Not all revenue is good revenue
Here’s a truth that stops most owners cold the first time they really look at it: some of your customers are costing you money, even though they’re paying you. The wrong mix of customers can cap a business as hard as any pricing or capacity ceiling — and because the revenue looks fine on the surface, it’s the plateau cause owners are slowest to see.
This is Part 4 of From Stuck to Growing. Part 1 mapped the plateau ceilings; we’ve covered pricing and hiring. This part is about the customer mix — how the blend of customers you serve can quietly cap your growth, why your worst customers cost more than they pay, and how to deliberately reshape who you serve.
The 80/20 of customers
The Pareto principle shows up brutally in customer bases. For most businesses, roughly 20% of customers generate something like 80% of the profit — and at the other end, a chunk of customers generate little profit or actively lose money once you account for the time, hassle, and stress they cost. The exact numbers vary, but the shape is nearly universal: your customers are not equally valuable, and some are negative.
The work behind this is well-established. Research on customer profitability — including Harvard Business Review’s analysis of unprofitable customers — has long documented that many businesses unknowingly serve customers at a loss, subsidized by their profitable ones. The owner sees total revenue and assumes it’s all good. It isn’t.
What bad customers actually cost
The customers quietly draining your business cost you in ways that don’t show up on an invoice:
- Time. The high-maintenance customer who needs ten emails for a small job eats hours that your best customers would never require. Time is your scarcest resource — and the capacity ceiling means every hour on a bad customer is an hour stolen from a good one.
- Margin. The customer who haggled you down to a price where you barely profit, then demands premium service. The pricing problem and the customer-mix problem are cousins — underpricing attracts exactly these customers.
- Stress and energy. The customer who makes you dread your phone. The morale cost is real and it bleeds into the work you do for everyone else.
- Opportunity. Every hour spent on a draining customer is an hour not spent finding or serving a great one. That’s the hidden cost that caps growth.
The customer mix that caps growth
Here’s how customer mix becomes a plateau. A business fills its capacity with a blend of great, okay, and draining customers. Because it’s at capacity, it can’t take on new great customers — there’s no room. So it stays stuck, its growth capped, while a meaningful slice of its capacity is consumed by customers who barely profit or actively lose money.
The breakthrough isn’t always more customers. Sometimes it’s a better mix of customers — replacing the draining ones with great ones, raising the average value of every hour worked without working more hours. That’s growth through subtraction, and it’s the move owners almost never consider because firing a paying customer feels insane.
How to reshape your customer mix
Reshaping the mix is deliberate work, done carefully:
1. Figure out who your best customers actually are
Look at your customer base honestly. Who’s profitable, easy, loyal, and refers others? Those are your best customers, and the goal is to get more like them. Identify what they have in common — industry, size, need, location — so you can target more of the same.
2. Identify the drains
Be honest about which customers cost more than they’re worth — the time sinks, the margin-killers, the stress-generators. You don’t have to act dramatically, but you have to see them clearly.
3. Raise prices on the marginal ones
Often the cleanest fix. For draining customers, a price increase either makes them profitable (now worth keeping) or prompts them to leave (freeing capacity for better customers). Either outcome improves your mix. This is the customer-mix application of the pricing lever.
4. Gently let the worst ones go
Sometimes the right move is to professionally part ways with a customer who consistently costs more than they pay. “We may not be the best fit for your needs going forward” — said respectfully — frees capacity and energy for customers who value you. Firing a bad customer is one of the most counterintuitive growth moves there is, and one of the most effective.
5. Target more of your best
Once you know who your best customers are, aim your marketing at finding more like them. This connects to word-of-mouth at scale — your best customers tend to refer people like themselves, so serving and delighting them compounds into a better mix over time.
The signs your mix is the problem
- A few customers consume most of your time while contributing little profit.
- You dread certain customers — the stress tax is real and recurring.
- You’re at capacity but margins are thin — busy but not profitable points at a mix problem.
- You can’t take on great new customers because draining ones fill your capacity.
- Your best customers feel underserved because the difficult ones absorb your attention.
If these ring true, your customer mix is capping you, and the fix is reshaping who you serve — not just finding more customers, but finding better ones and making room for them.
What’s coming in Part 5
Part 5 of From Stuck to Growing covers the operational bottleneck — the specific process or system that’s silently capping your capacity, why you’ve stopped seeing it, and how to find and widen it.
Stuck busy but not profitable? We help owners see which customers actually drive profit and reshape the mix — analyze, research, recommend. That’s our website marketing service and Rocket Growth Systems. We don’t grow unless you do.
Final Thoughts
Not all revenue is good revenue. A chunk of most customer bases costs more than it pays — in time, margin, stress, and opportunity — and that bad mix can cap a business as hard as any other ceiling. The breakthrough is often growth through subtraction: raise prices on the marginal customers, let the worst ones go, and aim your capacity at more of your best.
Run the five signs against your business. If you’re busy but not profitable, your customer mix is probably the ceiling — and reshaping it, not just adding more customers, is the move. There’s no ego in business, only profit, and that includes the hard call of admitting which customers aren’t worth keeping.
Further Reading
If you want to dig into customer profitability and mix, here are reputable sources worth bookmarking:
- Harvard Business Review – Unprofitable Customers
- Bain & Company – Customer Loyalty Economics
- McKinsey & Company – Customer and Growth Insights
- Harvard Business Review – The Value of Keeping the Right Customers
- Wharton – Customer Strategy Research



