A founder I know told me her business “did $340,000 last year” with real pride in her voice, and when I asked what she’d actually kept after costs, she paused for a long moment and admitted she genuinely didn’t know the exact number. She knew revenue precisely, down to the dollar. She’d never calculated actual profit with the same rigor, and the gap between those two numbers turned out to be far larger and far less comfortable than she’d assumed once we actually ran it together.
This mix-up is extremely common, and it’s not really a math problem. It’s a language problem, where the word people reach for, “revenue,” carries an emotional weight that “profit” doesn’t, even though profit is the number that actually determines whether a business is working.
Why Revenue Feels Like the More Natural Number to Talk About
Revenue is simple to state and impressive to say out loud. “We did $340,000” is a clean, confident sentence. “We kept $41,000 after all our costs” is a much less flattering sentence, and it requires actually doing the work of tracking every cost honestly, which revenue alone doesn’t demand.
Founders gravitate toward revenue as the headline number partly because it’s genuinely easier to talk about and partly because it feels better, and that emotional pull is exactly why so many businesses end up tracking it carefully while treating profit as an afterthought calculated once a year, if at all, usually only when a tax deadline forces the question.
What Actually Separates the Two Numbers
Revenue is every dollar that comes in the door for goods or services sold, full stop. Profit is what’s left after every cost of running the business is subtracted from that revenue, including costs that are easy to forget when you’re only looking at the top-line number: materials, contractor payments, software subscriptions, your own labor if you’re paying yourself, marketing spend, and the smaller recurring costs that don’t feel significant individually but add up meaningfully across a year.
The founder with the $340,000 business had genuinely forgotten to include her own labor cost in her mental profit calculation, treating her own time as free simply because no formal paycheck was changing hands for it. Once we added a reasonable value for the hours she was personally working, her real profit margin dropped from a number she’d have guessed was healthy to one that was uncomfortably thin.
Why This Confusion Actually Damages Decision-Making
Beyond just an inaccurate mental picture, confusing revenue with profit leads directly to real, costly decisions made on bad information. A founder who believes the business is more profitable than it actually is tends to reinvest too aggressively, hire too early, or take on debt based on a cash cushion that doesn’t actually exist once real costs are accounted for honestly.
I’ve watched this play out directly: a founder secured a loan based partly on an impressive revenue figure, assumed profit was proportionally healthy, and then struggled to make loan payments once actual margins turned out to be far thinner than the revenue number had implied. The lender had asked about profit specifically. The founder’s answer, in hindsight, had been more optimistic than accurate, not out of dishonesty, but out of genuinely not having calculated it precisely before that conversation.
The Middle Number That Also Gets Overlooked: Gross Margin
Between revenue and final profit sits gross margin, revenue minus the direct cost of producing what you sold, before overhead and other business expenses get factored in. This number matters because it tells you something specific: whether the core unit economics of what you’re selling actually work, separate from broader business overhead that can be adjusted or reduced.
A business with strong gross margin but overall thin profit has a fixable overhead problem. A business with weak gross margin has a much harder, more fundamental pricing or cost problem baked into every single sale, regardless of how efficient the rest of the business becomes. Tracking only revenue and final profit, without this middle number, hides which of these two very different problems you’re actually facing.
How to Actually Start Tracking This Correctly
Beyond simply knowing the definitions, the real fix is building a habit of calculating actual profit monthly, not annually, and including your own labor as a real cost even if you’re not currently drawing a formal paycheck for it. A simple monthly tally, revenue in, every real cost including your own time out, gives you an honest running picture instead of a once-a-year surprise calculated under tax deadline pressure.
The founder with the $340,000 business now tracks this monthly, and the discipline alone changed several pricing decisions within the first few months, once thin margins on certain services became visible in a way they’d never been before.
What to Do Now
Calculate your actual profit for last month, not last year, including a real value for your own time even if you haven’t been formally paying yourself. Compare that number honestly against your revenue for the same period.
If the gap between those two numbers surprises you, that’s genuinely useful information, not a reason for alarm on its own. It’s the exact signal that tells you whether pricing, costs, or overhead need real attention, information that stays completely invisible as long as revenue remains the only number getting real attention.