5 ways to cut costs and take control of your business's bottom line
One of the draws of going into business for yourself is becoming the ultimate decision-maker. Not only do you have control over your career, but you also choose how things are run-from the everyday decisions to big-picture strategy.
However, some things will inevitably be outside your control, such as larger economic conditions. And considering the impact they can have on a business's success, it's a topic on many entrepreneurs' minds. According to 2025 data from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 58% of business owners say that inflation is a top concern, which is no doubt also a contributing factor for the 35% concerned about revenue.
While economic conditions are out of your control, plenty of other things are still within it. Finding ways to reduce your operating costs can create some flexibility in your budget to help you weather whatever the future brings.
"Having more margin is a gigantic ecommerce cheat code," Andrew Faris tells Shopify. Faris is the founder of AJF Growth, a consultancy that helps scale direct-to-consumer brands.
Knowing your numbers is step one: how much money is coming into the business, and how much is going out. Next, consider the following strategies to help reduce business expenses and improve margins.
Reduce customer acquisition costs with product gifting
Customer acquisition costs (CAC) can add up quickly, but gifting free products could shave your expenses significantly. Leah Marcus and Yasaman Bakhtiar, the duo who founded the pickle brand Good Girl Snacks, used this strategy to grow their business at a faster clip.
Instead of paying influencers to talk up the brand on social media, they researched established content creators who were likely to genuinely enjoy their product-and sent them complimentary samples. The move paid off.
"It's created a lot of buzz and allowed for a lot of sales, while still maintaining a zero-dollar CAC, because we just gift, we don't pay anybody," Marcus says on Shopify Masters.
Similarly, when the clean skin care brand Tower 28 launched in 2019, founder Amy Liu sought out prominent beauty YouTubers, found their contact information, and sent each a free product sample-with a personal touch.
"From the very beginning, I've always really believed in a handwritten note," Liu says. "And we would just send these packages out to people. Our open rates were certainly not 100%, but there were a few."
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, she started gifting the brand's popular SOS Daily Rescue facial spray to health care workers to help relieve maskne and other skin irritations. In turn, recipients posted before and after photos showing how well the product worked, which Liu was then able to re-post (with permission) on the brand's account. This social proof is one of the reasons Tower 28 is now a multimillion-dollar brand.
Use AI to streamline your operations
AI can save business owners significant time across their operations, especially in areas that don't require a human touch or a great deal of strategy. This can include everything from data entry to content creation to customer feedback analysis. Julianne Fraser, founder of the digital brand marketing consultancy Dialogue New York, built proprietary systems to help her company meet increasing client demands.
"We knew that we didn't want to change that human-to-human approach in the way that we pitch, negotiate, and form the campaign narratives, but everything thereafter in terms of executing a campaign-from the contract process, the content approval, the invoicing, etc.-could be automated," she tells Shopify. "So we worked with a developer to help us streamline and automate that, and it really improved and increased our capacity substantially."
In fact, the team was able to quadruple the volume of campaigns they were managing without having to scale their human capital. Fraser says this has also led to more fulfilling work for her team, freeing up more time for the creative aspect of their work-the ultimate win-win.
Negotiate with manufacturers and vendors
Supplier prices aren't written in stone. Taking the time to compare prices among vendors, negotiate for better rates, and revisit contracts to update terms could help bring down your operating costs. This is especially true if your business relies heavily on outside vendors, which is often the case for product-based businesses.
Will Nitze, founder of the protein bar brand IQBAR, leveraged the company's increasing production volume to negotiate more favorable terms with his suppliers. "You go back to your manufacturer and you say, 'Hey, now that I'm producing 10 times more product, I need you to reduce my labor cost per bar from X to Y,'" he explains.
Ultimately, Nitze pivoted IQBAR's supply chain from an outsourced "turnkey" model to an in-house operation during the pandemic. Not only did this give him greater control over production, but it also improved the business's margins.
"Typically, they're marking up or taking a percentage of the total cost, as what's called a materials management fee," says Nitze.
One downside of taking ownership of this process, though, is a greater administrative burden. If this sounds too extreme for your business, you don't have to go all in. You might choose to assume a small role in co-manufacturing, then leave the rest up to trusted suppliers.
Build a small (but strong) team
Business growth doesn't always require a huge employee roster. Staying lean can free up more money to put toward product development, marketing, and scaling your operations. For Danny Buck, cofounder of the men's jewelry line CRAFTD London, maintaining a small, mostly remote team has also allowed him to source talent from all over the world.
"From a personal perspective, I didn't want a big team. So CRAFTD only has 15 people," he says. "We consider ourselves small and mighty. We're growing and will grow. We don't need a hundred people to do it."
