Cash Flow Management
See how much cash you have today, what will move in the next few weeks, and which customers, bills, and levers matter most — so decisions about collecting receivables, timing payments, and spend are based on a live picture, not a static report.
Cash Flow Management Software
Profit says how your business performs on paper. Cash flow says whether you can pay salaries, suppliers, and tax on time. Cash flow management software connects invoices, payments, and upcoming obligations into a single view of money in and money out.
Bookkeeping AI highlights the gap between profit and cash by showing when revenue is still locked in receivables, when expenses haven’t hit the bank yet, and how that plays into your short‑term cash picture.
See why you can “show profit” and still feel tight on cash — with a breakdown of receivables, payables, and timing differences.
Combine invoices, bills, payroll estimates, and taxes into a single picture of what’s coming in and going out.
Focus on today and the next few weeks — the horizon where cash decisions actually happen — instead of distant, abstract forecasts.
Cash Flow Dashboard
A good cash flow dashboard answers a simple question: “How much can we safely spend and when might we feel pressure?” To do that, it needs a reliable view of balances today and the main expected movements in the near term.
Bookkeeping AI brings together bank balances, expected receivables, and upcoming payments into a single, up‑to‑date view — so everyone looks at the same numbers when discussing cash.
Replace scattered trackers with a single cash view that pulls from bank, receivables, and payables.
Start with a high‑level cash position, then drill down into customers, vendors, and categories when you need to explain “why”.
Cash flow management is about the next few weeks and months: which invoices are likely to be paid, which bills are due, and where gaps might appear. For day‑to‑day cash decisions, you need a clear view of drivers and options — not long‑horizon scenario models.
Bookkeeping AI helps you see potential shortfalls early by combining expected inflows and outflows on a timeline, and by flagging concentration risks like a few large customers, big tax payments, or lumpy vendor bills.
Focus on short horizons where you can act — collecting receivables sooner, moving payment timing, or adjusting spend.
Spot patterns like heavy reliance on a few customers, clusters of upcoming payments, or persistent overdue invoices.
Connect cash insights to levers: receivables follow‑ups, renegotiating payment terms, or pausing non‑essential spend.
Cash reports should help conversations between leaders and finance: where you are, what changed, and what you plan to do. That means clear visuals and the ability to drill into details when someone asks “what’s behind this number?”.
Bookkeeping AI supports executive‑level cash summaries plus detailed breakdowns by customer, vendor, and category — so you can move from a summary view to supporting data in a couple of clicks.
Share simple, consistent cash views with leaders — without rebuilding charts manually every week.
Drill into customers, vendors, and time periods behind any cash number — so follow‑up questions are easy to answer.
Use cash flow management in Bookkeeping AI to see today’s cash, short‑term movements, and practical levers in one place — so conversations about “can we afford this?” start from shared, current numbers.