/
© 2026 RiffOn. All rights reserved.

Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

  1. The Amy Porterfield Show
  2. Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home
Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show · Oct 23, 2025

Stop chasing revenue and start uncovering hidden profits. Learn to analyze your numbers, pull the right profit levers, and build a sustainable business.

Your Highest-Revenue Offer May Not Be Your Most Profitable

Entrepreneurs often assume the product generating the most revenue is the most valuable. However, when factoring in the time and energy required for delivery (return on time), that "bestseller" might actually be the least profitable per hour, making it a poor candidate for scaling.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

An Unusually High Profit Margin Can Signal Underinvestment and Stagnation

Many founders run "too lean," maximizing short-term profit at the expense of long-term growth. Strategically investing in a team, even if it lowers margins temporarily, frees the founder to focus on scaling, leading to greater overall profitability and less burnout.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

Frame Price Increases as a Prerequisite for Long-Term Customer Support

Founders often feel guilty about raising prices. Reframe this: sustainable profit margins are what allow your business to survive and continue serving customers. Without profitability, the business fails and everyone loses. It's a matter of ensuring longevity, not greed.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

A $1M Business With 5% Profit Is a Recipe for Founder Burnout

Chasing a top-line revenue goal like "$1 million" is a vanity metric. A business earning $1M at a 5% margin nets only $50,000 for the owner. The focus should be on maximizing profit percentage, not just the revenue number, to build a sustainable and rewarding enterprise.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

Corporate Profit Benchmarks Are Irrelevant for Small Online Businesses

Small business owners often compare their margins to industry standards like 10%. These benchmarks are based on large corporations with massive overhead. Online businesses, especially those selling digital products or services, should aim for significantly higher margins and not use irrelevant comparisons.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

A Profitable Company Can Unknowingly Sell Money-Losing Products

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.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago

Calculate True Product Cost By Assigning a Salary to Your Own Labor

To see if an offer is scalable, factor in your own labor as a direct cost. Ask, "What would I have to pay someone to do this work?" Including this "founder salary" in your unit economics reveals the real profit margin and whether you can afford to hire help to grow.

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home thumbnail

Profit > Revenue: Tiny Tweaks, Bigger Take‑Home

The Amy Porterfield Show·5 months ago