In some cases, restructuring is a matter of survival. When Brad Charron took the reins as CEO of the protein brand Aloha in 2017, he was immediately faced with some tough decisions. The company was in serious financial trouble, which prompted him to let go of the bulk of his 70 employees and transition to remote operations. Today, Aloha is a multimillion-dollar business and the team remains small, with about 20 employees.
Intentionally spend on ads
Building and maintaining your online presence can be a huge expense. And while digital ads can be effective, they can also be costly.
Leon Hughes, partner at the London-based private equity firm Piper, cautions against paying for ads during a company's early days. Instead, he suggests first ensuring there's a market for your product.
"Go to events, get out there, sell hard, learn about the product, make sure that it is fit for purpose and people are coming back," he says. That can help you decide if the upfront investment in paid media is worth it.
When you are ready to put some budget into paid ads, a more manual approach could be key, says Faris, who leverages manual bids to get the best return on ad spend (ROAS) from his Meta ads.
"The basic concept here is that instead of just telling Meta, 'Here's how much budget I have; spend through all of it every day,' … instead, you say, 'Here's the target ROAS or cost per acquisition that I'm trying to get, you tell me how to spend as much money as you can while maintaining this target.'"
This strategy ensures Faris is investing the majority of his budget into his best-performing ads. "That ends up being the most efficient distribution of your dollars on ads," he says.
This story was produced by Shopify and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
© Stacker Media, LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
5 minutes ago
- CNBC
Gen AI is coming for online checkout in seismic shift for internet shopping
In the world of online payments, the buzzword these days is frictionless, as companies entice customers with increasingly convenient online payment options. Think the online equivalent of a biometric handwave: the fewer steps involved, the more customers will buy, experts say. With that aim in mind, the growing presence of generative AI such as ChatGPT in the shopping ecosystem may next take a shape that has a seismic impact on the economic model of internet retail. Currently, a search for a large London Fog men's coat on ChatGPT will bring up a purchase option, but you still have to click over to London Fog's site to complete the transaction. But that may soon change. Gen AI search engine Perplexity already has a deal with PayPal for this kind of function, allowing online shoppers to make purchases such as concert tickets and travel directly in chat, with payments completed with PayPal or Venmo, and PayPal handling the processing, shipping, tracking, and invoicing. The Financial Times reported last month that an integrated checkout system is coming to ChatGPT, with partners such as Shopify, so that users can complete the transaction within the platform. Merchants will pay a commission to OpenAI. OpenAI and Shopify have not confirmed the plans. The AI company has already worked with Shopify on an AI assistant for internet sales. OpenAI has already rolled out several features designed to enhance shopping and other consumer experiences, and experts say that in one form or another, this further use of gen AI in retail's future should be expected, and companies need to be planning for the consequences today. "Enabling customers to purchase without leaving the chat will have a significant impact on the sales cycle," said Elizabeth Perkins, professor of practice of business administration and economics at Roanoke College. But she added that from a marketing perspective, any time you consolidate or eliminate a part of the purchase cycle, you get your customer that much closer to spending money. "No more time-consuming steps. Customers get what they want faster, with less hassle, and honestly, with less chance of changing their mind," Perkins said. Perikins says that payment interfaces like Venmo or Apple Pay could be disrupted. But Paul McAdam, J.D. Power's senior director of banking intelligence, says he thinks that while AI checkout capabilities will disrupt the checkout ecosystem, big players will find a way to stay in the game. "This is one more competitor looking for a slice of the pie. It will be fascinating to see how banks react to this. There will be a shakeout," but he added, "PayPal, Apple, and Google are pretty entrenched, so I don't think they are going anywhere. This will affect the upstarts the most, some of which will probably get gobbled up by larger competitors." At eBay, AI checkout is not being viewed as a threat, but as a sign of further innovation in the industry. "AI is proving great at speeding up workflows and generating ideas. We believe the true magic lies in blending