If your revenue looks similar to last year but your take-home feels smaller, you’re not imagining things. Costs are up across the board - wages, insurance, energy, supplies, software - and for most businesses, those increases haven’t been matched by price rises or productivity gains. The result is a quiet margin squeeze that’s catching a lot of business owners off guard.
The good news? Once you can see exactly where your margins are being eroded, you can do something about it. That’s where most of our conversations with clients start right now.
Cost increases aren’t always dramatic. They tend to creep in - a wage review here, a supplier increase there, a software subscription that renews at a higher rate. Individually, none of them seem like a big deal. Collectively, they can wipe out the profit buffer you’ve built up over years.
The categories we’re seeing hit hardest right now are:
A lot of business owners focus on revenue and net profit but gloss over gross margin. That’s a mistake - especially right now. Gross margin tells you how efficiently you’re converting revenue into profit before overheads. If your gross margin is falling while revenue holds steady, your cost of delivery is going up and it’s only a matter of time before it shows up at the bottom line.
We encourage every client to benchmark their gross margin monthly, not just at year end. Small movements in margin, compounded over 12 months, can make a significant difference to what you actually walk away with.
When margins are under pressure, you essentially have three options: reduce costs, increase prices, or do more with the same resources. Most businesses need a mix of all three.
Not a once-over glance - a proper cost review. Pull up every recurring expense and ask whether it’s still earning its place. Are you getting value from all your subscriptions? Have you renegotiated supplier contracts recently? Is your staffing structure matched to your current revenue level? This kind of exercise regularly surfaces savings that go straight back to the bottom line.
Many business owners are reluctant to raise prices, worried about losing customers. But if your costs have gone up 8–12% over two years and your prices haven’t moved, you’re effectively working harder for less. A well-communicated, modest price increase - especially backed by genuine value delivery - is rarely as damaging as people fear. We can help you model the impact before you make any changes.
Productivity is the third lever - and often the most overlooked. Are there parts of your business that take significant time but generate a disproportionately small amount of revenue? Are there jobs or clients that consistently run over budget? Margin analysis by product, service line, or customer segment can reveal which parts of your business are genuinely profitable and which are quietly dragging everything else down.
Margin pressure isn’t going away overnight. But it’s also not something you just have to absorb. The businesses that come out ahead are the ones treating this as a trigger to get clearer on their numbers, tighter on their costs, and more deliberate about how they price and deliver their work.
If you’re not sure where your margins are sitting right now - or what’s driving them - that’s exactly the kind of conversation we have with clients every week. Let’s look at the numbers together and work out what moves make sense for your business.
Get in touch with the Trekk Advisory team to book a margin health check.