

Beginning Balance
Jesse Mecham
Jesse Mecham and Mark Butler teach you how to manage your business cash flow, hone your business model, and not freak out about money.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 3, 2023 • 33min
Harness Your Unique Ability: Mark and Jesse Read the Book This Time
Mark and Jesse discuss their thoughts on a book they've been reading. They explore wanting, mindset, and wealth, and set seemingly impossible goals for growth. They delve into the concept of unique abilities and self-management. They emphasize embracing and amplifying unique abilities and the importance of collaboration.

14 snips
Oct 20, 2023 • 38min
10x Is Easier Than 2x: Mark and Jesse Discuss a Book They Haven't Read (Yet)
A listener requested Mark and Jesse comment on the book 10x Is Easier Than 2x: How World-Class Entrepreneurs Achieve More by Doing Less by Dan Sullivan and Benjamin Hardy -- and they happily oblige! Except... they haven't read the book. Yet. Nevertheless the title is thought provoking, and they debate the merits of growing a business slowly vs growing quickly, as well as the difference between doing it as a startup vs a mature business. Jesse shares his experience 10x'ing YNAB over the years, and how the challenges of the business scaled with his own vision and expectations for the company. Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com

7 snips
Oct 6, 2023 • 20min
Money Dogma and Hard Work
Mark and Jesse discuss the nature of opportunity cost in budgeting, exploring the challenges faced by both accumulators and spenders. They emphasize the importance of understanding the cost of our spending decisions and aligning them with our values and priorities in life. They also highlight the significance of financial knowledge and the need for balance in financial management.

20 snips
Sep 22, 2023 • 57min
How Mark Gets Things Done: A Tale of Two Time Management Styles
Mark explains his unique system for managing his day to day tasks after years of struggling with ADHD. For Mark, it's all about managing his energy and honoring his mindset in the current moment. If the "dirt pile" calls (his affectionate name for an ongoing earthmoving project in his backyard), then that's what he does, whether or not it's the "best" or most important use of his time in the moment. Over the years, Mark has learned that allowing himself space to indulge in physical tasks often has the benefit of settling his mind and, therefore, putting him in a good headspace to tackle bigger, more stressful business challenges. For Mark, productvitiy follows his headspace. Jesse, on the other hand, has a very different style for getting things done. Jesse is a man of systems, and he's also a man with a long to-do list. He mentions how in the past he has been called out for letting tasks slip or needing reminders to follow up on things. So for Jesse the priority is making sure that tasks don't live in his head, but are organized in a good system. He likes David Allen's Getting Things Done (GTD) productivity system, which asks a person to first organize and sort through their list of tasks before tackling them. With a good categorization of tasks in place, it becomes easier to execute tasks at the time and place when you can do them, rather than relying on your mind's own reminder system which often reminds you when you can't do anything about the task! Jesse adds a weekly review to his process, to make sure he's working on things that matter -- in business and personal life -- and not avoiding challenging tasks by filing his day with low-level admin work. The takeaway? People can get things done with very different approaches. One key to figuring out what will work for you is to recognize and honor who you are. As Mark's mentor says, you can't will yourself to be the kind of person who systematically categorizes and organizes tasks if that's who you are by nature. Once you accept that, then you can find the system that works for you. Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com

Sep 8, 2023 • 39min
Meetings for Introverts, New Business Books, and Mark Running a 60k?!
Mark and Jesse answer a listener question about how to run more effective meetings, particularly for introvert-heavy groups. Jesse talks about the importance of ice breakers (although you don't have to call them that) and standardized meeting structures across the company. Mark and Jesse also discuss some new books on their reading list, including a book about the keys to longevity. Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com

5 snips
Aug 25, 2023 • 33min
How Much Money Knowledge Do You Need? And the Folly of Future Proofing
The podcast explores the importance of financial knowledge and literacy, as well as the challenges of future proofing. It emphasizes the need for living within your means and creating financial cushion, both for personal and business balance. The hosts discuss entity formation and tax strategies for businesses, and the benefits of investing in educating oneself about money. They also touch on the concept of a green box contingency plan and the significance of acknowledging limitations and uncertainties.

Aug 11, 2023 • 29min
Charlie Fixes Brakes
Topics covered include illegal underage driving, safety concerns at the mechanic, building a book of business, using signs to promote a business, and the importance of self-employment experience and developing skills.

8 snips
Jul 28, 2023 • 44min
Team Compensation: How to Set Expectations and Avoid Landmines
Mark and Jesse discuss the process of setting compensation, salaries, bonuses, and communicating those effectively to the team. Compensation is a touchy subject. Businesses want to incentivize employees to perform at a high level and reduce turnover by compensating them well. Employees need to feel like they have space to grow their skills and capabilities in the organization, and be compensated accordingly. And many business owners want their employees to be happy and feel fairly compensated, out of care for the people they have grown close to and relied upon to build their business. Therein lies a minefield, however! Jesse argues that compensation, including salary, benefits, and bonus, carries a lot of information and expectations. Business owners should set compensation based on market rates for a given role, discounted to what the business can afford (both what the business can afford to pay and what amount of turnover the business is willing to accept if they pay significantly under market). Business owners should NEVER compensate out of a sense of charity, generosity or to "share the wealth," epsecially with unplanned bonuses. While these things can seem great in the moment, they can cause serious confusion for employees. Why did I get this? How do I get it again? Should I expect this every year? If I don't get it next year, does that mean I'm performing poorly, or the business is doing poorly? There are many pitfalls to basing compensation on something other than the cold hard facts of market rates and clear job descriptions. Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com

Jul 14, 2023 • 42min
Your Next Easiest Dollar
...probably comes from doing more of what you're already doing, not a new venture or even a new product. But Mark and Jesse have talked about digging trenches already. Today they ask the question, is it enough for a business owner to put their head down and just dig more trenches? When do you look around, observe broad trends in your industry, and react to those? It's a balancing act, with risks on both sides of the question. Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com

Jun 30, 2023 • 32min
Striving for What? When Enough Is Enough
Mark and Jesse dissect the culture of striving that pervades American society, in businesses and consumers alike. There seems to be a tacit assumption that all business should be about more -- growing more, making more money, etc -- and you don't have to look far to see the same mentality in consumer culture. In fact, it's the heart of the economy! The desire for more is endless, a hole which can never be filled. So, how do you figure out what is enough? Mark and Jesse have encountered peers struggling with this question, and have noted that limitations can be freeing. If you simply tell yourself that what you have is what you will have forever, you create boundaries and limitations which actually spur creativity and help you figure out what you really want (not just want other people say you should want). Mark uses the house as an example on the consumer side. What if you said to yourself, this house that you are currently in is it -- this is the house you will own and live in until you die. With no possibility for moving in the future, or building something else, you're free to think about what you don't like about your current house, and what you would change. Maybe there are some things that you dream about having in a future house, like a pool, that you discover you are fine without. Or maybe you can't live without one and must find a way to put one in! It's a useful creative exercise to get closer to answering the question -- how much is enough? Mark Butler, Virtual CFO The Money School: https://moneyschool.works https://markbutler.com https://letsdothebooks.com YNAB https://www.youneedabudget.com