How to Save a Struggling Small Business | BCR Advisory
Business Recovery

How to Save a Struggling Small Business

Published: 21 June 2026 | Reading time: ~12 min

Running a small business through financial difficulty is one of the most isolating experiences a director can face. The pressure is constant — suppliers chasing payment, the ATO sending notices, staff wondering what is happening, and a cash balance that does not stretch far enough. If that sounds familiar, this guide is for you.

The hard truth is that most businesses that fail did not have to. The majority of small business collapses in Australia are not the result of a fundamentally broken model. They are the result of problems that built up quietly over time — cash flow mismatches, ATO debt that compounded, a customer lost too suddenly, or costs that crept above revenue — and were left too long before help was sought.

This guide covers what you need to know: why businesses struggle, how to recognise the warning signs early, what your options are under Australian law, and what a realistic path to recovery looks like. Whether you are in the early stages of concern or facing genuine insolvency, there is a path forward. The question is whether you act in time to access it.

01

Why Do Small Businesses Struggle?

Understanding the root cause of financial distress is the first step toward fixing it. In our experience working with Australian SMEs across every industry, the causes of financial difficulty tend to fall into a predictable set of categories.

The Most Common Causes

  1. Cash flow problems Revenue looks fine on paper, but money is not arriving fast enough to cover outgoings. This is the single most common cause of business failure in Australia. A business can be profitable on an accrual basis and still run out of cash. Long debtor collection periods, seasonal revenue patterns, and rapid growth can all trigger a cash flow crisis even in an otherwise healthy business.
  2. ATO debt accumulation Falling behind on GST, PAYG withholding, or superannuation contributions is extraordinarily common — and extraordinarily dangerous. The ATO has access to enforcement powers that no trade creditor has. Directors can be held personally liable for unpaid superannuation guarantee contributions and certain PAYG withholding amounts through Director Penalty Notices (DPNs). The longer these debts are left, the fewer options exist to resolve them.
  3. Loss of a key customer or contract A business that generates a significant proportion of its revenue from one or two clients faces concentration risk. When that client departs — whether through a decision to take work in-house, a competitive loss, or their own financial difficulty — the business can go from healthy to distressed very quickly.
  4. Over-expansion without adequate capital Rapid growth is one of the less-obvious causes of business failure. Winning more work, opening new locations, or taking on more staff before the working capital is in place to support it creates a gap that cash flow cannot bridge. The business grows itself into trouble.
  5. Failure to adapt to market changes A business model that worked three years ago may not work today. Rising input costs, new competitors, changes in regulation, or a shift in customer behaviour can erode margins quietly until the situation becomes critical. Businesses that do not monitor their financial position closely are often surprised by how far the deterioration has progressed.
  6. Poor pricing and margin management Underpricing to win work is a common trap, particularly for trade businesses and professional service firms. When every job is won at the margin, there is no buffer to absorb cost increases, inefficiencies, or unexpected expenses.
The important point: Most of these causes are identifiable and addressable. A struggling business is not necessarily a failed one. The distinction between a business that can be saved and one that cannot almost always comes down to how early and how honestly the problem is confronted.
02

Warning Signs Your Business Is in Trouble

Most business failures do not happen suddenly. They are preceded by warning signs that, with the benefit of hindsight, were visible for months or years before the crisis point. Recognising these signs early is what separates a recoverable situation from an unrecoverable one.

01
Persistent cash flow shortfalls
You are profitable on paper but consistently short of cash when bills fall due.
02
Mounting ATO obligations
Falling behind on GST, PAYG, or super guarantee contributions — even by one quarter.
03
Creditor pressure escalating
Suppliers are tightening terms, threatening legal action, or refusing to extend credit.
04
Declining profit margins
Revenue is holding but margins are shrinking — costs are outpacing income.
05
Missed loan repayments
Skipping or deferring bank repayments, or breaching a financial covenant.
06
Reliance on one customer
More than 40% of revenue from a single client or contract — extreme concentration risk.
07
Using personal funds
Regularly topping up the business from personal savings or credit cards to cover the gap.
08
Key staff leaving
Experienced people departing — often a signal that those closest to the business can see problems you cannot.
09
No capacity to invest
Every available dollar is absorbed by debt service, leaving nothing to grow or maintain the business.
If two or more of these apply to your business right now, you are in financial distress. That is not a judgment — it is a diagnosis. And like any diagnosis, it is more useful early than late.
03

Immediate Steps to Stabilise Your Business

Before engaging any formal process, there are practical steps every director should take the moment they recognise the business is under serious financial pressure. These steps will not solve the underlying problem, but they will buy time and preserve options.

