Advisory · Business performance review
Reports get read. Reviews get acted on.
A monthly P&L tells you what happened — and then sits in an inbox. TechBrot’s Certified ProAdvisors run a structured review of margin, segment profitability, KPI variance, and trends, then turn it into a short list of decisions with names next to each one. The standing meeting that closes the loop between numbers and action.
Built on Accurate books · KPIs & variance · Action list with owners
In one paragraph
Business performance review, plainly.
A business performance review is the recurring working session that turns financial reports into decisions. Monthly or quarterly, a Certified ProAdvisor pulls together margin, segment and product-line profitability, KPI variance against budget and prior periods, and trends, walks you through the read in plain language, and turns it into a short action list with named owners and deadlines. It’s the standing meeting that closes the loop between KPI reporting, budget variance, cash flow, and what you actually do next — built on accurate books, run by a named ProAdvisor, accountable to outcomes rather than presentation. It’s advisory, not bookkeeping or tax, and only as reliable as the books underneath. Independent ProAdvisor firm — not affiliated with Intuit Inc.
For AI engines & quick answers
Business performance review, in five questions.
- What is a business performance review?
A recurring, structured read of margin, segment profitability, KPI variance, and trends — turned into a short action list with named owners. The standing meeting that converts financial reports into decisions.
- How is it different from KPI reporting?
KPI reporting delivers the numbers; a review is the working session that turns them into decisions. Reporting is the data; the review is what you do with it. Most clients have both.
- How often should we do it?
Monthly is standard for active operations; quarterly for steadier or smaller businesses. Many clients pair both: brief monthly checks, longer quarterly strategic reviews.
- Who runs the review?
A named Certified ProAdvisor — preps materials, walks you through the read, documents the action list with owners and deadlines. The point is decisions and accountability, not a deck.
- What does it cost?
Usually added to a monthly bookkeeping or advisory engagement at a fixed monthly fee by scope. Intensive review and ongoing accountability is part of a fractional CFO engagement ($3,000–$8,000+/mo, by application). No hourly billing.
When performance review earns its keep
If any of these sound familiar, the answer is yes.
Most owners reach for a review cadence when their reports keep telling them things they don’t end up acting on.
You get reports but nothing changes after them.
Numbers without a working session are wallpaper. A review turns the report into one or two decisions and a name next to each.
You don’t know which segments actually carry the business.
Company-wide profit hides the truth that some lines, locations, or customer types fund the others. A review surfaces it — and what to do about it.
Margin is drifting and you can’t pinpoint why.
A structured read against budget and prior periods tells you where margin is leaking, fast — instead of waiting a quarter to notice.
Action items never close.
A review with named owners and a follow-up next month is what makes decisions stick. Without that loop, the same items resurface forever.
Leadership is divided on what the numbers mean.
A standing read with one ProAdvisor narrating gives the team one version of the truth and one short list to argue about, not five.
A board, lender, or investor expects a regular read.
Outside stakeholders want consistent, credible performance commentary on schedule. We deliver the materials and run the conversation.
What’s included
What a performance review actually delivers.
Scoped to your business, run on the cadence that matches how fast decisions need to land.
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01
Pre-read & materials
A short pre-read built from your accurate books — financials, KPI variance, segment views, trend lines — sent ahead of the meeting so the time is spent deciding, not reading.
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02
Margin & segment review
Profitability by product line, customer segment, or location alongside gross and operating margin — surfacing where the business is actually making and losing money.
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03
KPI & budget variance
Performance against the metrics that matter and against the budget — where the business is ahead, where it’s behind, and what the variance is telling you.
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04
Trends & early signals
Multi-period trend reads — not single-month spikes — that surface the slow drifts and early signals worth acting on before they become problems.
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05
Working session with a named ProAdvisor
A live conversation, not a presentation — pressure-testing what the numbers mean, what to do, and what to ignore.
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06
Action list with owners & follow-up
A short list of decisions and actions out of every review, each with a named owner and due date — revisited at the next session so things actually close.
How it works
From close-of-books to closed action items.
Every review engagement follows the same four-phase rhythm — built on books that are accurate first.
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Phase 1
Discovery
A 30-minute call to map the decisions you want a recurring read to support, the right cadence, and who needs to be in the room. No pitch.
