Did you ever journal as a teenager? Maybe even as an adult?
“Dear Diary, today, I…”
You see this skill of writing everything down? It’ll be a part of what we talk about today, because you need it now that you are an entrepreneur, more than ever before. Just so it sticks, we will also use the journaling approach for this article, only that it will be “Dear Business Owner” or “Dear Entrepreneur.” Let’s dive right in.
Dear Business Owner, we know you did not start your business because you had a burning passion for spreadsheets, whether you are running an online shoe store from your living room or you are building a healthy treats brand that is gaining ground. You started because you had a vision; you saw a gap in the market, you had a ‘lightbulb moment,’ you decided to build something, and you wanted to make money.
But as we sit here in April 2026, navigating a Nigerian economy that is as “dynamic” (a polite word for unpredictable) as ever, a sobering reality is setting in: Vision alone does not pay the VAT.
In Nigeria, we have a beautiful hustle culture, but most business owners depend on vibes for their business finance; they do not add the much-needed structure. Then, month-end hits, the generator needs diesel, the staff need salaries, and suddenly, the ‘profit’ you thought you made has vanished into thin air.
If this sounds familiar, do not panic. Yes, you are not an accountant, but you do not need to be to run a successful business; you just need to understand the language of money. Today, we are going to break down the financial basics every business owner needs to survive the five-year business mortality statistics.
Dear Entrepreneur, The Numbers Do Not Lie (But They Can Be Hard to Hear)
Why are we even talking about this? Because as we just mentioned above, the statistics are brutal. According to the latest Small Business Statistics in Nigeria for 2026, 50% of SMEs fail in their first year of operation, and more than 95% of SMEs in Nigeria fail within their first five years. Let that sink in. Out of every 100 businesses that start today, only 5 will still be standing by April 2031.
While issues like infrastructure and energy costs play a role, a massive contributor to this failure rate is the ‘Managerial Skills Gap.’ Specifically, many owners do not understand their Unit Economics. A recent study on SME Failure Rates in Africa highlighted that many owners sell a product for $10 that actually costs them $11 to produce once you factor in hidden costs like transport, electricity, and packaging.
Dear Entrepreneur, if you do not know your numbers, you are not running a business; you are running an expensive hobby.
Now let’s go into some basics of business finance for non-accountants.
1. Profit Is Not Revenue, and Profit Is Not Cash
This is the most common trap for non-accountants. You look at your sales records and see that you sold ₦1,000,000 worth of goods this month. Your costs were ₦600,000. On paper, you have a profit of ₦400,000.
But when you look at your bank account, you only have ₦50,000. Where did the money go?
- Scenario A: Your customers bought on credit and have not paid yet (Accounts Receivable).
- Scenario B: You used the money to buy more stock for next month (Inventory).
- Scenario C: You paid your rent six months in advance (Prepaid Expenses).
Profit is what is left over after you subtract expenses from revenue on paper. Cash is the physical (or digital) money you have available to spend right now. You can be ‘profitable’ and still find yourself in a tight corner because you ran out of cash. In the business world, cash is oxygen. You can survive without profit for a while, but you will not last a minute without oxygen; your business needs liquidity.
2. The ‘Big Three’ Financial Statements
Dear Business Owner, to start, you do not need to master complex software, but you must understand these three documents. Think of them as the ‘Medical Report’ of your business.
A. The Income Statement (Profit and Loss)
This tells you if you are actually making money over a specific period (a month, a quarter, or a year).
- Revenue: Every kobo that came in from sales.
- Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): What it actually cost to make or buy what you sold.
- Gross Profit: Revenue minus COGS.
- Operating Expenses: The ‘hidden’ costs (rent, salaries, data, diesel).
- Net Profit: The final ‘Take Home’ amount after you have deducted operating expenses.
B. The Cash Flow Statement
This is the most important one for survival. It tracks the actual movement of money in and out. It tells you if you can afford to pay your staff on the 25th or if you need to go and ‘chase’ your debtors.
C. The Balance Sheet
This is a snapshot of your business at a specific moment. It follows a simple formula: Assets = Liabilities + Equity.
