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The 3 Numbers Every Business Owner Should Check Monthly (But Usually Don’t)

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The 3 Numbers Every Business Owner Should Check Monthly (But Usually Don’t)

Most business owners know their revenue.

Ask what they did last month?
They’ll answer instantly.

But ask them this:

  • How long could your business survive without new revenue?

  • What’s your actual margin after delivering your work?

  • What percentage do you truly keep?

That’s where the pause happens.

Because revenue feels like progress.

But these three numbers?
They tell you if your business is actually working.

Why Revenue Alone Gives You a False Sense of Control

Revenue is exciting.

It’s also incomplete.

You can grow revenue and still:

  • Run out of cash

  • Shrink your margins

  • Take home less money

That’s why smart business owners don’t just track growth—

They track what sticks.

And it starts here.

1. Cash Runway: “How Long Can You Last?”

Cash runway tells you how many months your business can operate if revenue slows down—or stops.

It’s your buffer.

Your leverage.

Your ability to make decisions without pressure.

Quick calculation:
Cash on hand ÷ Monthly expenses = Runway (in months)

Example:
$60,000 cash
$20,000 monthly expenses
= 3 months of runway

That’s not a crisis.

But it’s not a comfort either.

Why it matters:
When payments slow (and they will), runway determines whether you:

  • Stay in control

  • Or start making reactive decisions
2. Gross Margin: “Are You Making Money on the Work?”

Gross margin shows what’s left after delivering your product or service.

Not after everything—just the direct costs.

Formula:
(Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold) ÷ Revenue

This is where a lot of businesses get surprised.

Because you can be busy…
fully booked…
and still underpriced.

Watch for:

  • Margins shrinking as you grow

  • Costs creeping up quietly

  • Services that take more time than they’re worth

If your margin is thin, more sales won’t fix it.

They’ll just scale the problem.

3. Net Profit %: “What Do You Actually Keep?”

This is the number that matters most.

Net profit percentage shows what’s left after everything:

  • Expenses

  • Overhead

  • Taxes

  • Operations

Formula:
Net Profit ÷ Revenue

Example:
$500,000 revenue
$50,000 profit
= 10% net profit

That means for every $1 you earn…
You keep $0.10.

For many business owners?

That number is lower than expected.

The Pattern Most Businesses Fall Into

Here’s how it usually plays out:

Revenue increases.
Expenses quietly follow.
Margins tighten.
Cash gets squeezed.

But because revenue looks strong…

Nothing gets addressed.

Until it has to be.

What Changes When You Track These Monthly

You stop guessing.

You start seeing:

  • Where money is leaking

  • When to raise prices

  • When to cut costs

  • How much risk you are actually carrying

And more importantly, you have the right conversations with your advisor before small issues turn into expensive ones.

Instead of reacting late…

You adjust early.

Keep It Simple (That’s the Advantage)

You don’t need more dashboards.

You don’t need more reports.

You need:

  • Cash runway

  • Gross margin

  • Net profit %

Checked once a month.

Because the businesses that stay strong aren’t tracking everything—

They’re tracking what matters.

Final Thought

If you’re not watching these numbers, you’re relying on assumptions.

And assumptions are expensive.

Clarity doesn’t just help you grow.

It helps you keep what you earn.

If you’re not sure where your numbers stand—or want help improving them—

Contact this firm today to get clarity on your cash flow, margins, and profitability, and start making more confident decisions.

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