Business Advisory Services
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us
Posted Monday, July 6, 2026
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You know you are making money. You can feel it. The bank account is growing – or at least it is not shrinking. But when someone asks, “How’s your business doing?” the honest answer for most small business owners is somewhere between “Pretty good, I think?” and “I have no idea, but I’m busy.”
That is not a strategy. That is a vibe check.
KPI dashboards fix that. And before you tune out because “KPI” sounds like something a Fortune 500 company invented to justify middle management, hear us out. KPI stands for Key Performance Indicator, and despite the corporate-sounding name, it is just a fancy way of saying “the five to eight numbers that tell you whether your business is actually healthy or just busy.” Because those are two very different things.
At WCG, we build KPI dashboards for small business owners – not 47-chart monstrosities with pivot tables and waterfall charts that no one looks at. We are talking about a clean, practical snapshot that answers the questions you should be asking every month but probably are not. Numbers that drive decisions. That is the whole point.
Let’s start with what KPIs are not. They are not your financial statements. Your profit and loss statement is a historical record – it tells you what happened. Your balance sheet is a snapshot of where things stand right now. Both are important. Neither one tells you what to do next.
KPIs are the metrics that sit between the raw data and the decisions. They translate your financials into something actionable. Revenue is data. Revenue per employee is a KPI. See the difference? One tells you a number. The other tells you whether you are efficient or whether you are paying people to stand around.
Sidebar: Most small business owners are drowning in data they never look at. QuickBooks Online generates dozens of reports. Your bank has transaction histories going back years. You probably have spreadsheets floating around from that one time you tried to track expenses more carefully. The problem is never a lack of data. The problem is that none of it has been distilled into something useful.
A good KPI answers a simple question – “So what?” Your gross revenue was $480,000 last year. So what? Is that good? Is that enough to pay you a reasonable salary, cover overhead, and build retained earnings? Without context and comparison, revenue is just a big number that makes you feel good or bad depending on the day.
Here is where most dashboard advice goes off the rails. You will find articles online with lists of 30 or 40 KPIs you “should” be tracking. That is the illusion of precision. Tracking 40 metrics means you are not really tracking anything – you are just generating reports that collect dust in a shared drive.
We recommend five to eight KPIs. Maybe ten if your business has multiple revenue streams. That is it. Period. Full stop. The goal is a dashboard you actually look at, not a science project.
Having said that, the right KPIs depend on your business type. Here we go-
If you sell time – or if your revenue is primarily driven by people doing work – these are the numbers that matter:
Different animal entirely. You are managing inventory, supply chains, and cost of goods sold. The KPIs shift-
Rental property investors – we see a lot of you, and most of you are tracking rent collected and expenses paid. That is the bare minimum. The KPIs that actually drive decisions look different-
If you are operating as an S Corp – or thinking about electing – there are KPIs specific to your structure that matter for both operational health and tax compliance-
Here is the thing. Most small business owners already have access to all of this data. It lives in QuickBooks. It lives in bank statements. It lives in that spreadsheet your bookkeeper updates monthly. The problem is not a data problem. It is a translation problem.
Raw data is just numbers. Let’s say your QuickBooks P&L shows $38,000 in payroll for March. Is that good? Bad? Meaningless? You cannot tell without context. But if we show you that your payroll as a percentage of revenue jumped from 28% to 41% in one month, now you know something changed. You hired someone. Revenue dipped. Or both. Now you can do something about it.
That is the difference between data and a KPI. Data tells you what happened. A KPI tells you what it means.
Sidebar: We love the analogy of driving a car. Your speedometer, fuel gauge, and engine temperature are your dashboard KPIs. You do not need to know the RPM of every cylinder, the exact fuel injection rate, or the tire pressure in real time to drive safely. You need five or six gauges that tell you whether something needs attention. Your business dashboard works the same way.
The other piece people miss is trending. A single month’s KPI is interesting. Three months of the same KPI is a story. If your gross margin has been 52%, 48%, 44% over the last three months, that is a downward trend and we need to figure out why before it becomes 38% and you are wondering where your profit went.
We are not a software company. We do not sell dashboard subscriptions or license fancy BI tools. What we do is take the data you already have and build something practical.
We update it quarterly or monthly depending on your needs. It evolves as your business does. A business generating $150,000 needs a different dashboard than one generating $600,000 – and we adjust accordingly.
This is where things get interesting – and where the dashboard connects to everything else we do at WCG.
Your KPIs are not just operational metrics. They are tax planning signals.
