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The Profitability Gap: Why Growing Revenue Does Not Always Mean Building a Better Business
Revenue growth is one of the clearest signals of commercial progress. It shows that customers are buying, markets are responding, and the organisation is creating economic activity. It can strengthen investor confidence, attract employees, improve negotiating power, and give leaders the resources to pursue larger ambitions. Yet revenue records only what entered the business.
3 days ago


Growth After the First Sale: How Businesses Build Repeat Revenue, Customer Loyalty, and Referrals
Businesses often define growth by what enters the top of the commercial system: more visibility, more leads, more meetings, more proposals, and more first-time customers. These activities are essential, but they tell only part of the growth story. A company can continue acquiring customers and still remain commercially fragile if too many relationships end after one transaction, fail to renew, or never develop beyond the original purchase.
Jun 29


The Commercial Mindset: How Businesses Learn to Think Like Growth Companies
Many businesses work hard to improve their products, services, teams, websites, marketing, and customer experience. They invest in better operations, better tools, better branding, and better communication. These improvements matter, but they do not always create growth by themselves.
Jun 15


Direct Sales, Distributors, or Partners: How Businesses Can Choose the Best Way to Reach Customers
Many businesses spend months improving their product, preparing marketing material, setting prices, hiring people, and identifying target customers. They believe that once the offer is ready, growth will depend mainly on promotion, outreach, advertising, or sales effort. But one of the most important growth decisions is often made too late or not made clearly enough: how will the business actually reach its customers?
Jun 8


LinkedIn as a Business Asset: Systems, Signals, and Strategic Use
In modern B2B markets, competitive advantage is increasingly shaped before conversations begin. Decisions that once depended on meetings, proposals, and negotiations are now influenced earlier — through perception, credibility, and visibility. Long before a buyer replies to an email, an investor schedules a meeting, or a partner explores collaboration, informal evaluation has already taken place.
Feb 9
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