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Your Best Client Might Also Be Your Biggest Financial Risk. Here's How to Tell

March 13, 2026

Written by

Melissa Armstrong

Founder of SteadyHand Accounting & Advisory

A few years ago, I started working with a creative agency founder who was, by every

visible measure, thriving. Her team had grown from three people to twelve. She had

landed a dream client, a national brand that kept sending over new projects. The

retainer alone was enough to cover most of her overhead. She told me, with genuine

relief in her voice, "I finally feel stable."

Six months later, that client restructured internally and paused all agency partnerships.

Overnight, 60% of her revenue was gone.

She was not doing anything wrong. She had built something real and beautiful. But her

financial foundation had a quiet crack running through it that neither of us had caught in

time.

Client concentration risk. It is one of the most common, and most overlooked, financial

vulnerabilities I see in women-led marketing and creative agencies. And the tricky part

is that it feels like success right up until it doesn't.

What Is Client Concentration Risk, Exactly?

Client concentration risk is what happens when one client (or a small handful of clients)

makes up a disproportionately large share of your revenue. There is no universal

threshold, but as a general guideline, if a single client represents more than 25% of your

total revenue, that relationship deserves a closer look. If they represent more than 40%,

you are in financially vulnerable territory, regardless of how healthy the relationship

feels right now.

This is not about being pessimistic or planning for failure. It is about building a business

that can absorb a loss without falling apart. Strong businesses are built on diversified,

stable revenue, not one big relationship that doubles as a single point of failure.

Why Agency Founders Are Especially Vulnerable

There are a few reasons this pattern shows up so often in creative and marketing

agencies specifically.

First, landing a big client feels like a victory, and it is. But when that win comes with a

large retainer, it can quietly crowd out the urgency to keep building your pipeline. Why

hustle for three smaller clients when this one covers your nut?

Second, agency work tends to deepen over time. A client who starts with one project

becomes a strategic partner. Scope expands. The relationship becomes personal. And

the more invested you both are, the harder it is to see that client as a risk.

Third, and I say this with so much love for this community: women founders often tie

their sense of financial security to relationships rather than systems. When a client feels

solid, we feel solid. But feelings and financials are not the same thing, and that gap is

where vulnerability lives.

How to Actually Measure Your Exposure

Here is a simple exercise I walk my clients through. Pull your revenue by client for the

last 12 months and calculate each client's share of your total. Then ask yourself:

• Does any single client represent more than 25% of my revenue?

• Do my top two clients together represent more than 50%?

• If my largest client paused tomorrow, could I make payroll for 90 days?

• Is my sales pipeline active, or have I been coasting on existing work?

If any of those questions made your stomach drop a little, you are not alone. And that

discomfort is useful data. It means there is work to do. The good news is, it is very

doable work.

This Is a Financial Planning Problem, Not Just a Sales Problem

I want to be clear about something: addressing client concentration is not just about

going out and getting more clients. It is about designing your financial model to be

resilient by default.

That means building a cash reserve that covers at least 60 to 90 days of operating

expenses, so that a sudden revenue drop does not immediately become a crisis. It

means understanding your true break-even number. Not just revenue, but what you

actually need to cover your team, your tools, and yourself. And it means tracking your

revenue mix intentionally, the same way you track project margins or client satisfaction.

A few things I help my clients build once we identify concentration risk:

• A revenue diversification target (for example, no single client above 20% within

12 months)

• A cash flow model that stress-tests what happens if your top client churns

• A rolling 13-week cash forecast so you always know where you stand

• A monthly client revenue report that makes concentration visible before it

becomes a problem

What to Do If You Are Already Concentrated

First, breathe. This is fixable. But it does require intention.

The most important thing you can do right now is not to panic-sell or abruptly change

how you serve your top client. That relationship has real value. What you want to do is

treat it as the gift it is while actively building your bench.

Use the revenue cushion that client provides to invest in business development.

Reactivate relationships with past clients. Create a referral strategy. Think about what a

smaller, lower-touch service offering might look like to bring in a different kind of client at

a different price point.

And while you are doing that, shore up your cash reserves. If your top client gave you

30 days notice today, how long could you operate? If the honest answer is less than two

months, that is the first financial fire to put out.

The Real Goal Is a Business That Can Weather Anything

I started SteadyHand Accounting & Advisory because I believe women founders

deserve financial clarity not just at tax time, but every single month. And financial clarity

means knowing not just how much you made, but how stable the foundation underneath

it actually is.

Your best client is a blessing. I hope you keep them forever. But the most powerful thing

you can do for your agency right now is to make sure that if they ever left, your business

would still be standing and still be yours.

Not sure where you stand? Start with my free self-assessment. It will help you spot the gaps and

opportunities in your current financial setup. And if you want a real conversation about

your numbers, reach out through our contact form at Steady Hand Accounting and I

would love to help.

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Melissa Armstrong