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An electrical contractor is evaluating two different cash management approaches for their business. Currently, they have a starting cash balance of $5,000 in their checking account. Over the next 14 days, they have a scheduled supplier bill of $6,000 due on Day 10, a crew payroll of $4,000 due on Day 14, and an expected client payment of $12,000 due on Day 12.

Approach A: The contractor checks their online bank account balance daily to guide their decisions, assuming their current $5,000 balance means they are in a safe financial position. Approach B: The contractor implements a short, repeatable weekly habit of listing all expected cash inflows and outflows for the next 14 days, comparing the weekly totals, and taking corrective action if outflows exceed inflows.

When evaluating these approaches, the contractor correctly rejects Approach A as a high-risk strategy. While their current balance is positive, it fails to reveal that the timing of their upcoming bills will cause a cash deficit on Day 10 before the client payment arrives on Day 12. Approach B is the superior, proactive cash management practice because it provides a critical ____________ of 7 to 14 days before a projected cash shortage becomes an emergency, giving the contractor enough time to negotiate a short extension with the supplier or accelerate the client's payment.

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Updated 2026-05-17

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