- Assets: What the business owns (cash, equipment, inventory).
- Liabilities: What the business owes (loans, unpaid bills, taxes).
- Equity: What is left for you, the owner.
3. The Interest Rate Hole and the Alternative Advantage
Dear Entrepreneur, can you really afford to take a loan at 18% to 30%? Traditional banks often charge interest rates on loans that can climb as high as 30% for small businesses.
If you take a loan at 30% interest to fund a business that only has a 20% profit margin, you are effectively working for the bank. You are digging a hole to fill a hole.
This is why we do things differently and we invite you to do the same. At The Alternative Bank, we operate strictly on non-interest principles because we don’t believe in the conventional cycle of debt that chokes business growth. We prioritise asset-backed finance and shared success.
If you need equipment to scale, we don’t hand you a loan; instead, through AltBiz, we provide lease-to-own arrangements or transparent marked up sales with a payment timeline ideal for your business. This way, the focus stays on the asset and your actual progress, not on mounting debt. It’s a more human, ethical way to build, one that keeps your books clean and your stress levels low.
4. Dear Entrepreneur, Stop Mixing “Madam’s Money” with “Business Money”
If there is one basic rule you must follow, it is this: Your business is not your personal ATM. Many Nigerian entrepreneurs fail because they use money from their business to pay personal bills. This makes accounting impossible. If you do not separate your accounts, you can never truly know if your business is profitable.
The Action Plan:
- Open a dedicated business account (AltBank Business Account).
- Pay yourself a fixed salary every month, just like an employee.
- If you need extra money for a personal emergency, record it as a ‘Director’s Draw,’ but keep it to a minimum.
5. Dear Business Owner, Pay Your Tax
In 2026, the tax man is becoming more digital and more efficient. Gone are the days when you could ‘hide’ from the NRS or your State Internal Revenue Service.
As a business owner, you need to understand:
- VAT (Value Added Tax): You are basically a “collecting agent” for the government. That 7.5% you add to your invoices is not your money. Do not spend it. Put it in a separate sub-account.
- CIT (Company Income Tax): A tax on your profit.
- WHT (Withholding Tax): An advance payment of income tax.
Ignoring these will not make them go away; it will only lead to heavy fines that can shut your business down. Use digital tools to automate your tax calculations so you are not caught off guard.
6. Technology Is Your Best Friend
Dear Entrepreneur, this isn’t 2002; you do not need a hardcopy heavy ledger book anymore. In 2026, there are dozens of affordable (and some free) apps designed for African SMEs that handle bookkeeping, invoicing, and inventory.
With your AltBank app, you can track your business inflows and outflows in real time. This includes the charges on each transaction; your billing account helps you know exactly what you are paying in charges. We provide the transparency you need so you spend less time worrying and more time growing.
Dear Entrepreneur, Here’s The Long and Short Of It
If you want to be part of the 5% that survives, you need to start doing these four things today:
- Check Your Cash Daily: Know exactly how much ‘Oxygen’ you have left.
- Separate Your Accounts: Stop spending business money on personal bills.
- Calculate Your Unit Economics: If it costs you ₦11 to make ₦10, stop selling that product immediately or reevaluate your pricing.
- Think Ethical and Asset-Backed: Avoid high interest traps that eat your margins; choose non-interest financing.
Remember what we said in the beginning about journaling? The idea is to document. Document everything: processes, expenses, sales, taxes, and so on.
Accounting in this instance is not about being a math genius. It is about respect. Respect for the work you have put in, respect for your money, and respect for the future you are trying to build.
When you master the basics of your business finance, you gain a superpower: certainty. You no longer have to wonder if you can afford that new shop or that extra staff member. You will know.
At The Alternative Bank, we are more than just a place to keep your money. We are your partners on your growth journey. Whether you are exploring funding via AltBiz or lease-to-own for equipment, we are the ethical, transparent, and non-interest partner you need to beat the statistics.
Do not let your vision be part of the “95% failure” statistic. Take control of your books today.