TurnkeyCFO client dashboard
Eagle Oak Landscape, L.L.C.

April 2026 dashboard for Eagle Oak Landscape

April is modeled as a good spring month. Sales improved to $96.4k, gross margin recovered to 48.8%, and operating profit was positive. The two areas to keep watching are crew productivity and how quickly invoices turn into cash.

Executive summary

At a glance: April was better, but labor and collections still need attention

This top section answers the main owner questions first: sales, gross profit, operating profit, and cash. If you only read one section, start here.

April revenue
$96.4k
Up 25% from March and 14.7% above modeled monthly run-rate, led by strong maintenance routing and spring enhancements.
YTD revenue: $297.4k
Gross profit
$47.0k
Gross margin landed at 48.8%, back inside the expected range for a well-managed commercial landscaping month.
Direct labor + materials: $49.4k
Operating profit
$9.3k
Operating profit margin of 9.7% shows the company can make money when crews stay busy and work is priced correctly.
Net income after interest and taxes: $7.1k
Ending cash
$62.1k
Cash improved, but only after collections accelerated in the back half of the month and owner draws were kept light.
Payroll coverage ratio: 1.8x
Revenue

Maintenance work keeps the base steady; project work adds upside

This is the revenue mix to protect. Monthly maintenance helps keep crews loaded. Install, irrigation, and add-on work improve the month when priced well.

April revenue mix
Recurring maintenance: $57.8k Install / enhancement: $27.0k Irrigation / specialty: $11.6k
Recurring maintenance60%
Install / enhancement28%
Irrigation / specialty12%

This is a healthy mix. The steady maintenance base helps cover payroll, while project work gives the month extra profit.

Revenue by month with data labels
Jan Feb Mar Apr $50k $64k $77k $96k $0 $30k $60k $90k

The first four months show a normal spring ramp. The key is keeping this pace without letting crews sit idle.

Revenue detail
Category April % of revenue
Recurring maintenance$57.8k60.0%
Install / enhancement$27.0k28.0%
Irrigation / specialty$11.6k12.0%
Total revenue$96.4k100.0%
Growth levers
KPI April Read
New contracts signed3Two multifamily, one light industrial
Upsell revenue$8.9kSeasonal cleanup and irrigation repair packages
Customer churn1.8%Low enough to protect route density
Average monthly contract value$2.9kSignals room for pricing work on smaller accounts
Labor

Crew productivity is still the main driver of profit

For this company, labor is the big lever. If crews stay busy on well-priced work, profit improves quickly. If routes are loose or jobs are underbid, profit disappears fast.

Revenue per employee
$3.9k
Using April as the pace month, this points to roughly $46k per employee on an annual basis. That is better, but still below stronger operators.
Target band: $6.5k to $8.5k per employee per month
Labor % of revenue
36.1%
This is workable, but it leaves little room for wasted drive time, small low-priced stops, or callback work.
Field labor dollars: $34.8k
Crew utilization
81%
Better than winter, but it still suggests some dead time in the schedule or too many small underpriced stops.
Target: 86%+
Utilization by crew
Crew A Crew B Crew C Crew D 92% 84% 77% 70%

The gap between the best and weakest crews is too wide. That usually points to route design, stop pricing, or dispatch issues more than staffing shortage.

Unit economics
Revenue per labor hour $82
Gross profit per crew day $671
Average route density 7.4 stops

These numbers are good enough to support a profitable month, but not strong enough to cover sloppy route planning. In a labor-heavy business, small scheduling problems add up quickly.

Labor profile April Benchmark
Billable labor hours1,1721,200+
Overtime hours74Below 60
Non-billable yard / travel time12.5%Below 10%
Callback / rework rate3.2%Below 2.5%
Financial detail

Profit and loss, cash flow, and receivables detail

This section shows the real financial detail behind the summary. It ties sales, job costs, payroll pressure, and collections into one clear view.

April profit and loss
Line item April % of revenue
Revenue$96.4k100.0%
Direct labor$34.8k36.1%
Materials and subs$14.6k15.1%
Gross profit$47.0k48.8%
Operating expenses$34.1k35.4%
Owner comp / admin overhead$3.6k3.7%
Operating profit$9.3k9.7%
Interest + taxes$2.2k2.3%
Net income$7.1k7.4%
Sales and operating profit trend
Feb Mar Apr YTD avg $60k $77k $96k $69k 4% 6% 10% 7%

Sales are improving, but the more important point is that profit improved too. That means the extra revenue did not get eaten up by overhead or labor drift.

Cash flow and cash safety
Metric April Takeaway
Operating cash flow$6.8kImproved as April invoices converted faster than March
Investing cash flow($4.2k)Routine mower and trailer maintenance
Financing / owner draws($2.5k)Controlled draw activity preserved cash
Net cash movement$0.1kCash stayed basically flat while still funding growth
Cash runway6.2 weeksSafe, but not enough to get sloppy on collections
Customer receivables aging
Bucket Amount % of A/R
Current$36.4k49%
31-60 days$18.3k25%
61-90 days$11.0k15%
91+ days$8.1k11%
Total A/R$73.8k100%

Receivables look better than a high-risk case, but the business is still carrying payroll before all cash comes in. The goal is simple: get paid faster and more predictably.

Largest customers
Client Monthly billings % of revenue
Northgate Multifamily$14.6k15.1%
Vista Ridge Property Group$11.8k12.2%
Coppell Commerce Center$8.2k8.5%
Top 3 total$34.6k35.8%
Balance sheet watch list
Account April Read
Cash$62.1kOperationally adequate
Accounts receivable$73.8kNeeds active follow-up cadence
Equipment loans$48.5kReasonable for fleet size
Accounts payable$19.7kWithin normal vendor float
Owner equity / retained earnings$104.0kProtected if summer margin holds
Key commentary

Main takeaways and next steps

The business looks healthier in April, but the next round of improvement depends on clear pricing, tighter routes, and faster collections.

1. Maintenance contracts are doing their job

At 60% of revenue, recurring work is stabilizing labor absorption and giving the business a base from which to add higher-margin projects. That reduces volatility and makes growth more controllable than a project-only model.

2. Productivity improved, but there is still room to tighten the routes

April's utilization and labor percentage are respectable, yet revenue per employee still trails stronger operators. The next win is route density and minimum pricing discipline on small accounts, not broad cost-cutting.

3. Payroll is still the real cash pressure point

Even in a good month, weekly payroll hits before all invoices are collected. A tighter A/R cadence, cleaner deposits on install work, and faster completion billing will do more for financial resilience than trimming office overhead.

4. Some margin improvement is probably sitting inside the current customer mix

The profile suggests too many small or underpriced contracts. If management prunes low-density stops and pushes enhancement upsells through the best property managers, operating profit can improve without adding much headcount.

Simple May action plan: raise minimum pricing on low-density stops, bill irrigation repairs the same week, review the 10 weakest accounts by profit per visit, and track each crew on billable hours, callbacks, and route completion time.