5 Financial Ratios Every SME Founder Should Track to Protect Business Health

Running a growing Small to Medium sized Enterprise (SME) can feel heroic.

You are making big decisions daily, balancing growth with risk and keeping the whole operation moving.

But even the most capable founder should not rely on instinct alone. Your real business superpower lies in understanding your financial ratios.

These five essential financial ratios for SMEs reveal the true financial health of your business and highlight problems before they become serious.

1. Gross Margin Ratio

Are you making enough profit on what you sell?

Formula:
(Revenue minus Cost of Goods Sold) divided by Revenue

Gross margin measures the profitability of your core product or service before overheads.

Why it matters for SME financial health:

  • Weak gross margins make growth risky
  • Strong margins give you room to invest
  • Shrinking margins often signal pricing or cost control issues

If your gross margin is falling, review pricing strategy, supplier costs and operational efficiency. Scaling a low margin model puts pressure on everything else.

2. Net Profit Margin

Is your business sustainably profitable?

Formula:
Net Profit divided by Revenue

Net profit margin shows what percentage of revenue you actually keep after all expenses.

For scaling SMEs, this ratio highlights whether growth is translating into real profit or simply higher turnover with more complexity.

If net margin is tightening:

  • Headcount may be rising faster than revenue
  • Overheads may not be aligned to strategy
  • Investment may not yet be delivering returns

Healthy businesses grow profitably, not just quickly.

3. Current Ratio

Can your business comfortably meet short term obligations?

Formula:
Current Assets divided by Current Liabilities

The current ratio is one of the most important liquidity ratios for SMEs. It shows whether you can cover short term debts with short term assets such as cash and receivables.

A ratio below 1 is a red flag. It suggests potential cash flow pressure.

If the ratio is weakening:

  • Strengthen credit control
  • Review payment terms
  • Improve short term cash flow forecasting

Liquidity problems are one of the most common reasons profitable SMEs struggle.

4. Debtor Days

How long does it take customers to pay you?

Formula:
Trade Receivables divided by Annual Credit Sales multiplied by 365

Debtor days measure how quickly your business converts revenue into cash.

For SMEs, this is a critical cash flow ratio.

If debtor days increase:

  • You are effectively funding your customers
  • Cash becomes less predictable
  • Working capital requirements rise

Reducing debtor days can improve cash flow immediately without increasing sales.

5. Debt to Equity Ratio

How exposed is your business to financial risk?

Formula:
Total Debt divided by Total Equity

This leverage ratio shows how much of your business is funded by debt compared to shareholders’ equity.

Debt can accelerate growth. But high leverage combined with inconsistent profits increases risk.

If you are planning to raise investment, refinance, or prepare for exit, lenders and investors will look closely at this ratio.

Why Tracking Financial Ratios Matters for Scaling SMEs

One month’s data tells you very little.

Tracking financial ratios monthly allows you to:

  • Identify trends early
  • Manage cash proactively
  • Make informed hiring and investment decisions
  • Protect margins as you grow

Financial ratios for SMEs are not just accounting metrics. They are decision making tools.

For SME founders, understanding these ratios means moving from reactive firefighting to controlled, strategic growth.

From Numbers to Action

If you are unsure what your financial ratios are really telling you about your SME, you are not alone. Many founders receive management accounts but lack the time or expertise to interpret them properly.

The numbers themselves are not the hero. The insight and action behind them are.

Structured financial oversight, whether through a Financial Health Check or a Fractional Finance Director, helps turn ratios into clear commercial actions.

Because the real superpower is not just knowing your numbers. It is understanding what to do next.

To get clear on your financial ratios, you might need some interim financial support. We can help find the perfect finance person for your business so do get in touch.

Photo by MeSSrro on Unsplash

FAQ

SME founders should usually track a small number of financial ratios that help them understand profitability, cash, debt, working capital and overall financial health.

The right ratios will depend on the business, but common examples include gross profit margin, net profit margin, current ratio, debtor days and debt to EBITDA or another suitable measure of borrowing capacity.
Financial ratios help turn your accounts into useful management information.

Rather than looking at sales, profit or cash in isolation, ratios help you understand how the business is really performing. They can show whether margins are improving, customers are paying more slowly, debt is becoming harder to manage or growth is putting pressure on cash. They are most useful if they are tracked over time.
Most SMEs should review key financial ratios monthly as part of their management accounts.

Some ratios, such as debtor days or cash-related measures, may need to be reviewed more often if cash is tight or the business is growing quickly. The aim is not to track everything. It is to focus on the measures that genuinely help you make better decisions.
There is no single good profit margin for every SME. A healthy margin depends on your sector, business model, pricing, cost base and stage of growth.

The more useful question is whether your margin is improving or declining, and whether it gives the business enough room to invest, pay tax, manage cash and absorb unexpected costs.
A financially healthy business usually has enough cash to meet its commitments, a clear view of future cash flow, manageable debt, sensible margins and financial information that supports good decisions.

No single ratio gives the full answer. Current ratio and quick ratio can be particularly useful for spotting potential liquidity issues, but they should be reviewed alongside profitability, debt, cash flow and working capital measures. The full blog explains the five ratios that give SME founders a clearer view of business health.

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London: 020 8191 2124

Bristol: 0117 244 1891

Email: enquiries@artemisclarke.co.uk