Let’s say you are a sole proprietor and your trailing six-month dashboard shows net income trending upward – $8,000 per month, then $10,000, then $12,000, now $14,000. Your effective tax rate is climbing because self-employment taxes are eating you alive at 15.3% on every dollar. The dashboard does not just show you the trend – it flags the conversation. “Hey, your income has crossed the threshold where an S Corp election starts making sense. Let’s run the numbers.”
We have seen this happen dozens of times. A business owner comes in for their advisory meeting, we pull up the dashboard, and the income trend tells us it is time to have the S Corp conversation. Without the dashboard, that conversation happens at tax time – after the year is over and the opportunity has passed. With the dashboard, we catch it in Q2 or Q3 while there is still time to act.
Same thing with owner salary adjustments. If you are an S Corp and your compensation ratio is dropping because business income is growing but your salary has stayed flat, the dashboard shows that. We can adjust your W-2 proactively instead of scrambling at year-end to issue a corrected W-2 or explain an unreasonably low salary to the IRS.
Sidebar: The IRS does not publish a magic compensation ratio number. There is no bright-line rule that says “your salary must be X% of net income.” But they do look at it, and if your salary looks unreasonably low relative to what the business generates and what someone in your role would earn in the open market, you are inviting scrutiny. The dashboard keeps this ratio visible so we can adjust before it becomes a problem.
Not everyone. And we will be honest about that.
If you are a solo freelancer earning $60,000 a year with minimal overhead, you probably do not need a formal dashboard. Your financial life is simple enough that a clean P&L and a quarterly check-in are sufficient.
But if you fall into any of these categories, a dashboard starts earning its keep-
That last one is the real dividing line. A P&L tells you whether you are making money. A dashboard tells you whether you are making the right decisions to keep making money – and to make more of it.
We should talk about this because the internet is full of terrible advice on dashboards.
There is a whole industry built around selling small business owners enterprise-grade analytics tools. Platforms with real-time data syncing, API integrations, custom widgets, and monthly subscription fees. These tools are great – if you are a mid-market company with a finance team. If you are a small business owner with 3 to 15 employees, they are overkill.
We have seen business owners spend $300 per month on a dashboard platform, connect it to QuickBooks, and then never log in after the first week. Because the tool generates 25 reports and 40 charts and nobody knows which ones matter. That is not insight. That is noise.
The best dashboard is the one you actually look at. And the one you actually look at is the one that fits on a single page and tells you something useful in under 30 seconds. We build those. Not because we cannot build complicated ones, but because complicated dashboards are cocktail party fodder. They impress people at networking events but do not change behavior.
If your dashboard does not change a decision you make at least once per quarter, it is decoration. Not a tool.
Key Performance Indicator. It is a metric that tells you something meaningful about your business performance – not just a raw number, but a number in context. Revenue is data. Revenue per employee is a KPI.
Five to eight. Maybe ten if your business has multiple distinct revenue streams. Beyond that, you are tracking noise. The goal is a focused set of metrics you actually look at and act on every month.
No. We build dashboards using QuickBooks Online reporting and custom spreadsheet tools. No new platforms to subscribe to, no integrations to manage. If your books are clean, we have what we need.
Monthly at minimum. We review dashboards during quarterly advisory meetings and adjust the metrics as your business evolves. Some clients prefer monthly reviews, especially during periods of growth or transition.
Utilization rate, revenue per employee, client acquisition cost, and gross margin are the big four. If you sell time, these numbers tell you whether you are pricing correctly, staffing efficiently, and growing profitably.
Occupancy rate, cap rate, cash-on-cash return, and expense ratio per property. These four metrics tell you whether each property is earning its keep and where to focus your attention.
Income trends can signal when an S Corp election makes sense. Compensation ratios tell us whether your owner salary needs adjustment. Margin and revenue trends help us time retirement contributions, estimated tax payments, and equipment purchases for maximum tax benefit.
Financial statements tell you what happened. KPIs tell you what to do about it. Your P&L says revenue was $480,000. Your KPI dashboard says revenue per employee dropped 12% and your gross margin is shrinking – which means you have a pricing or efficiency problem to solve.
Absolutely. S Corp-specific dashboards typically track owner compensation ratio, effective tax rate, distributions versus retained earnings, and the standard operational KPIs for your industry. These metrics are critical for both business health and tax compliance.
If you are a solo operator earning under $100,000 with minimal overhead, a formal dashboard is probably overkill. A clean P&L, a quarterly check-in, and a good tax strategy cover you. Once you add employees, exceed $200,000 in revenue, or own multiple properties, a dashboard starts paying for itself.
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Tax planning season is here! Let's schedule a time to review tax reduction strategies and generate a mock tax return.
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The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.
We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”
Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.
We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or our amazing Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax strategy and planning? Rental property support?
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us