Business Audit For Owners, Operators, Investors, Cash Flow, Systems, People, And Execution
A business audit with Michael Ligon is a private operator review of what is working, what is leaking, what is unclear, what depends too much on the owner, and what should be fixed first. The goal is simple: find the pressure points that affect profit, control, growth, execution, and decision quality.
Many businesses do not need more noise. They need a clear look at what is actually happening.
A business can stay busy and still be weak. The phones may ring, the team may work hard, the owner may be constantly moving, and the company may still have cash leaks, unclear roles, weak follow up, slow collections, or a delivery process that depends on too much owner involvement.
A business audit looks beneath activity. It studies where money is made, where money is lost, where decisions stall, where people are unclear, and where the operation becomes fragile under pressure.
Michael reviews the business from an operator, investor, capital, and execution perspective. The point is not to create a thick report. The point is to identify what deserves attention first.
A business audit is useful when the owner knows something needs to change but the real issue is not obvious enough yet.
The best fit is an owner, operator, investor, partner, or leadership group that wants a sharper view before making a move.
Owner Led Businesses
For owners who feel overextended, trapped in daily decisions, unclear on profit quality, or unsure whether the business is strong enough to grow.
Operational Pressure
For companies dealing with slow follow up, weak systems, poor handoffs, delivery problems, sales friction, or team confusion.
Before Investing Or Buying
For investors or buyers who want to understand whether a business has real operating strength or hidden problems beneath the numbers.
Before Growth Or Capital
For partners considering expansion, new capital, hiring, acquisition, new locations, restructuring, or a major strategy change.
The leak is often small enough to be ignored until it becomes expensive.
A business may lose money through bad pricing, weak follow up, slow collections, poor scheduling, unclear ownership of tasks, uncontrolled expenses, bad hiring, or a delivery process that creates rework.
The owner may feel the pressure but blame the wrong thing. The problem may not be the market. It may not be the employees. It may not be the leads. It may be the way the business converts attention into revenue and revenue into profit.
A useful audit finds the leaks that matter most and separates urgent problems from distractions.
A serious business audit studies the machine, not just the symptoms.
The audit focuses on how the business turns attention, effort, capital, people, and process into actual results.
Sales And Revenue Quality
Where does revenue come from, how reliable is it, what drives the sale, how strong is the margin, and what happens if one source slows down?
Cash Flow And Money Leaks
Where does cash get trapped, delayed, wasted, overcommitted, poorly tracked, or used in a way that weakens the company?
Team And Accountability
Who owns each result, where is responsibility unclear, which roles are weak, and where does the owner carry work that should be delegated?
Systems And Execution
Where does the business lose momentum between lead and close, sale and delivery, decision and action, promise and fulfillment?
The owner thought profit was low because costs were high. The real problem started before the sale was ever made.
A business owner may look at the bank account and believe expenses are the main issue. Payroll feels heavy. Vendors cost more. Marketing feels expensive. Cash seems to leave faster than it comes in.
But once the business is reviewed, the problem may start earlier. The offer may be priced too low. The sales team may be discounting too quickly. The company may be accepting weak customers. The scope may be unclear. Delivery may be doing extra work that was never billed.
In that situation, cutting expenses alone will not fix the business. The company has to repair how it prices, sells, defines scope, collects, delivers, and protects margin.
That is the value of an audit. It helps find the real starting point of the problem.
A strong audit helps the owner understand what to fix first, what to protect, and what to stop ignoring.
The review is most useful when the business has real activity but unclear performance, pressure, or direction.
Why Profit Feels Too Thin
The audit can look at pricing, margin, scope, labor, expenses, collections, discounting, and whether the business is selling work that is not profitable enough.
Why Everything Depends On The Owner
The audit can identify where the owner is still the salesperson, manager, problem solver, quality control, closer, dispatcher, and final decision maker.
Why Leads Are Not Turning Into Results
The audit can review lead response, qualification, offer clarity, follow up, sales ownership, customer fit, and close process.
Why The Team Feels Busy But Unclear
The audit can review roles, accountability, communication, handoffs, decision rights, expectations, and where responsibility is not clearly owned.
Whether The Business Is Ready To Scale
The audit can help determine whether growth would strengthen the company or expose weak systems, thin margins, and unclear leadership.
Whether Capital Would Help Or Hide The Problem
The audit can help separate a true capital need from a business model problem, cash leak, pricing issue, or execution weakness.
The most valuable audit does not list every problem. It identifies the problems that matter most.
Some problems are annoying but not critical. Some problems are visible but not central. Some problems are quiet but expensive.
Michael looks for the few issues that affect the rest of the business. A weak offer can hurt sales, margin, customer quality, delivery, and cash. A weak operator can affect team morale, execution, and customer experience. A weak process can make growth dangerous.
The audit should help clarify what needs attention first so the owner does not waste time fixing the wrong thing.
A strong business audit request should explain how the business actually operates.
Start with what the business does, how it makes money, where it operates, how long it has been active, who is involved, and what pressure the owner is feeling right now.
Include revenue range, margin pressure, cash flow issues, team size, lead sources, sales process, customer type, delivery process, owner role, and known problems if available.
If the business is considering growth, capital, partnership, hiring, acquisition, sale, or restructuring, include that decision clearly.
Bring the facts that show where the business feels strong and where it feels weak.
A business audit often connects to strategy, investment, board level, partnership, or opportunity review.
Choose the review path that best matches the pressure inside the business.
Business Strategic Reviews
Review a business situation through strategy, capital, people, execution, pressure, growth, and decision quality.
Investment Reviews
Review investment opportunities through capital, risk, upside, downside, structure, timing, and execution.
Board Level Strategic Reviews
Review leadership level decisions involving capital, direction, risk, reputation, timing, and execution.
Opportunity Review
Bring a serious opportunity for private review across business, real estate, capital, partnership, or special situation context.
Need a private operator review of what is working, what is leaking, what depends too much on you, and what should be fixed first?
Send the business details, current pressure, numbers if available, team structure, customer type, sales process, delivery process, owner role, and the decision you are trying to make. Clear requests create stronger reviews.