Graphs and Charts
16Operating Forecast
17Additional Operating AnalysisOperating
Percentages and per Case Analysis
18Income Data TableCase Sales v. Retail
- Most small wineries sell 20 to 30 retail
- The analysis below was prepared using the demo
model and an Excel 2-way Data Table.
19Production Forecast The Boot Strap Method
- Start with Anticipated Sales
- Then estimate gallons in process
- Make reasonable assumptions on what it will take
to support future sales - Compute inventory movement
- Gallons in the cellar
- Bottled goods
- Once you know crush requirements then work
backwards to compute grape purchases etc
20Inventory Movement
21Wine Production5 Year Comparative Forecast
22Costs of Wine Sold
- Wine production involves the following cost
types - Barrel (Standard Unit Gallon Month)
- Cellar (Standard Unit Gallon Month)
- Bottling (Standard Unit Case Equivalents)
- Grapes Bulk Purchases (Std. Unit - Tons
Gallons) - Crop (Standard Unit Acres)
- Harvest (Standard Unit - Tons)
- Crush (Standard Unit Tons)
- Each cost type is a cost center
23Production Costs Year 1
24Wine Costs Flow
- Production costs are charged to wine-in-process
inventory accounts - When bottled, wine-in-process is converted to
finished goods inventory - Cost per case equivalent is calculated.
- As wine is sold, the case cost is deducted
(credited) from finished goods and charged to
COGS.
25Simple Concept but Complex Implementation
26Vintage Costing Sheets
- A Vintage costing sheet should be completed for
each product. - A preliminary costing is completed when the
product is placed in production this is used
for costing and planning. - After bottling, complete the final vintage
costing sheet this is used to document your
case cost and establish reporting standards.
27Typical Vintage Costing SheetPage 1
28Typical Vintage Costing SheetPage 2
29Operating Expenses
- Retail Selling Expenses (Cost per Case Sold)
- Distribution Selling Expenses (Cost per Case
Sold) - Marketing ( of Sales)
- General and Administrative ( of Sales)
30Selling Expense Retail(About 50.00 a Case
Sold Plus Annual Increase)
- Wine club administration
- Tasting room operations
- Corporate and other direct sales efforts
- Retail and broker commissions
- Shipping and handling
- 30 to 50 of IT Costs
- Credit card fees
31Selling Expense Distribution(About 25.00 per
Case Sold Plus an Annual Increase)
- Travel Entertainment
- Collateral Sales Cost
- Sales Salaries Commissions
- Sales administrative support
- Shipping and Handling
- 20 to 30 of IT costs
- Samples
32Marketing Expenses(Budget About 10 of Sales)
- Web Site
- Newsletter
- Promotional expenses
- Prospecting costs
- Public Relations
- Video Pod Casts
- Label design Branding
33General and Administrative Expenses(Budget Fixed
Amount Plus an Annual Increase)
- 20 to 50 of owners/CEOs salary
- Finance salaries
- Bookkeeping Independent accountant
- 20 to 30 of IT
- Human resources
- Directors expenses
- Legal costs
- General business consulting
- Fees Excise Taxes
34Cash FlowIncome is NOT Cash
- Adjustments to Income to Derive Cash Flow
- Changes in Accounts Receivable
- Changes in Inventory - Finished Cases
- Changes in Inventory - Wine in Process
- Add Depreciation
- Deduct Purchases of Property and Equipment
- Changes in Accounts Payable Accrued Expenses
- Changes in Income Taxes Current and Deferred
- Adjust for Capital Contributions and
Distributions - Adjust for Changes in Debt
- Deduct Principal Payments on Debt
35Adjustment Computations
36Cash Flow Statement
- Three Sections
- Cash Provided by (Used in) Operations
- Cash Provided (Used in) Investment Activities
(See capital Budget) - Cash Provided (Used in) Financing Activities (See
financing assumptions) - In the Long Run, to survive all business must
generate cash from operations. - Cash Flows from Operations is presented using
both the direct and indirect methods.
37Cash Flow Statement
38Cash Flows Balances
39Forecast Cash Flow v. Growth
- Growth requires cash resources
- The table below summarizes the cash flow effects
of varying percentages of year-over-year growth
40Analysis of Key Financial Statistics v. Sales
Growth
41Inventory Levels v. Year
Addition Inventory Requirement - 1.5 to 2.0
Million
5 Annual Case Sales Increase
25 Annual Case Sales Increase
42The Balance Sheet
- Snapshot of financial position
- List of assets at historical values
- Cash flow components represent net change in
balance sheet accounts - Flow of forecast information
- Sales Production
- Operations
- Cash Flows
- Balance Sheets
43From Cash Flow to the Balance Sheet
44Balance Sheets
45Ratio Analysis
46Capital Employed
47How to Improve Operating Cash Flow
- Slower Sales Growth
- Move to shorter term wine products (e.g. whites)
- Get Better Margins
- Increase sales price
- Sell into higher quality programs generally
higher price wines also have better margins - Increase your retail sales efforts
- Lower Taxes LIFO, Property tax review,
reorganization etc - Lower expenses
- Rip the vineyard build condos
48Forecast Considerations
- Your forecast should have the same nomenclature,
classification and organization as your
accounting records. - Include all your main product groups. The 12, 24
and 36 month groupings used here were only for
illustration purposes only. - Modify the model to reflect your barrel program.
- Monthly production based forecasting is more
accurate, but much more complex and costly to
implement.
49Downloads Available
- URL http//alondon.com/VW.htm
- Click on Wine Education Button.
- Download this slide show.
- Download Excel Simple Winery Forecast workbook.
- Download Winery Accounting Flows .xls A
complete accounting system scheme for a winery. - Take a look at the more complex VIRTUAL Winery V3
forecast system (120 month forecast, with 8 cost
centers and 7 sales channels, unlimited wine
products) also available for download.