The Financial Errors That Quietly Cost Growing Tech Businesses
IT and web design companies are often brilliant at what they do.
They build platforms.
They solve complex problems.
They scale quickly.
They innovate constantly.
But financially?
Many are operating with avoidable weaknesses.
And the problem is this:
Accounting mistakes in IT businesses don’t usually explode overnight.
They build quietly.
Until one day, they become expensive.
Let’s walk through the most common mistakes we see — and how to fix them.
1️⃣ Confusing Bank Balance With Profit
This is the most common issue.
A large project invoice hits the account.
The balance looks healthy.
Money gets transferred out.
But what’s missing?
• VAT liability
• Corporation Tax provision
• Contractor costs
• Software subscriptions
• Accrued expenses
Profit is not the same as cash.
And cash isn’t all available for spending.
✅ How to Avoid It:
Have quarterly management accounts showing:
• True profit
• Tax building
• Dividend capacity
• Cashflow forecast
Not just a bank app.
2️⃣ Taking Dividends Without Checking Profit
Dividends can only be paid from retained profits.
But many IT directors:
• Transfer money when it’s there
• Assume profit exists
• Don’t document dividends properly
This can create:
• Illegal dividends
• Overdrawn Director’s Loan Accounts
• Section 455 exposure
• Personal tax complications
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Only declare dividends with up-to-date figures
• Prepare dividend vouchers and minutes
• Monitor retained reserves quarterly
Structure protects you.
3️⃣ Ignoring the Director’s Loan Account
As covered in Blog 3, DLAs are often misunderstood.
Unstructured withdrawals lead to:
• Overdrawn balances
• Additional tax charges
• Cashflow strain
IT businesses are especially vulnerable because income can fluctuate.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Set planned salary + dividend strategy
• Monitor DLA quarterly
• Don’t treat the company like a personal bank
4️⃣ Failing to Set Aside Tax
Corporation Tax at up to 25% is not optional.
Neither is VAT.
Yet many growing IT businesses:
• Spend gross income
• Forget VAT is owed
• Ignore Corporation Tax building monthly
Then month 9 hits — and panic follows.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Transfer VAT into a separate account immediately
• Move estimated Corporation Tax monthly
• Forecast tax at least quarterly
If it’s visible, it’s manageable.
5️⃣ Poor Project Margin Tracking
Not all revenue is equal.
A £25k build with heavy subcontractor use may yield lower margin than a £12k retainer.
Without margin analysis, you can:
• Scale low-profit work
• Underprice services
• Overhire
• Burn cash without noticing
Turnover growth alone doesn’t guarantee profit growth.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Track gross margin by project type
• Monitor contractor ratios
• Review pricing strategy annually
Smart growth beats fast growth.
6️⃣ Underestimating the True Cost of Hiring
A developer at £45k salary isn’t £45k.
Add:
• Employer NI
• Pension
• Equipment
• Software
• Insurance
• Training
• Holiday pay
The real cost may be £55k+.
Many IT businesses hire based on workload — not financial modelling.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Forecast cashflow before hiring
• Model best-case and slow-month scenarios
• Review reserves before committing
Growth should be funded, not assumed.
7️⃣ Sloppy Bookkeeping
IT directors often prioritise:
• Clients
• Development
• Sales
Bookkeeping becomes an afterthought.
But weak records lead to:
• VAT errors
• Missed expenses
• R&D complications
• HMRC risk
• Poor decision-making
And with increased HMRC scrutiny and digital reporting requirements, compliance is tightening.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Maintain clean digital bookkeeping
• Reconcile monthly
• Keep contractor records clear
• Document everything
Good records reduce risk.
8️⃣ Ignoring R&D Opportunities — Or Claiming Incorrectly
Some IT companies:
• Miss legitimate R&D claims
• Or claim aggressively without evidence
Both are risky.
HMRC scrutiny on R&D claims has increased significantly.
Poorly prepared claims can lead to enquiries.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Only claim where criteria are genuinely met
• Maintain technical documentation
• Ensure financial figures are accurate
Opportunity is good. Overreach isn’t.
9️⃣ No Month 9 Tax Planning
By Month 9 of your financial year, you should know:
• Estimated profit
• Corporation Tax liability
• Dividend strategy
• DLA position
• Pension planning options
If you’re waiting until after year-end, you’ve lost control.
✅ How to Avoid It:
• Schedule annual Month 9 review
• Adjust strategy before the year closes
Planning creates flexibility.
10️⃣ Outgrowing Your Accountant
As IT companies scale, complexity increases.
But many directors stay with:
• A compliance-only accountant
• No management reporting
• No forecasting
• No proactive advice
The business grows.
The support doesn’t.
That gap becomes expensive.
✅ How to Avoid It:
Work with an accountant who:
• Understands digital businesses
• Provides management accounts
• Plans tax early
• Monitors risk
• Advises on growth
Not just files forms.
The Bigger Picture
Most accounting mistakes in IT businesses aren’t reckless.
They’re reactive.
They happen because:
• Growth outpaced structure
• Visibility was limited
• Advice wasn’t proactive
And in tech, speed magnifies weaknesses.
The faster you grow, the more structure you need.
What We See When Clients Move to Us
Common themes:
• No tax reserves
• Overdrawn DLAs
• No dividend documentation
• Poor cashflow visibility
• Stress despite profitability
Once structure is added:
• Cashflow stabilises
• Tax surprises disappear
• Confidence increases
• Growth becomes controlled
Because clarity changes behaviour.
Final Thought
IT companies don’t fail because of lack of skill.
They struggle when financial structure doesn’t keep pace with growth.
Avoidable mistakes compound.
But so do good systems.
If you’d like to review whether any of these risks are building in your business:
👉 Book a clarity call
Because growth is powerful.
But control makes it sustainable.