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You can do a million in revenue and still spend Tuesday morning on the phone with your bookkeeper, wondering why the bank account is light. The P&L looks fine. The Shopify dashboard says you had a record month. And yet the supplier deposit for the next container is due Friday and the maths is not adding up.

That gap, the one between profitable and liquid, is the single most punishing problem in Aussie DTC. The 2026 ASBFEO Pulse data shows one in six Australian SMEs now lose more than $2,500 a month to late payments, more than double what it was in 2024. One in four say cash flow is the thing that could kill them. Public DTC brands across 11 SEC filings sit at a median 133 days of inventory on hand. That is four and a half months of cash, frozen on a pallet in a Western Sydney 3PL, waiting to ship.

The brands that survive are not the ones with the best ads. They are the ones who treat working capital as a separate scoreboard from profit. They run a short cash conversion cycle (CCC), they negotiate supplier terms like a CFO, and they know exactly how many days their cash is locked up before it turns into another order. This playbook is the 5-lever framework we use inside eCommerce Circle to free up trapped cash without touching your P&L.

The Cash Conversion Cycle, In Plain English

The cash conversion cycle is the number of days between paying your supplier and getting that cash back from a customer order. It is the single most honest number in your business. Profit can be massaged. Revenue can be vanity. CCC is hard.

The formula is three pieces:

The maths is: CCC = DIO + DSO – DPO. A healthy DTC brand sits between 60 and 120 days. Anything below 60 is genuinely strong. Above 120 means too much working capital is sitting in inventory, and you will fund growth out of your own pocket every time you scale.

A worked example. A skincare brand doing $200K a month at 65% gross margin holds 90 days of inventory, gets paid by Shopify Payments in 3 days, and pays suppliers in 30 days. CCC is 90 + 3 – 30 = 63 days. Every dollar of sales takes 63 days to come back as cash available for the next inventory order. Cut DIO from 90 to 60 days and CCC drops to 33. On a $200K revenue base, that is roughly $130K of cash released back into the business, with zero impact on profit.

Cash conversion cycle scorecard for five Aussie DTC brands showing days inventory, days sales outstanding, days payable, and net CCC with pass/watch/fail status pills
The CCC scorecard for five Aussie DTC brands at three revenue stages. The brands flagged red are profitable but cash-poor.

Lever 1: Cut Inventory Days With Ruthless SKU Discipline

Inventory is where most Aussie DTC brands trap their cash. The median public DTC brand is sitting on 133 days of stock. That is four and a half months of frozen capital. The fix is not “buy less”. It is buy smarter, more often, and only what the data tells you will sell in the next 60 days.

The 2026 vertical benchmarks give you a target. Fashion and apparel should be turning 4 to 7 times a year (52 to 91 days of stock). Beauty and cosmetics should be 4 to 9 turns (41 to 91 days). Supplements and consumables should turn 8 to 12 times (30 to 46 days). If your turnover ratio is below the bottom of this band, you have a working capital problem disguised as a stocking strategy.

Three moves that work in 30 days:

Tool stack: install Inventory Planner ($99 AUD per month for the starter tier, native to Shopify) or Stocky (free for Shopify Plus, $29 for everyone else). Both pull your sales history, calculate reorder points based on lead time and safety stock, and flag SKUs that are overstocked. The free version of Shopify’s native reports will tell you sell-through rate per SKU; that alone is enough to start the cull.

Lever 2: Negotiate Supplier Terms Like A CFO, Not A Buyer

This is the single biggest lever most founders never pull. A 30-day shift in DPO (from net 0 to net 30, or net 30 to net 60) has the same effect on cash flow as a 30-day cut in inventory. The difference is, DPO costs you nothing. Your supplier is sitting on the same cash flow problem you are. They want the order locked in.

The framework we use inside Circle has four asks, in order of difficulty:

Supplier term ladder showing net 0, net 30, net 60, net 90 with cash flow impact in AUD, days payable outstanding change, and supplier risk rating
The supplier term ladder. Each step up frees more working capital, but the trust level required steps up too.

The cash impact: on a brand spending $80K a month on COGS, every 30-day shift in DPO frees up roughly $80K of working capital permanently. That is not a one-off win. It is $80K that lives in your bank account every single month from then on.

Lever 3: Tighten The DSO Side (Payments, Wholesale, Marketplaces)

For most pure DTC Shopify brands, DSO is a non-issue. Shopify Payments settles in two to three business days. PayPal in one. Klarna and Afterpay pay you upfront and carry the customer credit risk themselves.

