You closed a great month. Maybe the best one this year. The team felt it, the pipeline report looked alive, and for a few weeks, it seemed like you'd finally turned a corner. Then the next month came in flat, and the one after that was worse. Now you're staring at a revenue line that zigzags instead of climbing, and nobody on your team can tell you exactly what made the good month good.
If that sounds familiar, you don't have a sales problem or a marketing problem. You've got a consistency problem, and consistency is a system issue, not an effort issue.
When your best months don't repeat, it's seldom because the team got lazy. It's because the good month ran on a burst of effort nobody can reproduce on demand. Inspect three things first: whether your pipeline gets fed on a steady cadence or in occasional pushes, whether anyone can name the specific activities that created the good month, and whether growth still depends on you personally driving it. If the answers are "in pushes," "not really," and "yes," you're looking at what we call Reactive Rhythm, one of the five revenue leaks inside our Revenue Rewired framework. The swing is the symptom. The missing cadence is the cause.
Here's the uncomfortable part. A great month you can't explain isn't a win, it's a warning.
Most B2B companies treat a strong month as proof the engine works. More often, it's proof that a few things lined up at once. A couple of deals that had been stuck finally closed, a referral came in warm, and someone on the team went on a tear with follow-up. None of that was wrong, but none of it was designed either. When the inputs that created the month were accidental, the output can't be repeated, because you can't schedule an accident. The companies that grow in a straight line aren't working harder than you. They've made the good month boring, so the activity that drives revenue happens on a schedule, whether anyone feels inspired that week or not.
A good month is an outcome. A repeatable month is a system that produces that outcome on purpose.
The test is simple. Ask your team what specifically created last quarter's best month. If the answer is a story about a few deals, that's a good month. If the answer is a set of activities that ran on a cadence and reliably produced a pipeline, that's a repeatable one. B2B companies in the $10M to $50M range tend to have plenty of good months and very few repeatable ones, because the business grew on the founder's instincts long before it ever grew on a process. The gap between those two is where revenue quietly leaks. You're not losing deals you can see. You're losing the months you should have had between the good ones.
Effort doesn't compound. Systems do.
When growth depends on someone pushing, results track the pushing. You have a strong month, everyone exhales, and the outreach, the content, and the follow-up all slow down. Six weeks later, the pipeline reflects the slowdown, the panic kicks in, the team pushes again, and the cycle repeats. That feast-or-famine rhythm is exhausting precisely because it works just often enough to feel normal. The reason it never smooths out is structural. There's no layer underneath the effort of turning consistent inputs into a consistent pipeline, so the business can only move as fast and as steadily as the person willing to push it, which is usually you.
A cadence isn't a campaign. It's the set of revenue activities that run on a fixed rhythm regardless of how the month feels.
In practice, that means a defined number of new conversations entering the pipeline every week, follow-up that happens on a schedule instead of a mood, outreach and content that ship whether or not anyone's inspired, and a weekly look at the leading indicators that predict revenue before it shows up. This is the part of Revenue Flow we build after the leaks are fixed, because adding more activity to a business that runs on bursts just gives you bigger swings. None of it is glamorous, and that's the point. The work that creates repeatable revenue is the work that's boring enough to survive a bad week.
Before you try to grow, get honest about whether your current growth is even repeatable. Run these questions with your leadership team:
If you're hesitating on three or more of these, the inconsistency isn't bad luck. It's a missing cadence, and it's fixable. The swing caps more than your stress level. It caps your planning, your hiring confidence, your cash flow, and eventually your enterprise value, because no buyer pays a premium for revenue that can't be predicted.
Take the Revenue Leak Finder assessment and schedule a Leak Diagnosis meeting with our CEO, Jay Feitlinger. It walks you through where your growth system is leaking, including whether Reactive Rhythm is behind the swings. If your result feels familiar, send it to me, and I'll tell you where I'd inspect first.
Usually, because growth runs on effort instead of a cadence. When the activities that create pipeline happen in bursts rather than on a schedule, revenue swings with the bursts. The fix isn't working harder; it's building a rhythm that produces pipeline, whether or not anyone feels motivated that week.
Some seasonality is normal. Wild month-to-month swings with no clear cause are not. If your team can't explain what drove the good months, the inconsistency is a system signal, not a market one.
Identify the specific activities that created them, then put those activities on a fixed cadence so they run regardless of mood or workload. Track the leading indicators weekly so you can see a flat month coming before it lands instead of reacting after it does.
It's one of the five revenue leaks in StringCan's Revenue Rewired framework. It describes growth that happens in inconsistent bursts without a clear cadence, which is why results swing and good months don't repeat.