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Yes, you read that right.

You cannot increase sales.

Not directly, anyway. That is because sales are a result, not an activity. You cannot manage sales, profits, just like you cannot manage even weight loss directly—those are outcomes. What you can manage are the activities that lead to those outcomes.

This might sound simple, but it is one of the most misunderstood ideas in business. Let us fix that.

Stop Managing Outcomes. Start Managing Activities.

Let us use weight loss as an example. You cannot just decide to lose 10 pounds. What you can do is manage your eating habits and increase your physical activity. Those are the drivers. The weight loss is a result.

Sales work the same way.

You cannot just declare, “We’re going to increase sales!” and expect it to happen. Instead, focus on the activities that create sales.

The 3 Building Blocks of Sales

There are only three ways to increase sales:

  1. Increase the number of customers (of the type you want)
  2. Increase how often they buy from you.
  3. Increase how much they spend each time.

That is it. Every sales strategy fits into one (or more) of those categories. Let us break them down.

Get More Customers (The Most Expensive Way)

When people say, “I’m going to grow my business,” they always mean getting new customers. And yes, it is important—but it is also the most expensive strategy.

Marketing, advertising, lead generation—they all cost time and money. Worse, new customers often require the most handholding.

So yes, keep attracting new clients. But do not stop there.

Increase Purchase Frequency (Often Overlooked)

Want a smarter way to boost revenue? Get your existing customers to come back more often.

They already trust you. They have already bought from you. This is low-hanging fruit.

Ideas to increase purchase frequency:

  • Send a monthly or quarterly newsletter with promotions or insights.
  • Offer loyalty cards or referral bonuses.
  • Pick up the phone and check in with past clients.
  • Host client appreciation events.

True Story:
An accountant blocked off every Friday morning just to call clients and ask how things were going. Nothing pushy—just open-ended business conversations. The result? His revenue doubled. Clients appreciated the proactive care and naturally brought him more business.

Increase the Average Sale (Mastered by McDonald’s)

You already know the question:
“Would you like fries with that?”

That simple upsell script has added billions to McDonald’s bottom line. What is your version of the fries question?

Ideas to increase average transaction value:

  • Bundle products or services into higher value packages.
  • Upsell or cross-sell relevant add-ons.
  • Implement a small price increase (even 5% can have a major effect)
  • Train your team to ask value-focused questions.

Real Example:
One client raised prices 5% after a little convincing. Guess how many customers they lost? Zero. Loyal customers did not blink, and the increase went straight to the bottom line.

Think Compound Impact

Here is where it gets fun: if you improve each of the three areas by just 5%, the result is a compound growth effect that can add 20–30% more profit to your bottom line. Without finding a single new customer.

Want to see it in action? Try this quick exercise:

Profit Improvement Plan (Fill-in-the-Blanks)
Component Current Position 5% Improvement New Position
Number of Customers ___ x1.05 ___
Purchase Frequency ___ x1.05 ___
Average Sale ($) ___ x1.05 ___
Sales Revenue ___ = ___
Gross Margin % ___ (same or better) ___
Net Profit ___ (should grow!) ___

Now subtract your current net profit from your new projected one.

That is your Profit Improvement Potential—from managing the right activities, not chasing the result.

Final Word

Stop trying to “increase sales.”
Start doing the things that lead there.

  • Get more of the right customers.
  • Stay in touch and serve them often.
  • Raise your average sale with simple strategies.

And most of all—track what matters. Because what gets measured gets managed.

Thanks for reading…