Financial Resilience-Overview
The impact of covid 19 dramatically highlighted the importance of financial resilience. Strong Financial Resilience requires businesses to adapt their financial frameworks to deal with a much more volatile environment in which profitability, cashflow and access to funds are experiencing simultaneous pressure.
There are 3 key elements in creating financial resilience in your business:
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Cash Management and Stress Testing
At the time of updating this post in early-2025, the high-level of uncertainty in the world, has increased the importance of accurate and timely cash management & forecasting, but some businesses are still not taking action to improve their capabilities and optipons.
The current international environment of uncertainty, requires companies to have the capabilities required for both understanding their current cash position and how much cash they may require in the short -to-medium future.
Even for cash-rich companies, the potential benefits of accurate cashflow forecasting are numerous.
Some businesses that were healthy Pre Covit-19 were still under financial pressure, with staff members contracting covid 19 taking time off work whilst they were still infectious or unwell, and severe staff shortages as the level of unemployment is at record low levels, and with inflation at record high levels meaning their cost base has increased significantly.
The uncertainty and disruption, they were experiencing meant they were also having to update their cashflow models frequently and making sure that they will have access to sufficient funds available to meet their short-to-medium-term financial commitments.
To implement the above quickly, many medium and large size businesses formed Agile Multi-Disciplinary teams, including talented people from functions such as IT, Admin, HR, Legal, Media and Communications, Finance and Operations.
The Agile teams should ideally still be focused on managing and upgrading their cashflow models to deal with the uncertainty and disruption that is showing no signs of resolution any time soon!
If you don’t have the required resources currently available in-house, you might consider bringing in a financial expert to set up your cash forecasting process and to train your finance-team to manage it going forward.
Financial stress testing is about identifying the areas of vulnerability in your business so plans can be tested to address them in a timely and proactive manner should the need arise.
This will allow you to determine the length of time your business can trade under different scenarios and give you time to engage with key stakeholders (shareholders, regulators, banks & any other potential sources of funds) to negotiate outcomes.
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Liquidity & Financing
Ongoing uncertainty over demand and supply-chain resilience is creating liquidity pressure across many businesses.
Your Agile Team and CFO will need to evaluate funding strategy options, including existing lenders and other sources of capital in order to meeting your funding needs in the time available.
You should continue to engage regularly with other key stakeholders to keep them informed of any potential short-term funding concerns and maintain awareness of any changes to interim funding and payment alleviation options supported by governments.
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Financial Crisis Response & Contingency Planning
Businesses in immediate cash crisis had to take steps to preserve cash balances by restricting payments to only the most business‑critical vendors as they activate contingency plans.
Directors should also consider their duties in a financially distressed situation, the duties owed by directors’ shifts from shareholders to creditors. Personal liability and disqualification risks should be reviewed and included in the minutes of board or executive committee meetings .
Strong Ongoing Financial Resilience will require businesses to adapt their existing financial frameworks to deal with a much more volatile environment in which profitability, cashflow and access to funds are experiencing simultaneous pressure.
To support the cash position and forecast the key underlying ratios should be available to the executive team. The key ratios would vary from business to business but would typically be:
- Current Ratio: Current assets/Current liabilities
- Quick Ratio: Current Assets-Stock/Current liabilities
- Accounts receivable days
- Accounts payable days, and
- Inventory day
An ongoing process should be in place to manage these factors, and they should be regularly reviewed by top management and board meetings.
Last Updated November 2025

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