Diversify or Die: 4 Simple Rules to Stay Alive!

Posted on 25.March.2015 by Mike Winters | @amcomcap

Business team holding their thumbs up

Image: javi_indy / Envato Elements

As an entrepreneur, your number one priority should be to strengthen your business’ ability to withstand future unfavorable economic events. That’s to say, you have an edict to maintain your business as an “Ongoing Concern.” This premise should be the basis of every entrepreneurial endeavor.

Don’t Put All of Your Eggs in One Basket!

In business, as in life, it is easy to fall into old habits and pick the low hanging fruit. So many young entrepreneurs fall into the practice of allowing one customer to account for over 80% of their revenue. In many cases, this is their first customer.

If you have a customer that accounts for over 80% of your revenue, you are no longer in charge of your own destiny. In short, you are no longer an independent entrepreneur. Instead, you’ve allowed yourself, and your company, to become nothing more than a contract employee of your largest customer.

While stating that you’re simply a contract employee may seem harsh, the fact is, few businesses can survive, for even a short period of time, after losing 80% of their revenue overnight. And remember, customers always have the option of moving their business to a new vendor.

Losing a customer can result from something as simple as a personnel change. The vast majority of sales are based on personal relationships that have developed over time. In many instances, a new manager will opt to buy products and services from a list of trusted vendors that he developed while with his previous employer. So, your best old customer, with a new purchasing manager, could stop buying from your company overnight!

The Four Rules

1. Never stop marketing! Even though your business might be at full capacity, keep marketing. You never know when a longtime customer will stop buying from you.

2. As a rule of thumb, I encourage my clients spread their customer base out and try to keep revenue concentrations below 25%. This is more of a guideline than a rule.

3. Try to develop pool of small but high margin customers. Should a big customer go elsewhere, these are the customers that are going to keep your business “in business.”

4. Try to develop personal relationships with all of your customers. A good personal relationship with your customer can provide vital information on planned personnel changes and/or provide intelligence on your competitor’s activities. Never underestimate the value of socializing or entertaining your customers.

image description

Roy Brooks and American Commercial Capital, LLC, has provided invoice-factoring services to Houston-area small businesses since 2003. We work with businesses in San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Fort Worth, Beaumont, Port Arthur, Corpus Christi, and other nearby Texas cities.

If you want to learn more about how cashflow-sensitive invoice factoring can help your business, give us a call at 713-227-3863, contact us here, or fill out our form for a free, no-obligation quote.

READ MORE FROM AMERICAN COMMERCIAL CAPITAL

How Factoring Works for a Small Hot Shot Trucking Company

How Factoring Works for a Small Hot Shot Trucking Company

Hot shot hauling is one of the fastest ways to put a truck to work, but it comes with a built-in cash flow trap: you pay for fuel, insurance, and your truck note in real time, while brokers and shippers pay you on their schedule. Invoice factoring closes that gap. Here is exactly how the process works for a small hot shot operation.

The Cash Flow Problem Every Hot…
Mike Winters 18.06.2026

Can Factoring Help Me Make Payroll on Time?

Can Factoring Help Me Make Payroll on Time?

Yes. If making payroll is the specific worry that brought you here, invoice factoring is one of the fastest, most reliable ways to solve it. Factoring converts your unpaid invoices into cash within about a day, so you can make payroll on time no matter how slowly your customers pay.

For a lot of business owners, “can I cover payroll this week?” is the single most stressful question…

Mike Winters 16.06.2026

How Does Invoice Factoring Affect My Business Credit?

How Does Invoice Factoring Affect My Business Credit?

This is a thoughtful question, especially if you’re trying to build your business credit carefully. The short answer is that factoring is generally gentle on your credit profile — and in some ways can help it — but there are a few nuances worth understanding.

Start with the most important point: factoring is not a loan, so it doesn’t add debt to your business credit profile the way…

Mike Winters 15.06.2026
Back
AMERICAN COMMERCIAL CAPITAL HOME

HOW MUCH COULD FACTORING INCREASE PROFITS FOR YOUR BUSINESS?

CALL 713-227-3863