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Business, Operations & Fundraising·Lesson 40 of 49

Budgeting & Cash-Flow Pitfalls

Diagnose and fix the budgeting mistakes that quietly sink teams: confusing total budget with cash on hand, ignoring timing, and starting every season from zero.

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The most dangerous budgeting mistakes are not about the total — they are about timing and certainty. A team can have a perfectly balanced annual budget and still be unable to pay the registration invoice in the fall.

Mistake 1 — Counting pledged money as cash. A sponsor's verbal 'we'll probably do $5,000 again' is not $5,000. Teams that budget against pledges instead of commitments discover the gap when invoices come due. Debug workflow: Split your income tracker into two columns — Committed (signed/received) and Pending (weighted by probability, as in the sponsor-CRM project). Only Committed may fund non-refundable obligations like registration. Run the check: does Committed income alone cover registration plus your first event? If not, you have a cash-flow problem regardless of your annual total.

Mistake 2 — Ignoring timing. FRC's biggest bills hit early: the $6,300 base registration opens in the fall, well before most fundraising lands. Teams that plan annually but not monthly hit a cash crunch precisely when they must commit to events. Fix: Build a simple month-by-month cash-flow row: starting balance, inflows, outflows, ending balance, for each month from September to May. If any ending balance goes negative, you need either earlier fundraising or a bridge (school advance, reserve).

Mistake 3 — Cold-starting every season. Spending the budget to zero every year means every fall begins with a panicked fundraising sprint just to register. FIRST explicitly recommends ending the season with a surplus to help start the next season. Fix: Treat a target reserve (e.g., enough to cover base registration for next year) as a fixed expense line, not optional leftover. Protect it.

Mistake 4 — No reconciliation. Teams that never compare budget to actuals repeat the same estimating errors forever and cannot catch missing money. Fix: Monthly, reconcile the bank/school account statement against your tracker. Every transaction should map to a budget line. Unexplained discrepancies are either errors or, worse, missing funds — investigate immediately.

Mistake 5 — One person knows the numbers. When the single 'treasurer' graduates or burns out, financial continuity collapses. Fix: At minimum two people (one student, one mentor) have visibility, and the budget lives in shared cloud storage with version history, never on one laptop.

The meta-lesson: a budget is a living forecast you reconcile monthly, not a document you write in the fall and never open again.

Key takeaways

  • Separate committed income from pending income; only committed money funds non-refundable obligations like registration.
  • Model cash flow month-by-month — FRC's biggest bills (the $6,300 base registration) hit early, before most fundraising lands.
  • Carry a deliberate reserve so you never cold-start a season; FIRST itself recommends ending with a surplus.
  • Reconcile against the actual account statement monthly and ensure at least two people have financial visibility.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.A team's annual budget shows total projected revenue equal to total projected expenses. Why is this NOT enough to guarantee the team can pay its bills?

2.A sponsor gives your team a grant restricted to buying a CNC machine, but you're short on cash for this month's competition registration. What is the recommended practice?

3.What operating reserve is commonly recommended to cushion a nonprofit team against delayed grant payments and seasonal cash-flow gaps?

Answer every question to submit.