Cutting waste from your business sounds like a total no-brainer. Less waste usually means lower costs, cleaner processes, and honestly - a little less chaos in your day. But here's the catch.
A lot of businesses try to cut waste by slashing things too aggressively and end up hurting their productivity, their quality, and their own sanity in the process. There IS a better way, friends.
You don't have to choose between being efficient AND being effective. With the right mindset and the right tools, you can trim the fat without losing what actually makes your business work!

1. Visibility is where you begin.
Before you cut ANYTHING, you need to actually see what's happening in your business. So much waste hides in plain sight - inefficient routes, duplicated tasks, unused subscriptions (more on that in a second!), or manual processes that you've been doing forever just because "that's how it's always been done."
Without visibility, cutting waste is just guesswork. Tools that track your workflows, logistics, or resource usage can surface inefficiencies you didn't even know existed. Platforms like CurbWaste help businesses get real insight into their waste operations so you can spot patterns and make smart decisions BEFORE things get out of hand!
2. Automate the boring (but costly!) stuff.
Repetitive tasks are sneaky little time thieves. Each one might only take a few minutes, but across a whole team or a whole YEAR? They add up fast. Manual data entry, repetitive reporting, scheduling tasks, email follow-ups - all of this can often be automated.
And here's the thing: automation isn't just about saving time. It also reduces human error and frees you up to focus on the work that actually moves the needle.
My advice? Start with your most repetitive, low-impact tasks first and build from there. Don't try to overhaul everything at once or you'll end up overwhelmed and back to square one!
3. Fix the PROCESSES, not the people.
This is my absolute sweet spot, you guys! At least once a year, I go through EVERYTHING I do in my business.
Does it still need to be done at all? If not - gone!
Does it need to be done by ME, or could a new tool or service handle it? This kind of process audit is genuinely one of the most valuable things I do all year. Because here's the truth: when something feels inefficient, it's tempting to assume someone isn't pulling their weight.
But MOST of the time, the inefficiency is baked right into the process itself! If a task requires five approvals, three tools, and two handoffs - even your best person is going to struggle. Instead of pushing people to work faster, streamline what they're working with. Can steps be combined or removed? Is information being entered more than once? Are people waiting on approvals that don't actually need to happen? Fixing processes almost always unlocks more value than cutting people ever could.
4. Use data to make decisions (not just vibes).
Okay, I'll confess - I am an analytics NERD. I watch ALL the numbers in my business and I would genuinely love a clean dashboard where I could pull everything into one place. Because gut instinct has its place, but it is NOT the best tool for identifying waste!
Your operational data tells a much clearer story - where time is being spent, where resources are underutilized, where bottlenecks are quietly slowing everything down (and usually I am the bottleneck!)
Even a simple dashboard can reveal game-changing insights, like which processes are taking the longest or where costs are quietly creeping up. The trick? Actually USE the data. Set a regular cadence - monthly, quarterly, whatever works - to review your key metrics and make adjustments. It becomes your own little feedback loop and TRUST ME, once you start you won't want to stop!
5. Consolidate your tech stack - and check your subscriptions!
You guys. I have a story. Have you seen those commercials about forgotten subscriptions quietly draining your bank account? I LIVED that!
I stopped taking clients but kept paying for a credit card processor for YEARS because I just... didn't notice. And when I finally went to cancel? Turns out they only allowed cancellations once a year with 60 days' notice. SIXTY DAYS. That is predatory and you should absolutely go check your subscriptions right now. I'll wait!
Beyond the sneaky stuff, one of the biggest modern forms of waste is simply having too many tools doing overlapping things. It is SO easy for a business to accumulate software over time - one tool for project management, another for communication, another for reporting, and on it goes.
Before long you're paying for duplicate features AND dealing with fragmented data. Consolidating your tech stack reduces both cost and complexity.
And here's my personal rule: before I get excited about shiny new software, I always ask whether something I ALREADY pay for can do the same thing. Marketing is a beautiful and persuasive thing - but don't let it talk you into buying something your current stack already does!
Cut Operational Waste Wrapup
I hope this post helped you to take a minute to think things you can do to make your business more efficient and less stressful.
Now I am off to take a look and see what else I can do to make my biz better!