that speed and scale with trusted, expert, enthusiast communities," said Blair Ethington, vice president of the company's focus categories and buyer experience division. Ethington says that eBay will be investing heavily in an increased AI experience at checkout that delivers real-time, hyper-personalized product picks and guidance tuned to each buyer's shopping preferences. "Ultimately, we believe our scale, unique inventory, and trusted community position us extremely well to thrive in an agentic commerce future," Ethington said. PayPal pointed to its deal with Perplexity as a sign of its embrace of the gen AI feature rather than viewing it as a threat. "We're partnering with some of the biggest players in this space, like Perplexity, to deliver personalized, secure, and seamless payments and commerce experiences to our network of more than 400 million consumers and merchants worldwide," said a PayPal spokesperson. In one form or another, the checkout experience online is ripe for change, according to Dee Waddell, global managing director of travel & transportation industries at IBM. "Consumers are no longer satisfied with the status quo," said Waddell, citing a recent IBM study that shows only 14% of consumers say they're satisfied with their e-commerce experience. "They're demanding seamless, hyper-personalized experiences across every touchpoint, and retailers must lean into AI to meet those expectations," Waddell said. IBM's retail clients are prioritizing AI to deliver a seamless experience throughout the entire customer journey. "I believe we're on the cusp of a revolution, where generative AI platforms like ChatGPT will act as 'personal assistants' to streamline the digital shopping experience from product discovery to fulfillment," Waddell said. The online shopping experience of the future could feature a consumer going into ChatGPT or Anthropic's Claude to ask for gift ideas. Then, Waddell says, without ever leaving the chat, they'll receive personalized recommendations, confirm their payment method easily, verify their shipping address, and complete the purchase. "In this new model, the AI personal assistant becomes the marketplace. This means retailers will need to solidify their ecosystem and channel strategies," Waddell said, adding that companies will either need to partner with channel providers that want to work with generative AI companies or go directly to AI providers themselves. "This will be a key part of staying relevant and delivering the integrated shopping experiences that consumers are demanding," Waddell said. Alex Graf, co-founder and CEO of digital commerce platform Spryker and author ofThe E-Commerce Book," says this is the beginning of a seismic shift in how people will shop online. But he says the focus on the threat to payment processors misses the biggest disruptive outcome from the shift. "We're witnessing a structural shift in the e-commerce value chain, and ChatGPT is right at the center of it. The old game was about who could close the sale. The new game is about who controls the pre-sale and gets the user's attention first," Graf said, adding that this is where the LLMs will disrupt the incumbents. Increasingly, Graf says, it will be ChatGPT and Claude that will guide discovery, curate choices, and compress decision-making for customers. "For ecommerce players who've relied on 'watch time' to keep users browsing, like Amazon, Etsy, or even Shopify storefronts, this is an existential threat," Graf said. "Users who previously started their search on e-commerce platforms are now starting with AI. And here's the kicker: selling the product isn't where the margin is anymore. It's selling the eyeballs," Graf said, noting that ads that appear inside ecommerce ecosystems have become a $50 billion market globally. "Amazon's most profitable business isn't Prime or AWS, it's retail media," Graf said. Amazon is investing heavily in its own generative AI features for shopping and has made significant investments in gen AI companies including Anthropic. Graf says that when a gen AI like ChatGPT becomes the "new homepage" of commerce, it doesn't need to sell products directly. "It just needs to own the watch time, then monetize via paid placements, affiliate links, and product recommendations, just like Amazon does internally. This re-routes billions in potential retail media revenue toward whoever owns that conversational layer," Graf said. Amazon's ads business has been a bright spot within earnings in recent quarters. Graf says fintech players like PayPal or Zelle, the online payment app run by a consortium of major banks, will be impacted, but indirectly. Once ChatGPT, or similar AI agents, corner end-to-end shopping, there's less space for third-party payment tools. "Integrated systems or AI-native wallets may eat that slice of the pie over time," Graf said. The ultimate winners, he says, will be those who can monetize attention and intention, not just transactions.


