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Article
How the Street Quietly Rewrites Your Story Without You Noticing
This post explains that expectation problems usually don’t appear suddenly on earnings day. They build slowly over several quarters through tone, guidance, early beats, KPI framing, and management’s answers to tough questions. The post argues that leadership teams often misdiagnose the first visible stock reaction as the problem, when the real issue started earlier as investors quietly raised their baseline assumptions. It recommends a quarterly expectations audit to catch drift before it turns into valuation pressure.
Article
The Art of Setting 2026 Guidance Without Backing Yourself Into a Corner
This post reframes guidance as a tool for preserving optionality, not simply predicting the year accurately. It explains why management teams often get into trouble by setting expectations too aggressively early in the year, leaving little room for July and October earnings calls. The post argues that strong guidance strategy requires discipline, credibility, and restraint. The goal is to give the business room to operate, create space for upside, and avoid training the Street to expect more than the company can consistently deliver.
Article
Running a Great Company Is Not Enough to Have a Great Stock
This post explains why strong company execution doesn’t automatically translate into strong stock performance. It frames management’s job as two separate games: running the company and managing the stock. The first depends on operations, strategy, products, and customers. The second depends on expectations, credibility, consistency, and how investors underwrite the future. The post argues that many companies disappoint in the market because they only play the operating game and ignore how the Street models risk, confidence, and valuation.
Article
What Investors Really Think of Your Company (And Why Your Leadership Team Probably Has It Wrong)
Leadership teams often overestimate how clearly investors understand their company. The post explains how perception gaps form when the internal story doesn’t match external signals, especially around numbers, trends, tone, and credibility. It argues that CEOs, CFOs, and IROs should use December to recalibrate messaging before January conferences by focusing on what investors actually care about, addressing trust issues directly, and aligning the narrative with the financial reality.
Article
Prepare for IPO: Essential IPO Readiness Checklist & Strategy
Ready to go public? Hold on a second! You need to properly prepare for IPO. Resurge gives you the essential IPO readiness checklist and strategy to succeed.
Article
What Makes a Strategic IR Person? An Investor’s View
Stock undervalued despite having an IR person? A 20-year investor & former IR SVP reveals the strategy to drive true market valuation.
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
Repetition, Repetition, Repetition to Get Your Point Across
What feels like "annoyingly repetitive" to you, is probably "refreshingly simple" to your investors.
Article
Here’s Why You Need New Investors
Very often, when I'm working with a client to help them simplify their story into easily digestible bullets, they say to me, "our existing investors already know this...why do we need to say this again? It feels so repetitive."
Article
Don’t Try to Pull a Fast One
I tell my clients all the time that a quarterly report consists of at least three major things: 1) the published numbers from the quarter, 2) management commentary, and 3) guidance.
Article
Educate and Reeducate the Street on Your Story
As a general group, investors want to be educated… tempted even, by the tantalizing aspects of a story in order to get interested. They want to hear a good story that reminds them of stocks that have worked for them in the past.