You’re selling more than ever. Your team is busy. Customers are buying. But when you look at your profit and loss statement, the number at the bottom is flat or falling. This is one of the most frustrating problems in business: revenue up, profits down. It happens more often than you’d think, and it usually points to a few specific issues you can fix.

What Causes Revenue to Rise While Profits Fall?
The simple answer is that your costs are growing faster than your revenue. But behind that simple statement are several distinct patterns. Let’s look at the most common ones.
You’re Discounting Too Heavily
Discounts boost volume. But each sale carries a lower margin. If your cost of goods sold stays the same, a 20% discount can wipe out most of your profit. You need significantly more volume just to break even on that product. If your sales growth came from aggressive promotions, check your gross margin per unit. It’s likely lower than before.
Your Cost of Goods Sold Has Crept Up
Suppliers raise prices. Shipping costs rise. Raw materials get more expensive. If you haven’t adjusted your selling prices to match, your gross margin shrinks. Revenue can look healthy while your cost of goods sold eats away at profit.
You Added Fixed Costs to Support Growth
You hired salespeople. You moved to a bigger office. You bought new equipment. These fixed costs don’t go away when sales dip. They also don’t scale perfectly with revenue. A large revenue increase might require a much larger increase in overhead. That mismatch squeezes profit.
Your Product Mix Shifted to Lower-Margin Items
Sometimes revenue growth comes from selling more of your cheaper, lower-margin products. Your average transaction value drops even though unit sales rise. If you track revenue but not gross margin by product line, you might miss this shift.
Customer Acquisition Costs Went Up
Marketing channels get more expensive. Ad costs rise. You spend more to get each customer. That customer might buy once and never return. If your customer acquisition cost (CAC) outpaces customer lifetime value (LTV), your profit per customer goes negative. More customers means more losses.
You’re Paying for Unused Capacity
Growth often leads to over-hiring or over-investing in inventory. You buy in bulk expecting demand that doesn’t fully materialize. That idle capacity—whether labor, storage, or equipment—still costs money. Your revenue grew, but you’re carrying costs for resources you don’t fully use. This is especially common in seasonal businesses where you ramp up for a peak that comes and goes.
How to Diagnose the Real Problem
Before you can fix the issue, you need to know which version of the problem you have. Here’s a step-by-step diagnostic process.
- Calculate your gross margin percentage for the current period and compare it to the same period last year. If it’s lower, your cost of goods sold or product mix is the issue.
- Segment revenue by product line or customer type. See which segments grew. Then check the margin on those segments. A shift to low-margin products will show up here.
- Review your fixed costs. List every new expense added in the last year. Compare the growth rate of fixed costs to revenue growth. If fixed costs grew faster, you have a structural problem.
- Analyze your customer acquisition costs. Divide total marketing and sales spend by the number of new customers. If CAC is rising while average order value stays flat, your profit per customer is falling.
- Check your discount depth and frequency. If you ran more promotions, calculate the average discount percentage. Apply it to your standard gross margin to see the impact on profit.
- Measure capacity utilization. For any assets you added—square footage, equipment, staff—estimate what percentage is actually used. If you have a large amount of idle capacity, that’s a direct drain on profit.
This diagnosis tells you where to focus your energy. Don’t guess. Use your numbers. A few hours of analysis can save months of wasted effort.

Practical Fixes to Restore Your Profit Margins
Once you know the root cause, you can take targeted action. Here are the most effective fixes for each scenario.
Raise Prices Strategically
If your costs have risen, you need to raise prices. Many business owners fear losing customers. But if your product delivers real value, customers will pay more. Try a small increase on a subset of products first. Measure the impact on volume. You’ll likely find that a small price increase has little effect on sales but flows straight to profit. For a deeper dive on pricing strategy, see our guide on Cost-Plus vs. Value-Based Pricing.
Cut Discounts and Promotions
Run fewer sales. Instead of blanket discounts, offer targeted promotions to your best customers. Use bundling to increase average order value without cutting per-unit prices. Train your sales team to sell on value, not price.
Renegotiate with Suppliers
If your cost of goods sold is up, talk to your suppliers. Ask for volume discounts. Explore alternative materials or suppliers. Lock in prices with longer contracts. A small reduction in COGS has a leveraged effect on profit.
Reduce Fixed Overhead
Audit your fixed costs. Can you sublet unused office space? Renegotiate software licenses? Move to a variable cost model where possible. For example, hire contractors instead of employees for fluctuating workloads. Every dollar saved in fixed costs goes directly to profit.