Get a Clear Financial Picture

You cannot manage what you cannot measure. If you do not have a current, accurate view of your cash position — including what you owe and when it falls due, what you are owed and when it is likely to be collected, and your forward cash flow position for the next 13 weeks — get one immediately. This single step changes your ability to make decisions and to engage creditors credibly.

Prioritise Your Creditors

Not all creditors are equal. The ATO and employees sit at a higher priority than trade creditors under Australian insolvency law. Director Penalty Notices for unpaid PAYG and superannuation can expose you to personal liability — they take priority over everything else. Your bank comes next. Trade creditors, while important, have the fewest enforcement mechanisms and should generally be managed last.

Talk to Your Creditors Before They Talk to You

This feels counterintuitive, but creditors who receive proactive communication from a business in difficulty are far more likely to cooperate than creditors who have to chase. A direct phone call explaining your situation and proposing a payment arrangement gives you control of the conversation. Most creditors — including the ATO — would rather receive something over time than force a liquidation where they receive far less.

Stop Creating New Liabilities

Under the Corporations Act 2001, a director who causes a company to incur a debt when they knew or ought to have known the company was insolvent can be held personally liable for that debt (the insolvent trading provisions under section 588G). If you have reasonable grounds to suspect insolvency, seek advice before taking on new credit, new contracts, or any new financial commitments.

Get Advice. Now.

The single most effective step you can take is to speak with a specialist in business recovery. Not your accountant (unless they specialise in this area). Not a mate who went through something similar. A registered insolvency practitioner or business recovery adviser who can assess your specific situation and tell you honestly what options exist — and what they cost. That advice is almost always free for an initial consultation.

04

Formal Recovery Options Available in Australia

When informal measures are not enough, there are several formal mechanisms under Australian law designed to help businesses in financial distress. The right option depends on the scale of the problem, the viability of the underlying business, and how early the situation is addressed.

OptionWho controls the businessBest suited forOutcome
Small Business Restructuring (SBR)Director stays in controlSMEs with debt under $1M, viable businessRestructured debt, business continues
Voluntary AdministrationExternal administrator takes controlLarger companies facing multiple creditor pressureDOCA, liquidation, or return to directors
Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA)Director regains control on completionBusinesses that can offer creditors a better return than liquidationStructured debt settlement, business continues
Creditors Voluntary LiquidationLiquidator takes controlBusiness is not viable — orderly wind-down preferredBusiness closes, assets distributed
Informal debt arrangementDirector stays in controlLimited creditors, cooperative relationshipsNegotiated repayment schedule
A key distinction: The formal options that let you keep the business running — SBR, DOCA — require the business to be fundamentally viable. That is, there must be a genuine product or service, real customers, and revenue. If those elements exist, there is almost always a path forward. If you are not sure whether your business qualifies, that is exactly what an initial consultation will tell you.
05

Small Business Restructuring: The Director’s Lifeline

The Small Business Restructuring (SBR) framework, introduced under the Corporations Act in 2021, is the most significant reform to Australian insolvency law for small businesses in decades. It was designed specifically for the situation many small business owners find themselves in: a viable business buried under a debt load it cannot service.

How the SBR Process Works

  1. Eligibility assessment Total liabilities must be under $1 million (excluding employee entitlements). Employees must be paid up to date. Tax lodgements must be current. BCR Advisory will assess your eligibility in the initial consultation.
  2. Appointment of a Restructuring Practitioner A registered restructuring practitioner (like BCR Advisory) is appointed. Critically, you remain in day-to-day control of your business throughout the process. Operations continue. Staff are not affected. Clients do not need to know.
  3. Restructuring plan developed Working with you, your practitioner develops a proposal for creditors outlining what they will receive under the plan and over what period. The proposal must offer creditors a better return than a liquidation.
  4. Creditors vote Creditors have 15 business days to vote. If a majority by value approve the plan, it becomes binding on all unsecured creditors — including those who voted against it.
  5. Plan executed and debt resolved You make the agreed payments, the practitioner distributes funds to creditors, and on completion the business emerges with its debts settled and its future intact.
Why this matters for directors: Unlike voluntary administration, SBR keeps you in the driver’s seat. There is no external administrator walking in and taking over your business. You continue to run it, serve your clients, and pay your staff — while the formal process works in the background to resolve the debt. Learn more about Small Business Restructuring at BCR Advisory.

