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Business Coaching

Profitability 101–301: How Small & Mid-Size Businesses Actually Make Money (and Keep It)

Don Jacks |

Most business owners don’t fail because they lack hustle.
They fail because they don’t understand profitability.

Revenue feels good.
Busy feels productive.
But profit is what gives you freedom, stability, and options.

Let’s break profitability down—from the basics to the advanced—so you can see where you are and what to work on next.

Three_Levels_of_Business_Profitability
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Level 1: Profitability Basics (Where Most Businesses Get Stuck)

At its simplest, profitability is:

Revenue – Expenses = Profit

Yet this is where many businesses already go sideways.

The most common mistakes:

  • Confusing revenue with income

  • Paying yourself last (or inconsistently)

  • Not knowing your true monthly operating costs

  • Running the business through your personal account

What to get right at this level:

  1. Separate accounts
    Business checking. Business savings. Personal account. Non-negotiable.

  2. Know your real monthly number
    What does it cost to operate before you pay yourself?

  3. Pay yourself intentionally
    Even if it’s modest. Owners who don’t pay themselves don’t know if their business actually works.

  4. Track three numbers monthly

    • Revenue

    • Expenses

    • Net profit (after owner pay)

If you don’t have clarity here, nothing advanced will fix it.


Level 2: Intermediate Profitability (Control & Predictability)

Once the basics are stable, the next question becomes:

“Where is my profit coming from—and where is it leaking?”

This is where real control starts.

Key concepts at this level:

1. Gross Profit vs. Net Profit

  • Gross profit = revenue minus direct costs (labor, materials, fulfillment)

  • Net profit = what’s left after overhead

Many businesses have decent revenue but terrible gross margins—and don’t realize it.

2. Margin Awareness

Ask:

  • Which services/products are most profitable?

  • Which ones consume time but deliver little return?

  • What would happen if I raised prices 5–10%?

Margins matter more than volume.

3. Owner Time ROI

Your time is an expense—whether you track it or not.

If you’re doing $20/hour work as the owner, profitability will always be capped.

4. Simple Forecasting

You don’t need a complex spreadsheet.
You need:

  • Average monthly revenue

  • Average monthly expenses

  • A 90-day cash outlook

Predictability reduces stress—and bad decisions.


Level 3: Advanced Profitability (Scalability & Freedom)

This is where profitability becomes a system, not a result.

Advanced operators think differently:

1. Profit Is Designed, Not Discovered

High-performing businesses plan profit first:

  • Target profit margin

  • Target owner compensation

  • Target reinvestment

Then they reverse-engineer expenses to support it.

2. Leverage & Delegation

Profitability improves when:

  • The owner steps out of operations

  • Systems replace memory

  • Roles are clearly defined

A business that requires the owner for everything is fragile.

3. Cash Flow Strategy

Profit on paper means nothing if cash is tight.

Advanced businesses:

  • Build cash reserves

  • Plan for taxes quarterly

  • Separate operating cash from profit cash

Cash buys time. Time buys good decisions.

4. Decision-Level Metrics

At this level, owners track:

  • Profit per employee

  • Revenue per hour of owner involvement

  • Cost of customer acquisition

  • Lifetime customer value

These numbers tell you where to invest and where to cut.


The Truth About Profitability

Profitability isn’t about being greedy.
It’s about being intentional.

Profitable businesses:

  • Serve clients better

  • Pay their people well

  • Weather downturns

  • Create freedom for the owner

Unprofitable businesses feel busy, stressed, and reactive—no matter how big the revenue looks.


Final Thought

Here’s the deal:

If you don’t understand your numbers, your numbers will control you.

Profitability doesn’t require perfection.
It requires clarity, consistency, and courage—especially the courage to look at the truth.

Start where you are.
Fix what’s simple first.
Build from there.

You’ve got this.

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