Turning a Revenue Target Into Weekly Math, Growth Academy

Growth Academy · Section 3 · Finding the money

Turning a Revenue Target Into Weekly Math

Your revenue goal has a number for December. Does it have a number for this Tuesday?

By the end of this section you can reverse-engineer a revenue goal into measured weekly activity and find the break in the funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step., the path customers travel from first hearing about you to paying, before spending on growth.
Page 1 of 4Before you start

Most revenue goals are a wish with a due date.

Write down "$10M by December" and you have written a hope, not a plan. It sounds like a plan because it has a number and a date. What it does not have is a single monthly figure you can check against, so the first moment you would learn whether you are on track is December itself, when it is too late to change anything.

The fix is not a bigger spreadsheet or a smarter forecast. It is a different starting point. Instead of pulling a target from ambition and working forward, you start from the smallest number that counts as success and work backward through your own conversionWhen someone takes the next step you wanted, like signing up or paying. math, the rates at which people actually take the next step you want, until you land on a required count for every single week. That number is checkable in March. It is checkable this Tuesday.

This section teaches that backward walk in three parts. First, how to build the model itself, from a floor number instead of a dream number, and cascade it down into a weekly task list with names attached. Second, why the model only works on a funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. that is already fixed and instrumented, and what to check before you spend a dollar on acquisition. Third, what actually moves the needle once the plumbing works: experimentation, existing trust, and a small number of genuinely big ideas, not a bigger budget.

If your business runs on relationships and referrals rather than a digital funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step., the math still applies. Swap "clicks" for "conversations" and "signup" for "qualified lead," and the same backward walk produces the same weekly number.

Page 2 of 4Learning 1 of 3

Reverse-engineer the revenue target instead of hoping toward it.

Picture a team that had just written an ambitious annual OKRA goal-setting format that pairs an ambitious objective with the measurable results that would prove you hit it., objectives and key results, a goal paired with the numbers that would prove you hit it: $10M in revenue, ten profitable projects, fifty target accounts. The numbers looked serious. They were made up.

"Basically, we set 10 million in revenue at the end of the year. And then based on that, we wrote this. But we have no idea if these things will lead to 10 million revenue."

The alternative starts from the floor, not the ceiling. Name your minimum success criterion, the number below which the plan has failed, and pair it with a handful of unit assumptions you already have some evidence for: expected customer lifetimeHow long a typical customer keeps buying from you before they stop., average order valueThe average amount a customer spends in one purchase., take rateThe percentage a platform or marketplace keeps from each transaction it handles., the rate at which a visitor becomes a signup, the rate at which a signup refers another visitor. Run those assumptions forward and you get an exponential curve, month by month, not a straight division of the annual number by twelve. That curve tells you exactly how many buyers, signups, and visitors each month requires.

The team's own model, built this way, called for roughly 4,300 new signups in the current month, sourced from about 430,000 clicks. That number is checkable mid-month. When the team looked, they were sitting at 180 active buyers against a required 216: close enough to confirm the model was right, precise enough to act on immediately.

The cascade into the week

A monthly target that lives in a spreadsheet does not change anyone's Tuesday. The next move is to cascade it into a weekly activity list with real quantities and a named owner for each line, so a mid-week glance answers "are we on pace" without waiting for the month to close.

Monthly targetCountWeekly activityCount
4,300 signups from 430,000 clicks430K clicksEducational posts3 / week
Tweets, across time zones6 / day
Competition or giveaway1 / week
Partnership outreach activities2 / week
Ad campaign, capped budget1 / 2 weeks
Targeted referral outreach30 / week
Newsletter1 / 2 weeks
Content-creation day1 / week

Every row above is written into the project tool as a task with an assignee and a due date. The monthly number (4,300 signups) is also divided by roughly four and logged as its own weekly due-dated task, about 1,100 signups a week, so the correction happens inside the month instead of after it.

Two questions filter every idea before it earns a place on that list. First: which funnel stageOne step in that path, such as visitor, signup, buyer, or repeat buyer. does it actually move, visitors, signups, buyers, or repeat buyers? An idea with no named stage is noise. Second, the magnitude check: does the idea's realistic yield match the scale the target requires in the time available? A course that brought 2,000 people over two years is a fine asset, but it cannot supply the hundreds of thousands a three-month push requires. Ideas get sorted by arithmetic, not by how appealing they sound.

When several bottlenecks are visible at once, technology, onboarding, a handoff gap, resist the urge to work all of them at once. Estimate the rough return of fixing each, and commit the team to the single highest-impact one first. That single choice does double duty: it produces more impact than ten half-finished fixes, and it gives everyone the same answer to "what are we actually working on."

  1. 1. Harkin et al., "Does Monitoring Goal Progress Promote Goal Attainment?", Psychological Bulletin 142(2), 2016. Meta-analysis of 138 randomized trials, N=19,951.
Page 3 of 4Learning 2 of 3

Fix and instrument the foundation before you turn on the engine.

One health-and-wellness startup preparing to fix its brand and infrastructure before spending on paid acquisition put it plainly: shaky foundations make it very hard to scale from there, no matter how much money goes into the growth layer. The same standard holds from the other direction: send paid traffic to a broken destination, and everyone you paid to bring in sees the break firsthand. Foundation work is not glamorous. It is the precondition for everything built on top of it.