But the moment you add wholesale, B2B, or marketplace channels, DSO becomes a serious working capital drag.

Three moves that compress DSO:

Lever 4: Pre-Order, Waitlist, And Drop Models (Cash Before COGS)

The dirty secret of working capital is that the best brands have already broken the equation. They collect cash before they pay for goods. This is not new (Apple, Tesla, and Supreme have all run negative CCC models for years). It is now well within reach for Aussie DTC.

The four pre-order plays that work on Shopify in 2026:

Set up: native Shopify pre-orders work with the PreOrder Globo ($14.95 AUD per month) or PreProduct ($24.99 per month) apps. Both let you set a partial deposit (we recommend 30 to 50%), set the ship date on the product page, and trigger an automated email cadence that warms the customer through the wait. Klaviyo handles the waitlist email flow natively if you connect via the Shopify Klaviyo Inventory feed.

12-week working capital release dashboard showing cash trapped vs cash released, CCC days reduction trend chart, and lever-by-lever contribution stack
The 12-week working capital release dashboard tracks every dollar freed from each lever. The compound math is the real story.

Lever 5: Use Working Capital Financing Like A Tool, Not A Crutch

If you have done the first four levers and still have a structural cash gap, financing is a legitimate tool. The mistake most founders make is using debt to paper over an operational problem (slow turns, sloppy supplier terms, a bloated SKU range). Financing only works if your unit economics are strong and your CCC is moving in the right direction.

The 2026 Aussie ecommerce financing stack:

The discipline test: never use external financing to fund inventory that has not validated demand. Only deploy financing capital against your top-selling SKUs with proven sell-through and a tight reorder cycle. If you use debt to fund a SKU expansion or a new category test, you are betting cash against an unvalidated hypothesis. That is the path to a $300K debt balance and a warehouse of dead stock.

The Compound Effect: A .4M Brand Walks Through The Maths

Let me ground this in a real case. We worked with a Melbourne-based beauty brand doing $1.4M annual revenue, 62% gross margin, 45% net of marketing. Profitable on paper. Cash account was sitting at $38K against a $180K monthly burn. They were one bad month away from a problem.

The CCC audit showed:

Over 90 days, we ran the 5 levers:

The result: CCC fell from 100 days to 37 days. Working capital released back into the business: $182K. The bank account ended the next quarter at $221K, not $38K. The brand went from one bad month away from a problem to genuinely capitalised. Same revenue. Same profit. Different liquidity.

The 90-Day Working Capital Rollout

Here is the sequence we run inside Circle. Do not try to do all five levers at once. The point is compounding wins, not heroics.

Track CCC weekly. Put the number on the wall. Do not let it drift back. The whole point of this work is that the gains are permanent. You do not need to repeat the exercise. You just need to defend it.

Three Failure Modes To Avoid

The brands that try this and fail tend to do one of three things:

Why This Compounds With Everything Else

The cash conversion cycle is the meta-metric that sits above CR, AOV, ROAS, and contribution margin. You can have a 4% conversion rate, $120 AOV, and a 32% contribution margin, and still be technically insolvent because all your cash is in a container.

Tighten the CCC, and every other lever in the business gets stronger. You can take on inventory bets faster. You can fund a Meta ads push without dipping into credit. You can negotiate harder with suppliers because you are not desperate. You can buy back equity from an early investor. You can pay yourself. The same brand, with the same revenue and the same profit, becomes a fundamentally different business once it is liquid.

The brands that scale past $5M, $10M, $20M in revenue without diluting equity all run a tight CCC. The brands that stall out, or worse, fold while showing P&L profits, almost always do so because they ran out of cash, not customers. The 5-lever framework is how you stay on the right side of that line.

Inside eCommerce Circle, working capital and cash conversion is one of the core pillars we work on with every member, alongside the broader CAC Payback Period Playbook and the unit economics work that sits underneath it. If you want a second opinion on your CCC, let’s talk.

The Shopify Cash Conversion Cycle Playbook: The 5-Lever Working Capital Framework Aussie DTC Founders Use to Free Up $80K+ in Trapped Inventory Cash (Without Touching Profit or Slowing Growth)
Paul Warren

Written by

Paul Warren

Helping Shopify brand owners scale smarter through the eCommerce Circle coaching community.

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