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Setting Up a Business calendar    Mar 26, 2026

The Distance Between You and an Industry Leader Is Measurable. Here's How to Find It.

The first step to improving your profit is comparing your numbers to a profitable business in your industry. Keep reading to find out how.

Most business owners who want to grow know the goal: make more, spend less, keep more of what comes in.

What they're usually missing is a clear picture of how much more to make, how much less to spend. Not compared to last year. Compared to the best businesses in their industry.

Without that comparison, you don't know if your margins are strong or below average. You don't know if your costs are competitive or quietly high. You're managing the business without knowing what a well-run version of it actually looks like.

Here's how to find out.

What the Best Businesses in Your Industry Actually Look Like

The Financial Performance Data tool, published by the federal government, pulls from CRA tax filings and shows you precisely how businesses in your industry break down their revenue and costs.

What they spend on delivering their product or service. What they spend on running the business. And what's left over as profit.

These aren't estimates or industry surveys. It's what businesses in your category actually reported to the CRA. And at the top of that data is a clear picture of what the strongest operators in your space look like on paper.

You can find it here: https://ised-isde.canada.ca/site/financial-performance-data/en

Finding Your Gap

Pull your own numbers as a percentage of revenue.

In QuickBooks Online, run a Profit and Loss report and turn on the "% of income" column. This converts every dollar figure into a percentage.

This is the only way to compare yourself fairly to businesses of different sizes.

Then find your industry and revenue range in the ISED tool.

Put the two side by side. You're looking for the one or two places where the gap is biggest, because that's where top performers pulled ahead, and where you have the most to gain.

What the Gap Is Probably Telling You

Your delivery costs are higher than theirs.

You're spending more to produce your product or service than the best operators in your space. That usually means one of three things:

  • Your prices are too low for what it costs you to deliver
  • A key supplier or subcontractor needs to be renegotiated
  • There's a service or product in your mix that costs more to deliver than you're charging for it

Your overhead is higher than theirs.

Your delivery costs are competitive, but you're spending more on running the business. That usually comes down to one of these:

  • You have more staff than the work actually requires, either headcount grew ahead of revenue, or roles aren't as productive as they look on paper
  • Your space costs too much relative to what you're generating, rent made sense at a different revenue level and hasn't been renegotiated
  • You're carrying software, subscriptions, or services you've stopped getting value from but haven't cut
  • Your owner's draw or salary is above what the business can sustain at your current revenue level

No meaningful gap.

You're already at or near the top of your category. Now the job is knowing that, protecting it, and understanding what's producing it so you don't accidentally undo it.

One Gap at a Time

The point isn't to fix everything at once. It's to stop guessing about where to focus.

If your delivery costs are running 8 points higher than top performers in your revenue range, that's not a vague problem anymore. It's a specific one with a specific size.

You know what you're working toward. You can test a price increase, revisit a supplier contract, or cut a service that's costing more than it's worth, and measure whether the gap actually moved.

That's the difference between running on gut feel and running on a road map.

A Note on the Data

The ISED data runs a few years behind. CRA takes time to compile and publish.

The ratios don't shift dramatically year over year in most industries, so it still holds up as a benchmark. Use it to understand where your gap is, not as a live scoreboard.

The Starting Point

Most business owners are working to improve without knowing what they're improving toward.

The gap between their numbers and what top performance in their industry looks like is there. They just haven't measured it yet.

Two minutes with this tool changes that.

If you want more two minute tools like this one - sign up for our newsletter below :)

Client Success Partner at Mesa CPA

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