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Authored by Aprio
Summary: Your business can look healthy on paper and still feel short on cash. Profit may appear on the income statement, but the money you need today can still be stuck in unpaid invoices, excess inventory, early supplier payments, or rising day-to-day costs.
Strong cash flow gives your business room to plan, invest, and compete, which matters even more in the current economic climate. In Q1 2026, 58.9% of Canadian businesses expected cost-related obstacles, according to Statistics Canada. The Bank of Canada has noted that tariff and trade uncertainty continue to push up cost expectations, while weak demand limits how much businesses can pass those costs on to customers.
This article walks through five operational levers that can help you improve cash flow without raising prices: accounts receivable, accounts payable, the cash conversion cycle, operating costs, and cash flow forecasting.
Many businesses default to raising prices when cash flow gets tight. Sometimes that’s necessary, but it shouldn’t be your first move.
The issue is often timing, not sales. You may have enough demand and enough work in the pipeline, but cash can still tighten if money comes in too slowly and goes out too quickly. This is where cash flow management matters: how you invoice, collect, pay suppliers, manage inventory, control costs, and forecast short-term cash needs.
Before changing your price list, look at the operational levers you can control.
Accounts receivable is often the biggest cash flow lever available to your business. The goal is simple: shorten the time between delivering a product or service and receiving payment.
Strong accounts receivable management starts with discipline. Invoice immediately after delivery, shipment, or milestone completion. Every day of delay is another day your business is financing the customer for free.
The following accounts receivable best practices can help you improve collections:
Receivables aren’t just an accounting issue. They are operating cash your business is waiting to collect.
Paying bills too early can hurt your cash flow. Paying too late can damage your vendor relationships. Good accounts payable management is about finding the balance.
The goal is to use your full payment terms while protecting supplier trust. That means knowing which vendors are critical, which payment dates matter, and where you have room to negotiate.
To strengthen accounts payable:
Accounts payable should not be managed as a last-minute cash scramble. It should be part of your regular cash flow management rhythm.
The cash conversion cycle measures how long it takes to turn your inventory and receivables into cash. The shorter the cycle, the more cash your business has available for payroll, suppliers, debt service, and growth.
The basic formula is:
Cash Conversion Cycle = Days Inventory Outstanding + Days Sales Outstanding – Days Payable Outstanding
In plain terms, this shows how long your cash is tied up between buying or producing what you sell, billing the customer, and collecting payment.
Working capital improvement strategies should focus on where your cash gets trapped:
A working capital ratio can tell you whether your current assets exceed your current liabilities, but the cash conversion cycle shows how quickly those assets move. Both matter.
Cost reduction works best when it targets waste rather than cutting indiscriminately. The goal is to remove what isn’t earning its place without weakening the quality of your product, service, or customer experience.
Start with expenses that can grow quietly in the background:
The goal is to reduce expenses without cutting quality or limiting your business’s ability to grow.
You can’t manage what you can’t see. A rolling 13-week cash flow forecast gives your business a practical view of near-term cash gaps before they become urgent. The 13-week horizon is widely used in treasury and finance: long enough to see real patterns, short enough to keep current without becoming a burden.
A useful cash flow projection should include your expected inflows and outflows.
Inflows may include:
Outflows may include:
Update the forecast weekly and compare it with actual results. As part of your cash flow analysis, the variance comparison shows where your assumptions are wrong, which customers are paying later than expected, and which costs are arriving sooner than planned.
Cash flow forecasting also gives you more options: delay a capital purchase, draw on a line of credit before cash gets tight, accelerate collection efforts, or renegotiate supplier timing before pressure builds.
A forecast isn’t just a spreadsheet. It’s an early warning system for your operating cash flow.
Improving cash flow doesn’t always require raising prices. Often, the better opportunity is already inside your business.
It may be receivables taking too long to collect, bills paid earlier than necessary, inventory moving too slowly, expenses no longer supporting the business, or forecasts not being updated often enough.
When you manage these areas together, cash flow becomes less reactive and more predictable. You can make decisions earlier, protect working capital, and reduce pressure without immediately passing more costs to customers.
Please connect with your advisor if you have any questions about this article.
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This article was written by Aprio and originally appeared on 2026-06-16. Reprinted with permission from Aprio LLP.
© 2026 Aprio LLP. All rights reserved. https://www.aprio.com/insights-events/five-operational-levers-to-improve-cash-flow-without-raising-prices-ins-article/
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