Well, it can technically hurt a large business too, but it’s far more prevalent for a small business. Sure, while all small businesses are doing financial planning, usually the consensus is to cut costs wherever possible and just try to make do with very little instead. Yeah, sometimes, it just gets to a point where profit feels thinner than it should, and every expense starts looking more and more uncomfortable. So then comes the classic reaction: start cutting. You cut this, pause that, cancel something else, and hope the pressure eases up a bit. That’s how all businesses do it. Which, yes, that’s very normal.
And yeah, that instinct makes sense. Nobody wants to keep paying for things that don’t feel essential. But this is also where a lot of small businesses make things worse without meaning to, because the easiest costs to cut aren’t always the safest ones to cut.
The Cheapest Choice isn’t Always the Smartest One
Okay, so when money feels tight, it’s really tempting to focus on whatever doesn’t look urgent. And again, that makes sense. So that’s usually the stuff that doesn’t create an obvious result by the end of the week. Like what? Well, it’s usually outside help, long-term growth efforts, software that supports the business in the background, stuff like that. On paper, cutting those costs can feel responsible. It can feel disciplined. It can even feel a little satisfying for five minutes.
But of course, cheaper in the moment doesn’t always mean cheaper overall. A lot of people mess that part up because some expenses are there to protect future revenue, not just today’s bank balance. For example, you have a lawn for your business, and you cut off your landscapers, well, when you need work on it again, it’s going to be more expensive because now theres more work to do. Does that make sense?
The Wrong Cut Can Dry Things Up Soon Enough
But what does this mean, though? Well, it ties into what was being stated just up above. Now, some cuts don’t cause an obvious disaster right away. Nothing explodes, nobody sounds an alarm, and the business owner thinks, alright, that wasn’t so bad. Makes total sense. Then a few months go by, leads start slowing down, visibility drops, customers aren’t finding the business as easily, and now there’s this weird feeling that something’s off.
Now, marketing is clearly the example here, but marketing is usually the first thing to be slashed when a business is trying to save money. Businesses will need an agency for search engine optimization and marketing, but they’ll cut it thinking they can DIY it (but everyone is already stretched too thin, so not much happens). So then visibility drops, meaning that future opportunities now plummet.
Sure, cutting marketing (this is just one example here) is saving one bill, well, removing the bill, but at the same time, the momentum is gone. The same goes for removing ingredients in products (be it manufacturing, baking, medicine, etc.), the momentum dies, and people lose interest in a less superior product.
Seriously, Some Expenses Deserve More Thought
Well, yeah, obviously, not every business expense is sacred. Some things absolutely should get cut. For example, random subscriptions nobody uses, tools bought during a motivated little productivity phase, those make sense. But outside of that, maybe put some more thought into this. A small business has to look at what each expense is actually doing.
Is it saving time, bringing in leads, helping people find the business, keeping operations smoother, or making revenue more consistent? Because if they are, maybe it’s a bad idea to cut it.
















