An Interview with Cash Flow Mike Milan


The Industry Has a Problem
There’s no shortage of advice for accountants and advisors right now.
More marketing.
More content.
More funnels.
But when a client looks across the table and asks:
“What should we do next?”
Most advisors hesitate.
That’s the real problem.
Interview: Cash Flow Mike Milan
Q: Let’s start here. What do most advisory coaches get wrong?
They focus on exposure instead of execution.
They’re trying to turn accountants into marketers.
That’s backwards.
You don’t need more leads if you can’t confidently guide the clients you already have.
Advisors don’t lose deals because of bad marketing.
They lose trust when they hesitate in the moment.
Q: What moment are you talking about specifically?
You’re in a meeting.
The financials are clean.
Everything ties out.
But something doesn’t feel right.
Cash is tighter than it should be.
Margins look fine but there’s pressure somewhere.
You walk the client through the numbers.
And then they ask:
“Okay… what should we do next?”
That’s the moment.
And that’s where most advisors slow down.
Q: Why does that happen?
Because the tools they’re using stop too early.
They’re great at explaining what happened.
But they don’t help you decide what to do next.
So you end up with insight but no direction.
That gap creates hesitation.
And hesitation is what the client feels.
Q: So what should advisors focus on instead?
Structure.
Not more data.
Not more reports.
A way to move from numbers to decisions every time.
Most advisors already understand the financials.
They just don’t have a repeatable way to turn that into direction.
Q: You’ve said before “more knowledge isn’t the problem.” What is?
Lack of structure.
That’s it.
Advisors don’t struggle because they don’t know enough.
They struggle because they see too much.
They look at a set of financials and find ten different issues and then they freeze.
The job isn’t to solve everything.
The job is to identify what matters right now and move.
Q: How do you actually do that in a conversation?
We use a simple framework called FIX.
Find the issue that matters most
Identify what’s driving it
Execute a clear next step
That’s it.
No overthinking.
No overwhelm.
Just a path forward.
Q: What changes when an advisor has that structure?
The moment changes.
The client asks:
“What should we do next?”
And instead of pausing…
You say:
“Here’s what’s actually happening.
Here’s what matters most right now.
Here’s what we’re going to do.”
That’s where confidence shows up.
Q: What’s the biggest misconception about cash flow advisory?
That it’s about reports.
It’s not.
Reports explain the past.
Advisors guide decisions.
If all you’re doing is delivering clean financials, you’re replaceable.
If you can confidently guide what happens next, you’re not.
Q: Where does Clear Path To Cash fit into this?
It gives advisors a structure they can actually use in real conversations.
Not theory.
Not concepts.
A way to step into that moment when something feels off and confidently move it forward.
Q: What should an advisor do differently starting now?
Stop trying to learn more.
Start practicing structure.
In your next client meeting:
Don’t lead with numbers.
Ask:
“What’s been bothering you lately in the business?”
Lock onto that.
Solve one thing.
Move it forward.
That’s how confidence builds.
Final Thought
Most advisors don’t fail because they don’t know enough.
They fail because when the moment comes, there’s no structure to follow.
And without structure, there’s hesitation.
That moment… we know it.