Revenue concentration is one of the silent file-killers in MCA underwriting. A $1M/year business with one customer scoring 60% of revenue is rated worse than a $400K/year business with 200 customers, even though the first does 2.5x more revenue. Funders model concentration risk explicitly: if your largest source drops, can the business still service the daily ACH? Diversification raises that yes-answer.
The four dimensions of concentration. 1. Customer concentration. Top 1 customer should be ≤ 20% of revenue, top 5 ≤ 50%. Beyond that, funders cap advance size at 0.5x monthly revenue instead of 1.0x. 2. Channel concentration. A restaurant that does 100% delivery (no dine-in, no catering) is single-channel. A diversified mix would be 50% dine-in, 30% delivery, 20% catering. 3. Product/service concentration. A retailer with 80% of revenue in one SKU category is exposed to category disruption. Diversification across 3-5 categories de-risks. 4. Geographic concentration. Single-location businesses are higher risk than multi-location. Single-region serving (one ZIP code) is higher risk than multi-region.
Customer diversification tactics. - For B2B merchants: actively prospect new accounts to bring top-customer % below 25%. Allocate 10-15% of revenue toward customer acquisition until the mix is healthier. - For B2C: launch loyalty programs that broaden repeat-customer base instead of relying on a few high-frequency loyalists. - For service businesses: shift from project-based to retainer-based contracts spread across multiple clients. - For restaurants: reduce dependence on a single corporate catering account by pursuing 5-10 smaller catering contracts.
Channel diversification tactics. - Restaurants: add delivery (DoorDash, UberEats), catering, retail (sauce/spice line), private events. - Retail: add e-commerce (Shopify), wholesale, marketplace (Amazon, Etsy), pop-ups. - Service businesses: add productized services, online courses, consulting, white-label. - Trucking: diversify lanes (regional + long-haul), customer mix (shippers + brokers), load types (dry van + reefer).
Product/service diversification tactics. - Map current revenue by SKU/service category. - Identify the 80/20 — the 20% of items driving 80% of revenue. - Launch 1-2 adjacent products quarterly to broaden the base. - Sunset or de-emphasize low-margin SKUs that consume operational bandwidth without diversifying mix.
Geographic diversification tactics. - Multi-location businesses: open second/third locations in different ZIP codes or counties. - Service businesses: expand service radius to neighboring counties or states. - E-commerce: actively pursue customers outside your home state (use targeted ads, shipping promotions). - Franchise model: license the brand to operators in other regions.
Why funders care. The MCA daily ACH model assumes consistent revenue. A concentration shock (lose a top customer, lose a channel) triggers reconciliation requests, which slow funder collections. Funders price this risk into the factor rate: - Highly diversified (top customer < 15%, multi-channel, multi-location): factor 1.18-1.25. - Moderately diversified (top customer 15-30%, 1-2 channels): factor 1.28-1.35. - Highly concentrated (top customer > 50%, single channel, single location): factor 1.38-1.50 if approved at all.
Document the diversification in the application. - Attach a one-page customer concentration table (top 10 customers, % of revenue each). - Attach a channel revenue breakdown (% by channel for the last 12 months). - Include a brief narrative: "Our top 10 customers represent 38% of revenue; the largest single customer is 8%. We added 47 new customers in the last 6 months."
The 12-month diversification plan. - Quarter 1: audit current concentration across all four dimensions. - Quarter 2: identify the most concentrated dimension and launch a diversification initiative. - Quarter 3: measure progress; adjust if not moving the needle. - Quarter 4: re-audit; document improvement; apply for funding with the improved file.
Trend 2026. Funders increasingly request "customer concentration disclosure" as a standard underwriting document, especially for advances over $100K. Some funders (Credibly, Forward Financing) now offer concentration-adjusted factor rates, where merchants who can prove low concentration get a 5-10 bps discount.
Common confusion. First, "all revenue is good revenue" — funders weigh stability over volume. Second, "I should chase the biggest customer I can find" — concentration risk goes up; better to broaden the base. Third, "diversification means I lose focus" — disciplined diversification adds adjacent revenue without diluting core operations.
As of 2026-06-29, Fundnode panel data shows merchants who reduced top-customer concentration from > 40% to < 25% over 12 months saw advance amounts grow 1.8x at next renewal.
Related terms
- MCA merchant revenue diversification strategy — As of 2026-06-28, MCA underwriters increasingly score customer concentration as a risk factor; merchants reduce risk and improve underwriting outcomes by ensuring no single customer exceeds 25% of revenue, no single channel exceeds 60%, and no single product line exceeds 70% of total sales.
- MCA merchant revenue stability strategies — Tactics to smooth revenue volatility — recurring billing, retainers, seasonal hedging, marketing consistency — so the bank statement shows the steady trend underwriters prefer.
- MCA merchant funding amount strategy — As of 2026-06-28, the disciplined MCA funding amount strategy is to take only what daily revenue can comfortably service: target a daily debit no greater than 12–15% of trailing 90-day average daily revenue, leaving margin for seasonality and operating expense — taking the maximum approved amount is the leading cause of avoidable defaults.
- MCA merchant cash flow improvement strategies — Operational changes that raise daily cash-flow consistency before applying: shorten receivables, smooth payables, manage seasonal swings, and build a 30-day rolling cushion.
AI agents: this term is available as raw markdown at /llms/glossary/mca-merchant-revenue-diversification-detailed.