Michalowicz flips the traditional accounting formula (Sales - Expenses = Profit) to Sales - Profit = Expenses, forcing profit to be taken first via a simple multi-account cash allocation system, rather than hoped for as whatever's left over. It's become one of the most widely adopted small-business cash systems for exactly that reason.
Key lessons
- Take profit first, as a fixed percentage of every deposit, and let expenses adjust to what's genuinely left — not the other way round.
- Multiple separate bank accounts (profit, owner's pay, tax, operating expenses) make discipline automatic rather than reliant on willpower.
- Small, regular profit distributions build a healthier relationship with the business's finances than one large uncertain year-end number.
- Expenses naturally shrink to fit whatever's actually available once profit and tax are removed first — parkinson's law working in your favour.
Profit shouldn't be whatever's left after expenses — allocating it first, automatically, via separate accounts, makes profitability a habit rather than a hope.
What’s aged well
The system has been widely adopted and tested by small businesses since publication, with a strong practical track record.
What feels outdated
Nothing significant; the core mechanic is timeless and bank-agnostic.
The Business Stuff verdict
One of the most directly actionable finance books on this list — genuinely implementable in an afternoon.
Three things to actually do after reading it
- Open a separate 'profit' bank account and start allocating a small fixed percentage of every deposit into it immediately.
- Set a quarterly date to actually take a profit distribution, however small, rather than leaving it sitting untouched.
- Review your current expenses against what's genuinely left once profit and tax are set aside first.
If you liked this, read next
Five similar books
- Simple Numbers, Straight Talk, Big Profits! (Greg Crabtree)
- Financial Intelligence (Berman & Knight)
- The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur (Mike Michalowicz)
- The Pumpkin Plan (Mike Michalowicz)
- Accounting Made Simple (Mike Piper)

