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Article
YOUR KPIs ARE EITHER TOOLS OR WEAPONS
This post explains how inconsistent KPI disclosure damages investor trust. It argues that when companies highlight metrics only while they’re improving, then change definitions, replace KPIs, or stop showing history when trends weaken, investors assume management is hiding something. The post lays out the cost of “KPI games,” including lower trust, more conservative assumptions, and less focus on the company’s strategy. It recommends introducing new KPIs with clear rationale, historical recasts, transition periods, and consistent quarter-to-quarter disclosure.
Article
The Street Only Remembers Three Things
This post argues that earnings messaging should focus on the few business drivers that actually move revenue or margins. It explains that if management tries to communicate 10 priorities, investors won’t retain any of them, and the company may have a focus problem. The post recommends identifying the three most important levers, making them concrete, aligning leadership around them, and using the earnings script as a forcing function for sharper internal focus and clearer investor communication.
Article
Guidance Is Optionality, Not Accuracy
This post argues that guidance shouldn’t be treated as a forecasting contest. It should be used to preserve optionality across the full year. The post explains how management teams often box themselves in by setting guidance too tightly, over-signaling confidence, or “guiding on the guide.” It frames beat-and-raise cadence as something that’s engineered through disciplined expectations management, not luck. The post gives CFOs a practical checklist for setting guidance that leaves room to execute, absorb noise, raise later in the year, and protect credibility.
Article
The Setup Is the Story
This post explains why stocks trade on results versus the setup investors bring into the quarter. It argues that management teams often create expectation problems weeks or months before earnings through guidance, tone, KPI emphasis, peer comparisons, analyst narratives, and casual follow-up comments. The post shows how companies can deliver “fine” quarters and still get punished if they’ve trained the Street to expect more. It recommends a setup audit before earnings or conferences to understand what investors actually expect, where that expectation came from, and whether delivering guidance will feel like a win or a disappointment.
Article
Humility Is an Underrated Valuation Strategy
This post explains why tone is a core part of investor credibility. It argues that management teams often overvalue optimism and undervalue humility, even though investors judge how leaders discuss risk, uncertainty, misses, and guidance. The post shows how overconfidence can create a trust discount, even when results are fine, while grounded communication preserves optionality in the numbers, the narrative, and investor psychology.
Article
Every Investor Question Is a Modeling Exercise
This post explains that investor questions are rarely just qualitative. They’re usually attempts to determine what numbers belong in a model, including revenue, margins, free cash flow, capital allocation, and valuation assumptions. It argues that management teams should stop answering questions as if investors want commentary, and instead prepare for Q&A by mapping likely questions to the specific model inputs investors are testing. The post gives a practical prep framework for helping CEOs, CFOs, IR, and FP&A deliver answers that give investors enough structure to update their assumptions with more confidence.
Case Study
$2bn Software Company Entering a Model Transition
Management doesn’t always provide concise, direct answers to questions which can leave investors feeling unsatisfied. We then helped them script their earnings calls, Q&A, and investor presentations (including an investor day) to tell the story while also releasing a series of new KPIs that investors used to gauge the company’s progress through the transition.
Case Study
$5bn Hardware Company Lacking Investor Credibility
The client (under NDA) was looking for someone to help them fix their sagging stock price, which was lagging behind their peers despite several quarters of beating consensus estimates.
Case Study
$5bn Software Company with a Lagging Multiple
Management had a history of over-promising and under-delivering, which we needed to correct. Also, the business model transition created a layer of opacity that only increased disclosure, and new KPIs could solve.
Case Study
$14bn Software Company in Model Transition
After many years of disappointing results, investors lost interest in this company. Additionally, the company’s financial disclosures made it impossible to see all the changes going on “under the surface.”
Article
Win Over New Investors with Essential Strategies for Your First Conference Question
Master your investor conference introduction with strategic advice from leading investor relations consultants, ensuring your company stands out to new investors.
Article
The Importance of Post-Mortem Reviews in Investor Relations
Uncover the transformative power of post-mortem reviews in investor relations, ensuring your communication strategies effectively align with investor expectations and enhance stakeholder trust.
Article
Enhancing Your Post-Earnings Strategy with Expert Investor Relations Consulting
Unlock the advantages of investor relations consulting to enhance post-earnings communication and strategically engage with key financial stakeholders.
Article
How Investor Relations Consulting Firms Can Ensure Accuracy in Earnings Call Transcripts
Discover how investor relations consulting firms enhance the accuracy of earnings call transcripts, ensuring clarity and maintaining trust in financial reporting.
Article
Maximizing Analyst Relationships: Essential Strategies from an Investor Relations Consultant
Learn how to correct analyst misconceptions and build stronger market relationships with practical tips from an experienced investor relations consultant.
Article
The Power of Condensation: Captivating Investors with Fireside Chats
Fireside chats are a valuable IR tool, but lengthy transcripts can lose investors' attention; condense answers for a more captivating experience.