Every company dreams of explosive growth. Founders pitch it. Investors chase it. Analysts build elaborate spreadsheets trying to predict it. Revenue doubling. Markets expanding. New products flying off shelves. Growth is exciting. Growth is glamorous. Growth is the thing that gets CEOs invited onto financial television. But eventually, something inconvenient happens. Growth slows down. Not because the company failed. Not because management got lazy. But because the business reached maturity . The market becomes saturated. Customers already own the product. Competitors copy the innovation. Margins stabilize. Expansion becomes incremental rather than explosive. And at that exact moment, one of the most important strategic questions in corporate finance appears: What do you do with all the cash when growth opportunities shrink? This is the moment when great capital allocators distinguish themselves from mediocre ones. Because allocating capital after growth saturation is not a technical p...
For most of my professional life, I was obsessed with one thing: revenue. Not profit. Not sustainability. Not operational efficiency. Revenue. Revenue was the scoreboard. Revenue was the trophy. Revenue was the headline number everyone loved to talk about in meetings, slide decks, and quarterly updates. If revenue was up, people clapped. If revenue was down, people panicked. Everything else was treated like a supporting character. For years I played the same game everyone else was playing. I chased growth. I celebrated big numbers. I believed the simple story that more revenue meant a healthier business. Then something uncomfortable happened. I started paying attention to cash. And once you start paying attention to cash, you realize something almost nobody talks about openly: Revenue can lie. Cash rarely does. That realization changed how I think about business entirely. What started as a focus on revenue acceleration eventually evolved into something much more importa...