The Moment the Curve Stops Bending There’s a very specific kind of silence that follows slowing growth. It’s not the dramatic kind. Not the kind that makes headlines or sends shockwaves through Slack channels. It’s quieter than that. More… awkward. It’s the moment you open your dashboard expecting the line to keep climbing—because it always has—and instead you get something flatter. Not catastrophic. Not even alarming. Just… underwhelming. The kind of chart that doesn’t scream “crisis,” but definitely whispers, “You’re not special anymore.” And that’s the first uncomfortable truth: growth has a personality. It makes you feel like a genius when it’s accelerating and like a fraud when it’s not. Margins, on the other hand? Margins don’t care about your feelings. Margins are boring. Stable. Relentless. And when growth slows but margins hold, you’re left standing in a very strange place—somewhere between success and disappointment, where nothing is technically wrong, but everything...
I used to think margins were a number. A neat little percentage tucked into an income statement, sitting there like it had something meaningful to say about the strength of a business. Gross margin, operating margin, net margin—clean, comparable, deceptively simple. Then I spent enough time actually studying companies to realize margins aren’t a number. They’re a battlefield. And once you see that, you can’t unsee it. Because every basis point of margin is contested. Fought over. Pressured from directions that don’t show up cleanly in financial models. Customers push down on price. Suppliers push up on costs. Competitors circle like they’ve been waiting for a single weak quarter to pounce. And management—well, management usually insists everything is “under control” right up until it very much isn’t. Margin stability, the thing investors love to admire in hindsight, is not a default state. It’s something that has to be defended. Relentlessly. The Myth of the Stable Business ...