  1. Walk your own funnel as a stranger.Open the ad or post, the landing pageThe single web page an ad or link sends people to, built to move them toward one action., the signup, the checkout, in a private window. Click every link. A warm click that re-lands on the homepage instead of continuing the specific journey it started is the break, and it is common: one telehealthHealth care delivered remotely, over video or an app. service spent thousands and converted a handful of signups, zero paying customers, because every ad sent a decided click back to a generic homepage.
  2. Name the source of every number before you trust it.A traffic figure, an abandonment rateThe share of people who start signing up or buying and quit before finishing., a click count is not information until you know the channel, geography, and campaign behind it. Reviewing a 93% abandonment figure without knowing where that traffic came from invites any story you like, and none of them are falsifiable.
  3. Instrument before you scale spend.If you can measure a step, you can fix it. If you cannot, you are guessing. Keep the assessment-to-purchase flow on a domain you control so every step is visible, and tag every partner and press link individually, because most operators run heavy marketing without ever learning who is actually buying.
  4. Know the operational detail before you write the copy.Payment sequencing, pricing tiers, eligibility checks, shipping timing: each one changes what a campaign can honestly promise. Copy written from assumptions instead of the real flow makes claims the flow cannot support.

Sometimes the break is not in marketing at all. When conversion fails despite real traffic and competent execution, the honest read is that the product itself needs to change, not the copy around it. One rebuild only found tractionProof that real customers want what you sell, shown by payments and growth, not compliments. after the team conceded that its "democratized access" positioningThe place you claim in the buyer's mind: who your product is for and why it beats the alternatives., the place it claimed in the buyer's mind, was contradicted by its own one-of-a-kind pricing tier, and restructured the offer before restructuring the campaign.

~2% e-commerceSelling goods online. visitor to buyer, industry benchmarkA published typical number for your industry, used as a starting comparison until you have your own.2 15-25% SaaSSoftware customers pay for by subscription and use over the internet. trial to paid, industry benchmark3 93% abandonment with no source attached, worthless on its own

Published benchmarks, typical published numbers for your industry, are a starting range, not a promise. Work the funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. backward using ranges, not points: start from a published figure close to yours, then replace it with your own measured rate the moment you have one. Your own baseline always beats the industry's, because it is the only rate with your traffic behind it.

Sources

  1. 2. Triple Whale, Ecommerce Benchmarks 2025: global average conversion roughly 1.8-2%, top quartile 3-4%.
  2. 3. Userpilot, B2B SaaS Funnel Conversion Benchmarks: visitor-to-trial 2-5%, trial-to-paid 15-25% for opt-in trials.
Page 4 of 4What you do with this

Growth comes from experimentation, trust, and big ideas, not budget.

Traditional marketing runs one ad, waits weeks, and evaluates at the end. Growth marketing runs several variants at once, kills what is not working quickly, and treats every campaign as an ongoing experiment instead of a single bet. A team that ran one static ad set for a month with zero conversionsWhen someone takes the next step you wanted, like signing up or paying. before pausing learned the cost of that difference the hard way.

"Content marketing is a channel. The kind of content you put in there can make that channel effective or can make it not effective."

Social, PR, partnerships, and paid ads are all pipes. None of them generate attention on their own. What moves the needle is a story worth retelling, a genuine category-first, and once you have one, even influencer interest tends to follow rather than needing to be bought. One team built a headline giveaway (rewards drawn entirely from products it already owned, so the prize pool cost nothing to fund) and tied it to a real anniversary so the scale had a believable reason behind it. The same team flipped its outreach model: instead of chasing partners, it built an application process with a selective panel of judges, so applicants pitched to be chosen instead of being cold-approached, and every applicant, winner or not, became a warm contact who had approached them first.

Existing trust converts. A generic, unbranded site pointed at cold traffic mostly does not, even with a fast checkoutThe final steps where a customer enters payment details and completes a purchase., because visitors have no reason yet to trust the destination. The businesses that converted well on one shared platform were the ones sending an already-trusting customer base to it. The same logic applies to building any platform for yourself: prove an audience organically first, then let publishers or investors compete to fund the distribution, instead of paying for distribution before anyone has shown they want what you are distributing.

None of this works from a marketing seat alone. Diagnosing why a funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. underperforms, rather than guessing, requires understanding the product well enough to talk with engineering directly, without a translation layer in between. A team that spans backend, product, and marketing catches problems at the seams that single-discipline specialists keep bouncing between without resolving.

Tool pointer. The Revenue Model Calculator turns the backward walk from Learning 1 into a working instrument: enter your minimum success number, your period length, your deal value, and your funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. stages with sourced conversion rates, and it computes the required weekly count at every stage, flags whichever one exceeds what you can plausibly do, and exports the cascade as the living document for your weekly check-in.
What you do with this · The Stranger's Funnel Walk 45 min

Walk your own funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. as if you had never seen it before, then reverse-engineer one real target.

  1. Walk it cold. Open your funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. in a private window: the ad or post, the landing pageThe single web page an ad or link sends people to, built to move them toward one action., the signup, the checkoutThe final steps where a customer enters payment details and completes a purchase.. Click every link. Screenshot every break or dead end.
  2. Check the landing. Note where your best, most decided traffic actually lands. If it re-lands on the homepage, that is the break.
  3. Source every metric. For your top five dashboard numbers, write the channel, geography, and campaign next to each. Anything you cannot source, flag as noise.
  4. Reverse-engineer one target. Name your minimum success number for the period, not the aspirational one, and cascade it into this week's activity counts, assigned by name.
  5. Name the one bottleneck. Of everything you just found, pick the single fix with the biggest return, and write one sentence on why you picked it over the others.

You did it right if you found at least one break you did not already know about. No funnelThe path a customer travels from first hearing about you to paying you, with people dropping off at every step. is clean on the first cold walk. Finding nothing means you walked it as the owner, not as a stranger.