Business Insider
2 hours ago
- Business Insider
Cathie Wood's Friday Flurry: Buys TTD and CRSP, Sells Roblox and Palantir Stocks
Popular investor Cathie Wood 's ARK Invest ETFs made several changes to their holdings on Friday, August 8. The firm bought shares of ad-tech company The Trade Desk (TTD) and gene-editing firm CRISPR Therapeutics (CRSP), while trimming stakes in gaming platform Roblox (RBLX) and Palantir Technologies (PLTR). Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. The biggest buy of the day was The Trade Desk, with ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) purchasing 210,664 shares worth $29.5 million. The trade came the same day TTD posted second-quarter results, which showed a revenue slowdown and sent the stock tumbling in pre-market trading on Friday. The company also named Alex Kayyal as its new chief financial officer, effective August 21, replacing Laura Schenkein. Following the results, Several Wall Street analysts downgraded the stock, pointing to slower growth, rising competition, and valuation pressures. ARK also bought 8,292 shares of CRISPR Therapeutics for $714,200. The move indicates Wood's continued confidence in the gene-editing pioneer's long-term prospects, even as the biotech sector faces ongoing volatility. ARK Trims Stakes in These Stocks On the sell side, ARK Invest pared back holdings in several well-known names. The firm sold $10.8 million worth of Roblox shares from its ARKK and ARK Next Generation Internet (ARKW) ETFs. It also trimmed its stake in Palantir Technologies, a data analytics and AI software provider for governments and enterprises, unloading $7.1 million worth of shares. In addition, ARK reduced its Shopify (SHOP) position by $7.1 million. The e-commerce platform helps businesses create and manage online stores. The fund also cut its Pinterest (PINS) holdings by $14.0 million across ARKK and ARKW. In terms of share price performance, RBLX, PLTR, SHOP, and PINS have gained 244%, 536%, 119%, and 21%, respectively, over the past year. Let's take a brief look at how all these stocks perform on


Time Magazine
2 hours ago
- Time Magazine
Why Stocks Keeps Rising—Despite Trump's Tariff Chaos
As America hikes tariffs sharply, the jobs market slips, and President Donald Trump turns his ire from Harvard to the Bureau of Labor Statistics the stock market refuses to collapse. Despite these economic speed bumps, the S&P 500 Index is up nearly 8% so far this year. How long this rise can continue depends on whether the fundamental strength of the U.S. economy can withstand the wrenching transformation to the global trading system that President Trump has forced. Economics textbooks insist that stock prices reflect the future stream of a company's profits on any given day. For all the brainpower devoted to these forecasts, however, they are essentially rough estimates of what may happen over the next twelve months and wild guesses about anything after that. Over the past several weeks, more companies than usual reported second-quarter results that beat market expectations, and analysts have even slightly raised their estimates for the next three months. Market valuations are higher than historical averages (about 22 times forward earnings) But the bulls argue that this includes those transformative tech firms that will reap handsome rewards from the artificial intelligence revolution. Read More: The Chaotic, Fantastical World of Donald Trump's Tariffs That's all pretty reasonable for an economy that has grown on average 2.8% for the last five years, recovering nicely from COVID-19 lockdowns, powering through the sharpest interest rate increases in 40 years, and still going strong as the president fundamentally redesigns the global trading order. Generous checks and rock-bottom interest rates following the pandemic may explain at least some of this remarkable performance. Still, stocks are all about future expectations, and none of this history reveals much about the impact of the Trump Administration's dramatic policy departures. The 'One Big Beautiful Bill' locked in lower corporate tax rates and delivered a massive boost to defense spending, adding some $3.4 trillion to the deficit over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The administration promises, however, that together with a wave of deregulation, growth rates will be more than 1% higher over the next four years. That would be quite something, but most independent economists expect more headwinds from tariffs than tailwinds from tax cuts and deregulation. The International Monetary Fund recently raised global growth forecasts to 3.1% this year—but doesn't expect more than 2% in the U.S. in 2025 or 2026. The problem is that tariffs represent a large stealth tax increase as average rates rise from 2.5% to nearly 20%, depending on what goods are ultimately covered. Not all prices will rise by this much as imports represent just over 10% of the economy, and many companies will absorb some of the higher costs. Still, the $300 billion in tariff revenues that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent expects this year will be paid by Americans. Worse than this one-off blow, however, is the lingering uncertainty for investors and corporate strategists. Even as Trump's tariffs went into effect on Aug. 7, crucial details of the deals he has announced remain unknown. Meanwhile, Trump has promised more tariffs on pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. And even if pending court cases force him to backtrack on some tariffs, his 'Truth Social' threats of tariffs to pressure Brazilian prosecutors or block India's purchases of Russian oil will keep everyone on their backfoot. Read More: Trump's Decision to Fire BLS Commissioner Echoes Putin's Strategies There's also a big question around Chinese imports, many of which could see tariffs snap back to 145% if the current truce is not extended beyond Aug. 12. Negotiators signaled they might extend the deadline, working towards an agreement that Trump and China's president Xi Jinping could endorse at a fall summit. Then, the White House walked back this suggestion. Indeed, it doesn't take much more than a weather balloon to derail this fragile relationship. Markets delivered a bone-chilling response to Trump's initial 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements in early April with a simultaneous sell-off of U.S. stocks, treasury bonds, and the dollar. If that news came as a jolt, today's rocketing stock prices suggest investors believe the economy can handle higher costs and persistent uncertainty. Or they believe the Fed will be cutting rates soon. But the real test will come in the fall when goods with their new post-tariff price tags start arriving in stores. Will they bring another burst of inflation that the Fed has to fight with delayed rate cuts? Could they damage the holiday spirits of American shoppers and raise the risks of recession? Still worse, might we see both? If a U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities, escalating fighting in Ukraine, and the president's persistent attacks on the Fed aren't enough to derail this market, it could be a burst of 1970s-style 'stagflation' that does the trick.