Who SBR Is Not Right For

SBR is not appropriate if the business is not genuinely viable, if total liabilities exceed $1 million, or if the director has not maintained current tax lodgements and employee entitlement payments. In those cases, other options including voluntary administration or creditors voluntary liquidation may be more appropriate. BCR Advisory will give you an honest assessment of which path fits your situation.

06

How to Fix Cash Flow Fast

Cash flow is the oxygen of a small business. When it runs short, everything else deteriorates quickly. The following are the most effective levers available to businesses in a cash flow crisis.

Accelerate Cash Coming In

  • Review your debtors immediately. Chase every invoice over 30 days. Consider offering a short-term early payment discount (2 to 3%) to incentivise faster collection.
  • Invoice faster. If your standard practice is to invoice at month end, move to invoicing on completion of work. The earlier the invoice, the earlier the clock starts on payment terms.
  • Consider invoice financing or debtor finance, which allows you to draw against unpaid invoices immediately rather than waiting 30, 60, or 90 days for customers to pay.
  • Identify any assets the business can sell — equipment, vehicles, or intellectual property not core to operations.

Reduce Cash Going Out

  • Review every overhead line item. Distinguish between costs that are essential to revenue generation and costs that are overhead without direct return.
  • Approach landlords, suppliers, and service providers to negotiate extended terms or temporary payment deferrals. Be direct and honest about your position.
  • Review your staffing model. Reducing hours or hours of non-essential staff is painful but preferable to the alternative.
  • Pause or eliminate discretionary spend: subscriptions, non-essential travel, marketing spend not tied to measurable lead generation.

Access Alternative Finance

The traditional bank loan is not the only source of working capital. Depending on your business model, asset base, and credit history, options include invoice finance, asset-backed lending, merchant cash advances (for retail and hospitality), and in some cases, a director loan from personal funds — though this carries risks if the business subsequently fails to recover.

07

Dealing with ATO Debt

ATO debt is the most common and most dangerous form of creditor pressure facing Australian small businesses. Unlike trade creditors, the ATO has powers that can bypass the normal creditor hierarchy, including the ability to issue Director Penalty Notices (DPNs) that make individual directors personally liable for certain company tax debts.

What Is a Director Penalty Notice?

A DPN is a formal notice from the ATO making a director personally liable for the company’s unpaid PAYG withholding tax or superannuation guarantee charge. Once issued, you have 21 days to take one of the actions that can relieve the penalty — which typically means paying the debt in full, appointing a voluntary administrator, or placing the company into liquidation. Do not ignore a DPN.

Your Options With ATO Debt

  • Payment arrangement: The ATO will generally negotiate a payment arrangement for businesses that approach them proactively with a realistic repayment proposal. These can extend from 12 months to several years depending on the circumstances.
  • Small Business Restructuring: If total liabilities are under $1 million and the business is otherwise viable, SBR is often the most effective way to resolve ATO debt — it binds the ATO (as an unsecured creditor) to the approved repayment plan.
  • Voluntary Administration or DOCA: For more complex situations where ATO debt is part of a larger creditor landscape, voluntary administration and a DOCA can deliver a comprehensive resolution.
Critical: The longer ATO debt is left unaddressed, the fewer options exist. If you have received a DPN, a Garnishee Notice, or an ATO wind-up application, seek specialist advice immediately. BCR Advisory’s practitioners deal with the ATO regularly and understand how to negotiate from a position of credibility. See our Corporate Recovery and Insolvency services.
08

What a Business Turnaround Actually Looks Like

A business turnaround is not a single decision or intervention. It is a structured process — typically spanning three to twelve months — that addresses the financial, operational, and strategic causes of a business’s decline and puts in place the conditions for sustainable recovery.

The BCR Advisory Turnaround Process

  1. Rapid financial assessment We begin every engagement with an urgent review of the business’s financial position. Cash flow mapping, creditor pressure points, working capital, and a clear view of whether the business has genuine viability.
  2. Strategy development Based on the assessment, we develop a written turnaround plan with realistic targets, a clear timeline, and a stakeholder communication strategy. The plan separates financial issues (debt structure, cash flow, overhead) from operational issues (process, staffing, supply chain) and strategic issues (market position, revenue model).
  3. Creditor and stakeholder negotiation BCR Advisory engages directly with the ATO, banks, trade creditors, and other stakeholders on your behalf. Our practitioners have over 100 years of combined experience in insolvency and restructuring — creditors take our calls and respond to our proposals.
  4. Operational implementation With financial pressure stabilised, we work alongside the management team to implement the operational changes identified in the plan: overhead reduction, cash flow improvement, supply chain review, revenue mix analysis, and business model adjustments.
  5. Stabilisation and transition As the business stabilises, BCR Advisory transitions from active advisory to a monitoring and support role — tracking KPIs, reviewing cash flow against forecast, and providing ongoing guidance until the management team has regained full operational confidence.

