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The Revenue Problem Most Leaders Ignore

Ryan Taft, Impact Eighty-Eight
Ryan Taft, Impact Eighty-Eight

There’s a reason many sales teams plateau, and it’s rarely the market.

It’s not effort.
It’s not talent.
It’s not even motivation.

It’s a lack of revenue discipline.

Most organizations treat revenue like a quarterly event. The team rallies around the number. Pressure builds. Activity spikes. If they hit it, everyone celebrates. Then the cycle resets.

But revenue doesn’t respond to pressure. It responds to structure.

The Hard Question

If your revenue feels inconsistent, ask yourself:

  • Are expectations clearly defined, or assumed?
  • Does coaching happen weekly, or only when numbers dip?
  • Do standards stay firm in slow months, or do they soften?
  • Are you developing people or mostly reviewing reports?

Inconsistent revenue is rarely a sales problem. It’s usually a leadership system problem.

Revenue Is Not a Goal. It’s a Standard.

Goals are something you chase. Standards are something you live by.

When revenue is treated as a goal, teams sprint. When revenue is treated as a standard, teams execute.

The shift is subtle but powerful:

  • Instead of asking, “How do we hit the number?”
  • Ask, “What behaviors must exist daily for the number to become inevitable?”

Leadership Challenge

Audit your current rhythm:

  1. How often are you inside real sales conversations?
  2. Can every salesperson clearly articulate your defined sales process?
  3. If I asked your team what “great” looks like here, would their answers match?

If clarity isn’t universal, revenue won’t be predictable.

The Real Takeaway

Revenue problems are almost always leadership problems in disguise. Pressure may create short-term spikes. Structure creates sustainable results.

If you want revenue to stabilize, stop chasing numbers and start reinforcing standards.

👉 Order your copy of RevenueGetter here: https://www.amazon.com/RevenueGetter-Build-Coach-Sales-Teams/dp/B0G545DRK9/

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