Business owners rarely wake up one morning and say

Everything is broken.”

Instead, it usually sounds more like:

  • “Cash feels tighter lately.”
  • “We’re busier than ever, but somehow making less.”
  • “Something just feels… off.”

That’s what makes financial drift dangerous.  It’s subtle.

And because it’s subtle, it often goes unaddressed for far too long.


How drift risk is pervasive and real

In 1979, Air New Zealand Flight 901 crashed into Mount Erebus in Antarctica after a navigation error altered the aircraft’s course by what initially appeared to be a very small amount.

Over distance, that small deviation became catastrophic.

The crew believed they were safely positioned – but they weren’t.

There’s an uncomfortable business lesson in that.  Because most companies don’t run into trouble because of one dramatic decision.  They drift there.


The drift usually starts small:

  • pricing that’s slightly off
  • labor assumptions that no longer match reality
  • overhead that quietly expands
  • inventory creep
  • margin erosion hidden inside “strong sales”

Individually none of those seem fatal.  In fact, most barely register in the moment.  But over time, small misalignments compound.

And eventually owners find themselves asking:  “How did we get here?”


One of the hardest parts about financial drift is that it often happens during periods of growth

Revenue increases can mask operational inefficiencies for years.

Busy can feel healthy.  Until it doesn’t.

That’s why visibility matters so much.

  • Not spreadsheets for the sake of spreadsheets
  • Not dashboards that nobody uses

Actual operational clarity.

The ability to see:

  • where profit is leaking
  • where cash pressure is building
  • where assumptions no longer hold
  • where the business has slowly drifted away from its intended course

This is also why good financial leadership isn’t just about reporting history

It’s about calibration.  Recalibration, honestly.

The businesses that stay healthy long-term are rarely perfect:  they consistently make small directional corrections before problems compound.

They don’t wait for a catastrophic event to appear.


Most owners don’t need more motivation

They need better visibility.  Because small errors in direction become dangerous over distance.

And sometimes the most valuable thing a business can do is pause long enough to ask:  “Are we still heading where we intended to go?”

Sometimes a small recalibration creates more value than a major strategic overhaul.

Find Out

Find out how much drift affects margins, profits, and corporate value with our new tool, The StraightForward Financial Drift Analyzer™.