The Business House

The Business House

Running a business has become more challenging in these times, as the funding winter is still in full swing. Many startups have had to pivot, shut down, or seek profitability.

I often get asked, "How do you build a profitable business?" The truth is, it comes down to scaling—scaling margins, increasing outputs (volumes), and reducing inefficiencies (waste). However, there are some fundamental aspects of scaling that I refer to as The Business House.

A house is a building that functions as accommodation and shelter. Similarly, building a business is like constructing a house. It has essential elements like a "roof, pillars, foundations, and fences".


The Roof (Margins)

The roof, which covers all aspects of a house, can be likened to margins in a business. Margin refers to the remaining revenue after deducting the variable costs of producing a product or service. It determines how much each sale contributes to covering fixed costs and ultimately, the business's profit. The more output sold per dollar, the better the margins. This raises the question, "Which is more important: higher volumes with lesser margins, or higher margins with lesser volumes?" While I lean towards the former, understanding your business is crucial in making this decision.


The Pillars and Foundations

Pillars in a building serve two main functions: they provide structural support and enhance its aesthetic appeal.

Similarly, in business, pillars refer to core areas that a company identifies as crucial for its success. These include:

  • Management Team: A strong management team allows for sound decision-making and efficient execution.
  • People: Employees are the lifeblood of an organization. They build policies, procedures, and processes that allow for efficient execution.
  • Technology: It improves work efficiency and allows operations to scale beyond physical limitations, reaching remote locations.
  • Customer Focus: Prioritizing customer needs, just like prioritizing the king in chess, can lead to success. Always build for your customers, not just for what you prefer.
  • Operations: The way you run your business is essential. Solid operations allow quick service to your customers. They are not interested in your company's inner workings; they want reliable products or services.
  • Pricing: The process of setting prices for your products and services can enhance your competitiveness.
  • Working Capital: Cash is important, but cash flow is crucial. Remember, the queen is the most versatile piece on a chess board. Even a profitable business can fail if it runs out of cash.

Fences (Moats)

A moat is a deep, wide ditch that surrounds a castle, fort, or town. It's typically filled with water and serves as a defense against attack. In business, moats are defenses that protect you from competition and new entrants. They give you a competitive edge and help maintain profitability. Moats include:

  • Partnerships
  • Distribution
  • Scale efficiency
  • Network effects
  • High switching costs
  • Cost advantage
  • intangible assets

When planning to start a business, consider the aforementioned components and how each one can contribute to your business's profitability.

Gerald Wamugi

Finance Business Partner|Commercial Finance Manager|Finance Manager|Financial Controller

9 个月

Babajide Duroshola Business House concept is solid and concise. To me pricing is one of the most critical aspects of margin determination. Less volume high returns or more volumes less margins, all boils down to product mix, channel mix. Ideally for any business, each product/brand should have a role to play in the business. Eg We have the product that are volume players, help us to drive and retain market share, better fixed cost absorption, even if the margins per unit are low. We have products that are high margin low vol, which could ideally be playing a channel role, i.e maintaining presence in a specific channel, or customer segment.The challenge however is always to optimise the mix so as to rip maximumly in absolute terms. This is further complicated by issues like aggressive competitor practises, state of the economy-inflation etc...

Tobi Odeyemi

Regional Retail Coordinator at M-kopa||CRM||Retail shop mgt||Training and Development||Human Dev||Administrative support||FinTech

9 个月

Very insightful and educative?

Glory Nwogu

Software Engineer (Backend)| Community Manager(#womenofalxse or TechGirlies)|Freelancing part time as an Admin Virtual Assistant

9 个月

Great article. I like the part where you mentioned that it is necessary to first, understand your business before making the decision of producing more volumes with lesser margin or the reverse. Also, the fact that a good business hinges on a lot of things for its survival where the need for a good team can't be overemphasised. Ultimately, a business should focus more on what the consumers need, not just what you think is okay. ????

Oluwatobi Bamidele

First Principles Thinking || Tinkering with High Agency || Technical Product Manager || On a mission to a massive global impact

9 个月

Niceee! This is just about putting business in a sound and proper perspective. And like you rightly mentioned, it majorly depends on the market you operate in; going for a low margin and high volume is pretty much a default because it summarizes the DNA of most market dynamics. And also, in so many cases, the best approach to scale margin is not through a price bump but increasing output and reducing waste, because the pricing is just sort of highly 'market regulated'.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Babajide Duroshola的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了