The goal of a turnaround is a business that no longer needs us: self-sufficient, financially healthy, and positioned for sustainable growth. Learn more about BCR Advisory’s Business Turnaround services.

09

When to Call in a Specialist

The most common mistake business owners make is waiting too long. The instinct to manage the problem internally, to keep it private, and to hope things improve is completely understandable — but it is the instinct that costs options.

You should speak to a business recovery specialist the moment you identify any of the following:

  • You have missed a tax payment or are unable to meet the next one
  • You have received a letter of demand, statutory demand, or DPN from the ATO
  • A major creditor has threatened legal action or wind-up proceedings
  • You are regularly using personal funds to keep the business afloat
  • Your cash flow is consistently negative despite revenue being present
  • You have lost a significant customer or contract and cannot see how to replace the revenue
  • You suspect the business may be insolvent — meaning it cannot pay its debts as and when they fall due

None of the above means the business is finished. What they mean is that the window for acting with the most options is open now, and it will not stay open indefinitely. An initial consultation with BCR Advisory is confidential, carries no obligation, and will give you a clear picture of where you stand and what is possible.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a small business be saved from insolvency?

Yes — in many cases. A business that is insolvent is not necessarily a business that is finished. Cashflow insolvency (inability to pay debts as they fall due) is the most common form, and it can often be resolved through a formal process like Small Business Restructuring, which lets you continue operating while the debt is addressed. The critical factor is acting early enough that options still exist.

What is the difference between insolvency and bankruptcy in Australia?

Insolvency refers to a company’s inability to pay its debts as and when they fall due. Bankruptcy, in the strict Australian legal sense, applies to individuals, not companies. When a company cannot pay its debts, it may enter a formal process such as voluntary administration, Small Business Restructuring, or liquidation. Directors of insolvent companies can face personal liability, but the company and the individual are legally distinct.

Will my employees find out if I start a restructuring process?

Under Small Business Restructuring, you remain in day-to-day control of the business and operations continue as normal. There is no requirement to notify employees that the process is underway. Clients and suppliers are similarly not automatically notified. The process is designed to be discreet and business-continuity focused.

How do I negotiate with the ATO if I have a tax debt?

The ATO will negotiate payment arrangements with businesses that approach them proactively with a realistic, sustainable repayment proposal. A structured plan developed with the assistance of a practitioner like BCR Advisory carries significantly more weight than an approach made by a director acting alone. If you have received a Director Penalty Notice, the window to act is 21 days — do not wait.

Can I use my own money to save my business?

You can, but you should do so with caution and professional advice. If you inject personal funds into a company that subsequently fails, you become an unsecured creditor of the business and are unlikely to recover those funds. Before putting personal money in, understand clearly whether the injection will actually resolve the problem or simply delay the inevitable — that is a question a business recovery specialist can answer honestly.

How long does Small Business Restructuring take?

The formal SBR process has a statutory timeframe of approximately 20 business days from appointment of the restructuring practitioner to creditor vote. Preparation time prior to appointment varies depending on the complexity of the business’s financial position, but BCR Advisory aims to move quickly once engaged. The entire process from initial consultation to completion of the plan is typically three to six months.

What happens if I do nothing?

Inaction is the most dangerous choice. If a company continues to incur debts while insolvent, directors face personal liability under the insolvent trading provisions of the Corporations Act. Creditor pressure will escalate. Options will narrow. The ATO can apply to wind the company up — at which point control is lost entirely and a court-appointed liquidator is assigned. Acting early keeps you in control. Waiting removes that control progressively until there is none left.

Your situation is not as hopeless as it feels.

BCR Advisory works with Australian business owners who are facing financial difficulty. Our first conversation is confidential, obligation-free, and honest. We will tell you exactly where you stand and what your options are.

Book a Confidential Call
Or call us directly: 02 9128 3838
Tom Vandermeer BCR Advisory
Disclaimer: This article is intended as general information only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Every business situation is different. Before making any decisions about your business, you should seek independent professional advice from a qualified practitioner. BCR Advisory is a specialist firm of registered insolvency practitioners and business recovery advisers. Contact us for advice specific to your circumstances.