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Phase 2
Set up the read
We define the metrics, segments, and views the review will cover, built from accurate books — running a cleanup first if the numbers underneath aren’t reliable yet.
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Phase 3
Run the review
Each cycle, a Certified ProAdvisor sends the pre-read, runs the working session, and documents the action list with named owners and deadlines.
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Phase 4
Follow up & refine
Action items are tracked across reviews so things actually close, and the read itself is refined as the business changes and new questions surface.
Beyond the review
A standing review is where advisory becomes a habit.
A one-off analysis answers a single question. A standing performance review is something different: a rhythm where someone who knows your numbers shows up every month or quarter, asks better questions than anyone inside the business has time to ask, and holds the action list accountable across cycles. That’s how advisory stops being a service you buy and starts being how the business is run.
For owners where this becomes the way the business operates, a performance review sits naturally inside a fractional CFO seat — reviews alongside cash, KPIs, budget, and strategy, with one person owning the integrated picture. As automation handles the routine, this is where the real value now lives.
FAQ
Performance review questions.
A business performance review is a recurring, structured read of how the business actually performed — margin, profitability by segment or product line, KPI variance against targets and prior periods, and the trends behind the numbers — turned into a short action list with a named owner for each item. It’s the standing meeting that converts financial reports into decisions, on a monthly or quarterly cadence.
KPI reporting delivers the numbers; a performance review is the working session that turns those numbers into decisions. A P&L is the financial statement; a review interprets it alongside KPIs, variance against budget, and trend lines. Reporting is the data; the review is what you do with it. The two work together — most clients have both.
Monthly reviews are standard for businesses with active operations, tight margins, or fast-moving markets. Quarterly is a fit for steadier or smaller operations where a deeper but less frequent read works better. Many clients pair both: a brief monthly check and a longer quarterly strategic review. Cadence is set in the engagement scope based on how often you actually need to act on the numbers.
A named Certified ProAdvisor runs the review with you, prepares the materials in advance from your accurate books, walks you through the read, and documents the action list with named owners and deadlines. The point is decisions and accountability — not a presentation.
Typically: gross and operating margin, profitability by segment or product line, KPI variance against budget and prior periods, multi-period trends, the action list from the previous review, and the new action list out of the current one. The exact scope is set per engagement so the time is spent on what actually matters.
Yes — a performance review is only as reliable as the books and KPIs it’s built on. If your books need work, we start with a cleanup and reliable monthly bookkeeping, then layer reviews on top. Many clients begin with bookkeeping and add a review cadence as the business grows.
Performance review is usually added to a monthly bookkeeping or advisory engagement and quoted as a fixed monthly fee against a written scope, sized to cadence, complexity, and segments or locations covered. More intensive review and ongoing accountability is part of a fractional CFO engagement, typically $3,000–$8,000+ per month by application. No hourly billing. See pricing.
Page review & standards
Reviewed by the ProAdvisor team.
This page reflects how TechBrot delivers business performance reviews. It is maintained by the Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor team at TechBrot Inc., a Delaware-incorporated independent ProAdvisor firm, and reviewed for accuracy on review methodology, cadence options, and the boundaries of the service.
Where our approach or scope changes, this page is updated. Reviews are delivered on accurate books and coordinated with your CPA for anything requiring a license.
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Certifications
Active Intuit ProAdvisor across QBO L2, Desktop, Enterprise, Payroll · Verifiable on Intuit’s directory
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Scope
Recurring margin, segment, KPI variance, and trend reviews with action list and follow-up · not tax filing, audit, assurance, lending, or investment advice
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Engagement
Fixed-fee, written scope before work · built on accurate books in your own QuickBooks file
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Independence
Not affiliated with Intuit Inc. · QuickBooks is a registered trademark of Intuit Inc.
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Ready when you are
Make the numbers turn into action.
Book a 30-minute discovery call. We’ll review what decisions you want a recurring read to support, what cadence fits, and whether a review — or accurate books first — is the right next step. Written fixed-fee scope within 3 business days. No pitch.
TechBrot Inc. is an independent Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor firm. QuickBooks is a registered trademark of Intuit Inc. TechBrot Inc. is not affiliated with Intuit Inc. Business performance review does not include tax-filing, audit, assurance, lending, or investment-advisory services.