Separate the world into what you charged or paid (price) and how much you sold or used (volume). A simple two-step view clarifies if revenue rose because customers paid more or because you moved more units. This lens works for costs too, revealing whether higher spend reflects negotiated rates or simply greater consumption, and guiding targeted actions that avoid sweeping, ineffective cuts.
Separate the world into what you charged or paid (price) and how much you sold or used (volume). A simple two-step view clarifies if revenue rose because customers paid more or because you moved more units. This lens works for costs too, revealing whether higher spend reflects negotiated rates or simply greater consumption, and guiding targeted actions that avoid sweeping, ineffective cuts.
Separate the world into what you charged or paid (price) and how much you sold or used (volume). A simple two-step view clarifies if revenue rose because customers paid more or because you moved more units. This lens works for costs too, revealing whether higher spend reflects negotiated rates or simply greater consumption, and guiding targeted actions that avoid sweeping, ineffective cuts.
Ten percent of what? Always show the absolute number alongside the percent and the prior period. A small base can turn tiny dollars into dramatic percentages, triggering misguided reactions. Add a quick sentence translating the math into business impact. This habit protects priorities, reduces heat in meetings, and keeps leadership energy aimed at drivers that truly move results.
Comparing January to December often confuses more than it clarifies. Normalize to last year’s same period and adjust for scale when regions or products differ wildly. When apples meet apples, patterns appear. Build a simple calendar of known seasonal effects and annotate charts accordingly. People appreciate when analysis reflects reality they live, not an idealized curve drawn in isolation.
Flooding slides with decimals and footnotes buries the point. Lead with the narrative and keep supporting data available but secondary. Create a rule: if a detail does not change the decision, it belongs in the appendix. This discipline speeds meetings, clarifies ownership, and ensures the real insight is memorable enough to spark action after the deck is closed.