You’ve landed that big client. Your backlog is strong. Yet, every time payroll comes around, you feel that familiar pit in your stomach. Why? In the A&E and consulting world, success often outpaces cash — and high-growth firms feel the squeeze the most.
The issue isn’t just late payments. The real challenge lies in the lack of real-time visibility into how cash is moving in, out, and across your business. In a project-based environment, every decision — around labor, consultants, subcontractors, invoicing, and spending — depends on fluid, accurate cash intelligence.
It’s all too common to hear a principal ask, “We just secured three big projects—so why does our cash flow look worse than last quarter?” This is a clear sign that your systems haven’t evolved with your scale.
Cash flow volatility doesn’t just create financial stress—it holds back your ability to grow. When you’re unable to see and control your cash, you’re forced to make decisions reactively, not strategically. Here’s what often follows:
And the worst part? Many leaders don’t know the true state of their cash until it’s already too late. They’re relying on backward-looking reports, siloed project managers, and systems that fail to sync critical data in real time.
If you’re running lean admin and finance teams, the success you’ve worked so hard for quickly becomes a double-edged sword. As your volume grows, it becomes increasingly difficult to keep up with:
Instead of having one streamlined dashboard, you’re left piecing together a patchwork of spreadsheets, emails, and assumptions. The result? Missed revenue, delayed decisions, and a never-ending cycle of reactive firefighting.
We’ve worked with architecture, engineering, and environmental consulting firms across the country, and here are a few common threads among firms struggling with cash flow. These firms typically share three key traits:
When these three factors collide, leaders are left scrambling to answer questions like: “Can we hire this quarter? Should we delay that vendor payment? Is this new project profitable — or slowly bleeding money?”
Effective cash management doesn’t mean building out a full in-house finance team. It means putting the right systems in place to give project managers (PMs) and principals the visibility they need to make informed decisions. A modern approach includes:
For firms using BQE CORE, we’ve seen firsthand how powerful it can be in unlocking better cash flow control. Here’s how we’ve helped clients achieve greater cash clarity:
Using real-time data in BQE CORE, we flag delayed time entries, unbilled WIP, and aging receivables. Project managers receive automated reports that keep them accountable while ensuring finance stays in the loop.
With integrated billing, time tracking, and vendor data, we create rolling 8- to 12-week forecasts that help firms anticipate slow months, payroll spikes, and large vendor payments.
By optimizing workflows inside BQE CORE, we streamline the invoicing process. This reduces the time it takes to send out invoices, leading to faster collections. For firms still using manual PDFs for approvals, this change is a game-changer.
While BQE CORE isn’t the only tool capable of this, it’s one we’ve seen deliver strong results, particularly for A&E firms that need their finance, project, and operations teams speaking the same language.
One of our clients, a mid-sized engineering firm, developed a 13-week cash flow forecast to better navigate seasonal fluctuations. The forecast revealed a $225,000 working capital gap, created by three large projects with 60-day payment terms. While most projects had 30-day terms, these larger contracts created a cash flow challenge. By connecting them with our partner lenders, we secured long-term working capital at favorable terms, addressing their immediate needs and providing liquidity for future projects. They now have the flexibility to repay over 10 years, allowing continued growth without cash flow concerns.
Conversely, a prospective client managed cash flow based solely on their bank balance. Riding a seasonal high, they didn’t create a forecast and overestimated their financial health. When the cash crunch hit, they faced tough choices: cut staff or take on revenue-based financing at a rate above 25%. They ultimately cut staff, borrowed at a high rate, and paused their growth plans while they stabilized financially.
Here are a few steps you can take today to improve your cash flow management:
Identify what’s manual and what’s delayed. Your project backlog means little if you can’t access cash when you need it.
Even if it’s imperfect, getting started will help align your team around cash flow goals. Your systems need to talk to each other: time → billing → collections.
Key metrics like margin and collection time should be tracked in real time. This will help you make proactive, data-driven decisions.
You don’t need to expand your finance team to get better cash flow clarity. But you do need systems that surface the right data at the right time. Whether you’re using BQE CORE or another platform, we can help you design a financial operations strategy that scales with your business.
Ready to charge ahead with better cash flow visibility? Contact our team of accounting and finance engineers to supercharge your professional services business today.