LEAD-TO-ORDER PROCESS
Most $5M–$50M technology companies do not have a sales problem.
They have a Lead-to-Order process problem.
Revenue becomes unpredictable when the operating architecture behind commercial performance has not kept pace with the company’s growth stage. The issue is rarely effort. It is structural design.
Any of This Happening?
- The board asks how confident you are in the forecast. The honest answer is: it depends who updated the CRM last.
- One slow quarter and you are pausing hires, deferring investment, or explaining variance to investors.
- Important deals do not close unless you personally get involved.
- You replaced a sales leader in the last 18 months. The numbers did not change.
Three Levels. You Stop When You Have What You Need.
Level 1
Structural Assessment
Find out what is actually wrong. Six dimensions of your revenue process scored against companies at your stage and in your sector. Delivered in five working days. Takes 30 minutes of your time.
Level 2
Architecture Redesign
Get the blueprint to fix it. A redesigned revenue process, an operating model, a 90-day plan, and a board brief you can use at the next meeting. Three weeks. Three hours of your time.
Level 3
Rebuild Sprint
Have it installed. ICP model in the CRM. Qualification rules enforced. Pipeline discipline built. Forecast accuracy restored. Board-ready before-and-after at day 90.
The Intelligence Behind The Verdict
Every Lead-to-Order assessment is grounded in commercial intelligence — not theory. TechGrowth Insights produces ongoing, decision-grade research used by CEOs, boards, and investors to understand what is actually working in live commercial environments.
Our Competitive Edge Intelligence Series:
| Report | What it covers |
|---|---|
|
The Competitive Deal Playbook |
How competitors really sell, price, and position — verified proposals, not public claims |
|
The Competitive Product Roadmap |
Where markets are moving, which motions are emerging, what's breaking first |
|
The Investment Risk Radar |
Early warning signals on pricing pressure, churn risk, and failed expansion patterns |
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The operating history behind the structural work
The Lead-to-Order methodology was not developed in theory. It was extracted from 25 years of installing and governing revenue operating systems across global technology businesses — in the seat where decisions are made and outcomes are measured.
Michael Williamson
Lead-to-Order Process Advisor
The experience base:
- Chief Product & Marketing Officer, Equifax
- Global GM Commercial Growth, Vodafone
- GM Commercial Growth & Revenue, Telefonica
- VP Marketing, Symantec
- London Business School MBA
- GTM decisions owned across £1.8bn–£12bn P&Ls
- Board Advisor & Operating Partner to PE-Backed SaaS, Cyber, Fintech, Telecom & IoT Scale-Ups
Assessed by those who operated alongside
From C-suite leaders and P&L owners who worked with Michael under board-level commercial pressure.
Revenue becomes predictable when the architecture governing Lead-to-Order is structurally sound
If your Lead-to-Order process is under pressure, the first step is structural clarity.
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