Your Revenue Ceiling Is Lower Than You Think… Here’s Why You Won’t Hit Your Goal This Year.

Written by Zack Marker | February 25, 2026

If you want to make more money, you first need to know what’s actually possible.

Most service business owners set revenue goals based on hope.

“I want to do $1 million next year.”
“I want to double revenue.”
“I want to hit $2 million.”

That’s fine.

But here’s the real question:

Is that even possible with your current structure?

Because every service business has a built-in revenue ceiling.

And it’s math.

Step 1: How Many Crews Do You Have?

Start simple.

How many production crews are running work?

Not how many you want.
Not how many you plan to hire.

How many do you have right now?

Let’s say you have:

2 crews.

Step 2: How Much Revenue Can One Crew Produce Per Day?

This number needs to be honest.

Not a best-case scenario.
Not your biggest job ever.

What is the realistic average revenue a single crew can produce in a normal working day?

Pick your real number.

Let’s say your crews average $6,000 per day.

Step 3: How Many Working Days Do You Have?

This is where a lot of owners get it wrong.

You don’t work 365 days a year.

You don’t even work 250 days at full production capacity in most seasonal service businesses.

How many real, productive install days do you have?

For a seasonal lighting contractor, that might be:

  • 60 days
  • 75 days
  • 90 days

Let’s say you have 75 productive install days (this varies widely by what services you offer).

Now Multiply It

Crews × Daily Revenue × Working Days

Using the example numbers:

2 crews × $6,000 per day × 75 days = $900,000

That’s your current ceiling.

Not your dream.
Not your goal.

Your ceiling.

If Your Goal Is Higher Than That Number

Then you have only a few options:

  1. Increase daily production per crew (either increase efficiency or raise your average ticket).
  2. Increase the number of productive days (either start your season earlier, or work weekends)
  3. Add more crews

That’s it.

There is no hidden fourth option.

If your math caps you at $900,000 and your goal is $1.5 million, you do not have a motivation problem.

You have a capacity problem.

And capacity problems require structural solutions.

The Mistake Most Owners Make

They try to grow revenue without increasing capacity.

They:

  • Work longer hours
  • Squeeze crews harder
  • Overbook the schedule
  • Lower prices to increase volume

But none of those change the equation.

You cannot outwork a structural ceiling.

The Real Power of This Exercise

This calculation forces clarity.

It tells you:

  • Whether your goal is realistic
  • Whether you need more crews
  • Whether you need better production efficiency
  • Whether your season is too short

It replaces emotional goal-setting with operational reality.

That’s how real growth happens.

Growth Is a Math Problem First

Before you think about:

  • Hiring
  • Marketing spend
  • Scaling
  • Expansion

Run the math.

Know your ceiling.

If you want more revenue than your current structure allows, you must expand capacity.

More crews.
More days.
More production per day.

Growth is not guesswork. It’s math.

Replace Chaos With Systems

Growth doesn’t create control. Systems do.

If you’re building a service business and want cleaner execution, stronger crews, and predictable growth, let’s talk.