Improve Customer Retention
If CAC is too high, focus on getting existing customers to buy again. Retention is cheaper than acquisition. Implement a loyalty program. Send follow-up emails. Offer subscription options. Increasing repeat purchase rate by even a small amount can dramatically improve LTV and profit.
Right-Size Your Capacity
If you have idle capacity, don’t just accept it. Sell off excess inventory at a discount to clear space. Sublet unused office or warehouse space. Cross-train employees to be flexible so you can shift them to revenue-generating tasks. Consider just-in-time inventory to avoid overstocking. The goal is to match your resource base to actual demand, not hoped-for demand.
A Comparison Table: Types of Profit Margin Leakage
Here’s a quick reference to match your symptoms to the right fix.
| Scenario | Key Indicator | Best Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Discount-heavy growth | Sales volume up, average order value down | Reduce promotions, raise prices |
| Rising COGS | Gross margin percentage declining | Renegotiate suppliers, raise prices |
| Fixed cost bloat | Overhead grew faster than revenue | Cut or convert to variable costs |
| Product mix shift | Low-margin products grew fastest | Adjust sales incentives, drop weak products |
| High customer acquisition costs | CAC rising, LTV flat or falling | Improve retention, narrow ad targeting |
| Idle capacity | Utilization rate below a healthy level | Liquidate excess, sublet, adopt just-in-time |
How to Prevent This Problem in the Future
Fixing the current situation is urgent. But you also need systems to keep profit in line with revenue going forward.
Track Profit per Customer, Not Just Revenue
Make profit per customer a key metric. Know your average gross margin per customer and your customer acquisition cost. If CAC is a large share of LTV, you have a problem. Review this monthly.
Set Price Increase Reminders
Don’t let inflation silently erode your margins. Review your pricing every quarter. If your costs have gone up, adjust your prices. Small, regular increases are easier for customers to absorb than one big jump.
Build a Variable Cost Structure
Whenever possible, tie your costs to revenue. Use performance-based pay for sales staff. Outsource production during peak periods. Rent equipment instead of buying. A variable cost structure protects your profit when revenue drops and scales more efficiently when it grows.
Monitor Your Product Mix Weekly
If you sell multiple products, track the sales mix by margin category. Set targets for the share of high-margin products. If low-margin items start to dominate, you can intervene early.
Review Capacity Decisions Carefully
Before adding staff, space, or equipment, project its utilization over the next 12 months. Only commit to fixed costs if you’re confident demand will support them. Consider a probation period: lease month-to-month or use temp agencies first. Once you lock in a big fixed cost, it’s hard to undo. Slow and measured growth is safer and more profitable than rapid expansion.
When You Should Be Worried
Most cases of revenue up, profits down are fixable. But there are warning signs that your business model itself may be broken. If you see these, consider a deeper strategic shift:
- Gross margin is negative on your core product.
- You need constant discounts to make sales.
- Customer acquisition costs exceed the first year of revenue from that customer.
- You’ve cut costs as much as possible and still can’t turn a profit.
If any of these describe your business, it may be time to revisit your entire pricing strategy or even your product offering. A healthy business can grow revenue and profit together. If they’re diverging, don’t ignore it.
For more on managing your margins, check out The Ultimate Profit Margin Checklist for Ecommerce Stores and our guide on The 3 Most Common Cash Flow Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them).
The fix starts with your data. Pull your numbers, find the gap, and take action. Your profit is waiting.
Frequently asked questions
Why is my revenue increasing but profits are decreasing?
Common causes include rising costs of goods sold, heavy discounting, higher customer acquisition costs, a shift toward lower-margin products, or fixed overhead growing faster than revenue. Each of these can make revenue look healthy while profit margins shrink.
How can I tell if my discounting is hurting profits?
Compare your average order value and gross margin percentage before and after running promotions. If average order value dropped and gross margin fell, discounts are likely eroding profit. Calculate the break-even volume needed to justify each discount to see the true impact.
What is the fastest way to improve profit margins?
Raise prices on your most popular products. Test a 5% increase on a small set of items. If volume doesn't drop significantly, the extra margin goes straight to the bottom line. Also, eliminate unnecessary fixed costs or renegotiate supplier contracts.
Should I cut costs or focus on growth to fix profits?
Both, but start with the low-hanging fruit. Cut any spending that doesn't drive revenue or customer retention. Then optimize your pricing and sales mix. Only after you've tightened the cost side should you reinvest in growth with a focus on profitable channels.
How often should I review my profit margins?
Review your gross margin and net profit margin at least monthly. For product-based businesses, track margin by product line weekly. Quarterly, do a full comparison to the same period last year to spot trends early.