The part most businesses underestimate
Here’s the thing
Most companies don’t lose EBITDA in big, visible ways.
They lose it quietly.
Not through bad strategy.
Not through lack of demand.
But through weak internal controls.
What this really means is simple:
If your controls are not tight, your profitability is not real.
What are internal control weaknesses
Internal controls are the systems and processes that keep your business financially disciplined.
They ensure:
- Revenue is recorded correctly
- Costs are authorised and monitored
- Compliance is maintained
- Risks are identified early
A weakness appears when these systems either fail or don’t exist in the first place.
And when that happens, the numbers may still look fine on paper.
But underneath, value is leaking.
Why control weaknesses happen
Most control failures are not intentional.
They build over time.
1. Rapid growth without structure
Businesses scale faster than their processes.
Controls don’t evolve at the same pace.
2. Over reliance on people
Critical functions depend on individuals instead of systems.
When people change, controls break.
3. Lack of ownership
No one is clearly responsible for monitoring controls.
So gaps go unnoticed.
4. Manual processes
Too many spreadsheets.
Too little automation.
Higher chance of error and manipulation.
5. Weak review mechanisms
Data exists but is not reviewed with intent.
Issues are detected late.
The real risks businesses face
Weak controls don’t just create technical issues.
They create business risks.
- Revenue leakage through incorrect billing or missed invoicing
- Uncontrolled expenses and cost overruns
- Fraud risks due to lack of segregation
- Regulatory exposure and penalties
- Delayed or incorrect financial reporting
But the bigger issue is this:
Most of these risks don’t show up immediately.
They compound quietly.
How internal control weaknesses impact EBITDA
This is where it becomes serious.
EBITDA is not just a number.
It reflects how efficiently a business operates.
Weak controls directly distort this.
1. Revenue leakage
- Unbilled revenue
- Incorrect pricing
- Missed collections
All of this reduces top line realization.
2. Cost inefficiencies
- Duplicate payments
- Unapproved spending
- Vendor leakages
Costs increase without adding value.
3. Provisioning and write offs
- Errors and disputes lead to bad debts
- Inventory mismatches lead to write downs
These directly hit profitability.
4. Compliance costs
- Penalties
- Interest
- Litigation expenses
These are avoidable but become real costs.
5. Poor decision making
When data is unreliable,
decisions are flawed.
And flawed decisions impact EBITDA over time.
What this means for leadership
A business may report strong EBITDA.
But if controls are weak, that number is not sustainable.
What looks like profitability today can reverse tomorrow.
Strong leadership doesn’t just focus on growth.
It focuses on control.
Because control is what protects growth.
How businesses can strengthen internal controls
This is not about adding complexity.
It is about building discipline.
- Define clear ownership of processes
- Move from manual tracking to system driven controls
- Introduce maker checker mechanisms
- Conduct periodic internal audits
- Use data reviews as a decision tool, not a formality
The goal is simple:
Make control part of how the business operates daily.
Where HSAG comes in
At HSAG, internal controls are not treated as a checklist.
We look at how your business actually functions.
Where value is being lost.
And how controls can be built without slowing you down.
From internal audits to CFO level advisory,
the focus stays on one thing:
Protecting your EBITDA while helping you scale with clarity.
Final thought
Weak controls don’t break a business overnight.
They weaken it slowly.
And by the time it shows in EBITDA,
the damage is already done.
The smarter move is to fix it before it becomes visible.