What Clarity Looks Like in Practice

Every business here was doing real revenue. The numbers just weren't telling the full story. Here's what changed when they got a CFO in their corner.

Construction & Trades

They were booking $80K months. The owner was still broke.

The owner had been running a fencing and concrete business for four years. Revenue was up. His bank account said otherwise.

He thought he had a sales problem. He had a cash flow problem.

  • Built a job-level P&L tracking material and labor cost per division
  • Identified that two of three divisions were running below 35% gross margin
  • Mapped accounts receivable timing to cash outflows, found a 22-day lag destroying working capital
  • Created a 12-month rolling forecast with weekly cash projections
$38K Recovered in identified margin leakage in the first 90 days
34% → 41% Gross margin improvement after repricing two service lines
4 Years Owner had a clear cash flow picture for the first time

All figures anonymized. Results vary by business.

Property Management

The P&L showed profit. The owner couldn't make payroll.

A DFW-area property management company was managing 40+ units across residential and light commercial. The monthly P&L showed positive numbers every month.

The owner called it "phantom profit." The cash was never actually there when he needed it.

  • Separated revenue by property type and lease structure to find which units were actually cash-positive
  • Built a monthly cash flow model accounting for maintenance reserves, vacancy buffers, and owner distributions
  • Identified $14K per month in expenses being booked as income offsets incorrectly
  • Introduced a simple cash reserve rule: 2 months of operating expenses always on hand
6 Units Operating at negative cash flow despite "positive" P&L entries, identified and corrected
$14K/mo In misclassified expenses corrected. Adjusted profit dropped 18%, but the owner finally trusted the number
18 Months First time in 18 months the owner made a distribution without wondering if payroll would clear

All figures anonymized. Results vary by business.

HVAC / Home Services

How an HVAC Business Added 10 Points of Gross Margin with Better Financial Visibility

Peak Comfort HVAC is an owner-operated home services business generating roughly $900K in annual revenue across service calls, maintenance agreements, equipment installs, and emergency work. The owner runs all operations personally with a team of four technicians and no dedicated finance support.

The business was busy and revenue was growing, but the owner had no clear picture of which jobs were actually profitable. Pricing was based on gut feel and rough estimates. Labor costs varied month to month with no tracking in place. Cash flow felt tight despite strong top-line numbers.

There was no way to tell whether the business was winning or just running fast.

  • Job-level profitability was completely invisible
  • Service pricing had not been reviewed in over two years
  • Technician labor was the biggest cost with no variance tracking
  • Maintenance agreements were underpriced relative to their actual cost to deliver
  • No monthly financial review process existed

After building out a clean financial model and classifying 90 days of transactions by job type and technician:

  • Equipment installation jobs were generating 18% gross margin, well below the 35% target. Parts markups had not kept pace with supplier price increases.
  • Emergency and after-hours calls were priced identically to standard service calls despite 40% higher labor costs.
  • Two of the four technicians had labor cost ratios 15 percentage points higher than the other two, driven by callback rates and job time overruns.
  • Maintenance agreement revenue covered only 61% of its true delivery cost when indirect labor was allocated properly.
  • Built a job-level margin tracking model in Google Sheets, classifying every job by type, technician, and margin tier
  • Created a simple KPI dashboard tracking five metrics: Revenue per Technician, Average Job Value, Labor Cost %, Parts Margin %, and Recurring Revenue %
  • Repriced the maintenance agreement package to reflect true cost plus a 28% margin
  • Introduced a tiered pricing structure for emergency calls with a 20% premium over standard rates
  • Set up a monthly financial review cadence with a one-page summary the owner could review in 15 minutes
27% → 37% Gross margin improvement over two quarters
+22% Emergency call revenue after repricing, with no drop in call volume
91% Maintenance agreement renewal retention after the price adjustment
60 Days Cash flow predictability horizon for planning equipment purchases

The owner identified and addressed the two highest-cost technician situations within 90 days of having the data.

Most HVAC businesses are not struggling because of bad work. They are struggling because they cannot see the numbers clearly enough to make good decisions. A clean financial model and a simple monthly review process can change that in 60 to 90 days.

  • Gross margin improved from 27% to 37% in two quarters for a $900K HVAC business
  • Identified underpriced service lines and technician cost overruns through job-level margin tracking
  • Repriced maintenance agreements and emergency calls, improving cash flow predictability
  • Owner went from zero financial visibility to a 15-minute monthly review process

All figures anonymized. Results vary by business.

Get Started

Your numbers should tell you where to go next.

If you're doing $1M to $25M and still guessing at your margins, we should talk. First call is free.