Zero-Based Budget

We are smack dab in the heart of budget season, and if you’re a leader like me, you know what that means: lots of late nights, endless cups of coffee, and tough decisions, like whether to keep the company gym membership or just declare walking to the printer our new wellness initiative. But even in the whirlwind, I like zero-based budgets. Why? Because it makes every dollar in our organization earn its keep. No more freeloading line items from three years ago that no one remembers adding! It’s a leader’s best friend for uncovering inefficiencies and making sure our resources work as hard as our teams do—minus the complaints and requests for more vacation days.

 

So how does it work?

 

A zero-based budget is a budgeting method where every dollar of income is allocated to expenses, savings, or debt repayments until there’s “zero” left unassigned. This means starting from a “zero base” each month and justifying every dollar spent instead of building on past budgets. Every expense needs a purpose, so nothing is overlooked, and every dollar has a job.

 

Humorous Example:

Imagine you’re making a zero-based budget for your coffee habit:

  1. Income: $3,000
  2. Essentials: Rent, groceries, utilities, and … coffee.

 

So, you think, “Coffee is essential, right?” You allocate $100 to coffee. But wait, at $5 a cup, that’s only 20 coffees! “I drink that much before lunch in a week,” you realize.

 

Now you have to justify every single coffee in your budget. You start by convincing yourself:

  • Monday morning coffee: “Absolutely necessary for survival.”
  • Tuesday coffee: “Essential for creativity.”
  • Wednesday’s second coffee: “I mean, the boss said I look tired…”

 

Before you know it, your coffee budget has squeezed groceries into ramen territory. So, you scale back and start brewing at home, ultimately finding ways to balance coffee, rent, and the occasional slice of real food. By month’s end, you’re budgeting like a pro, sipping drip coffee with the satisfaction that every dollar found its rightful place!

I Power Seeds

Here are our takeaways and thoughts - pause and reflect, then nourish and grow!

A zero-based budget model ensures every dollar of income is allocated and accounted for, creating a comprehensive and intentional plan for managing finances. This method promotes financial discipline, helping individuals or organizations prioritize spending based on current needs and goals rather than relying on past habits. By evaluating each expense from scratch, it uncovers inefficiencies, reduces wasteful spending, and maximizes the impact of every dollar, leading to better control over finances and more strategic allocation of resources.

Leave a Comment

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Popular Posts

Equity not Equality

Equity, Not Equality

Equity is not about treating everyone the same. That is equality. Equity has us look at each client, employee, or student as an individual. Affirm his or her identity and

The Art of Coaching

The Art of Coaching: Effective Strategies for School Transformationby Elena Aguilar   Summary of book from Amazon Hands-on resources for new and seasoned school coaches This practical resource offers the

Andrew Carnegie

We Are Creatures of Emotion, Not Logic

“When dealing with people, let us remember we are not dealing with creatures of logic, we are dealing with creatures of emotion.” Andrew Carnegie I hear this over and over

Reading People

Reading People: How Seeing the World through the Lens of Personality Changes Everything   This was a really excellent book regarding some of the various personality frameworks. It touches on