The strategy of eliminating the "worst 20%" applies across the business. Beyond firing unprofitable customers, analyze your product lines and even your team. Discontinuing low-margin, high-hassle products or removing toxic employees can free up immense resources and improve overall business health just as effectively.

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A practical application of the 80/20 principle, the 50/20 rule provides a clear action plan. Identify the bottom 20% of your customers (or products) and fire the easiest half to get rid of within the next month. This overcomes analysis paralysis and creates immediate momentum in boosting profitability.

Firing decisions should be a function of both incompetence and business constraint. Not all underperformers are equal priorities. Some are like a "trash can on fire in the driveway"—a problem, but not the company's main bottleneck. Focus firing efforts on roles that are the direct constraint to growth.

Focusing on "bad to great" is more effective than "good to great" when scaling. Bad behaviors and destructive norms are so corrosive that they make it impossible for excellence to take root. A leader's first job in a turnaround or scaling effort is to eliminate the bad—like dirty bathrooms or incompetent employees—before trying to implement the good.

Before a major business pivot, first identify what can be let go or scaled back. This creates the necessary space and resources for the new direction, preventing overwhelm and ensuring the pivot is an extension of identity, not just another added task on your plate.

Aggregate profitability can mask serious issues. A company's positive bottom line might be propped up by one highly profitable offer while another "bestseller" is actually losing money on every sale. This requires a granular, per-product profitability analysis to uncover.

Deciding which products or services to cut can be an emotional process for founders. Amy Porterfield advises removing the "drama" by relying on data. By tracking metrics for each offer, she could make objective decisions to retire those that didn't make business sense, simplifying her path to growth.

Audit your revenue streams to distinguish 'busy revenue' (high-effort, soul-sucking work) from 'aligned revenue' (energizing, sustainable systems). Focusing on growing aligned revenue, even if it means restructuring or eliminating profitable but draining streams, is key to a sustainable business model.

Most entrepreneurs are trapped doing things they believe they *should* do, leading to burnout with minimal results. The Pareto Principle suggests 80% of your results come from 20% of your efforts. By auditing your activities to find that 20%, you can eliminate busywork and focus only on what truly moves the needle.

A potential buyer's first move is often to fire the least profitable clients. Proactively dropping these clients—those on legacy deals or who complain excessively—improves your gross margin, making the business more attractive and valuable before a sale even begins.

A significant portion of profitability issues stems from serving "bad money" customers who are unprofitable or break-even. Firing them eliminates direct losses and frees up time, energy, and resources to better serve your best clients, leading to a direct and immediate improvement in the bottom-line and team morale.

Boost Profit by Pruning Unprofitable Products and Toxic Employees, Not Just Bad Customers | RiffOn