#ClientCase - The “profitable” service business that couldn’t pay itself | John Galt
John Galt

#ClientCase – The “profitable” service business that couldn’t pay itself

Alex Astapchyk I CCO April 10, 2026
#ClientCase – The “profitable” service business that couldn’t pay itself

A client ran a fast-growing service company.

Revenue looked strong.

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Clients were happy.

Team was working nonstop.

But the founder still couldn’t consistently:

  • pay themselves on time
  • plan hiring without anxiety
  • stop checking the bank account daily

The issue wasn’t effort. It was structure.

They priced projects “to win”.

Then delivery took longer than planned.

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Then extra work got added “to keep the relationship”.

Margin leaked quietly on every job.

So we rebuilt the business around one number: contribution margin per project.

What we did:

  1. Created a simple job margin model
  2. Revenue – direct labor – contractors – delivery tools = true contribution margin.
  3. Standardized scope + change orders
  4. Anything outside the baseline scope became a priced add-on. No free extras.
  5. Introduced weekly utilization + capacity planning
  6. Not as HR control. As a cash control system. If utilization drops, cash drops.

Outcome: projects became predictable, pricing stopped being emotional, and the founder started paying themselves monthly without surprises.

Founder takeaway: if you can’t pay yourself reliably, you don’t have a revenue problem. You have a delivery economics problem.

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