When cash flow is unclear, decisions get delayed or made under pressure. Hopscotch helps businesses build practical budgets and forecasts, so you can see what’s ahead and act earlier with more confidence.
This service focuses on helping you look ahead. It connects budgeting and cash flow forecasting so you can understand how the business is likely to perform and where pressure may build.
Rather than static budgets that sit unused, the aim is to create practical planning tools that support day-to-day decisions and ongoing visibility.
Understand when cash is coming in, when it is going out, and where gaps may appear.
Build budgets that reflect how the business actually operates, not just high-level targets.
Spot potential shortfalls, cost pressure, or revenue gaps before they become urgent.
Make decisions with a clearer view of what is likely to happen, not just what has already happened.
We focus on building forecasting models that are simple enough to maintain but detailed enough to be useful. That means aligning budgets to real drivers of the business and connecting them to cash flow timing.
The goal is not complexity. It is clarity, consistency, and a model you can actually use.
We identify the key revenue streams, cost drivers, and timing factors that influence your cash flow.
We develop a practical model that reflects how your business operates and projects forward.
We update forecasts and review performance so the model stays relevant as conditions change.
Forecasting works best when it is built on reliable reporting. We can also support financial reporting and advisory to strengthen your visibility.
You can identify issues earlier and take action before they become urgent.
You have a clearer view of cash position and can manage timing more effectively
Decisions are supported by forward-looking insight rather than relying only on past results.
This service is most valuable when understanding what is ahead is just as important as understanding what has already happened.
The business is expanding and cash flow is becoming harder to predict.
Income and expenses are not evenly spread, creating pressure at different points in the year.
Decisions are often made late due to lack of forward visibility.
You are considering growth, investment, or restructuring and need to understand the financial impact.
A budget sets expectations, while a forecast updates those expectations based on current performance and changing conditions.
Typically monthly, but frequency can vary depending on how quickly your business conditions change.
It should be detailed enough to reflect key drivers, but simple enough to maintain and use regularly.
Yes. Forecasting works best when integrated with reporting so performance can be tracked against expectations.
Yes. Accurate, up-to-date financial data is essential for reliable forecasting.
It can be either. Some businesses need an initial setup, while others benefit from ongoing forecasting support.
If you do not have a clear view of what is ahead, start with a conversation. We’ll help you understand your current position and build a practical approach to forecasting