Revenue Growth

You don’t have a revenue problem. You have a revenue architecture problem.

When growth stalls, the instinct is to do more. For most technology businesses, the real issue sits in the structure beneath the numbers.

When growth stalls, the instinct is to do more: more leads, more activity, more headcount. For most technology businesses, that is the wrong fix. The real issue sits in the architecture beneath the numbers, where deals leak out between marketing, sales and delivery.

Adding more effort to a leaky structure just pushes more volume through the same gaps. The leaks get bigger, not smaller. The cost goes up, and the conversion stays flat.

Where revenue actually leaks

Follow a hundred leads through a typical technology business and watch what happens at each hand-off. The drop is rarely about effort. It is about structure: unclear qualification, undefined hand-offs, and no owner for the gaps between teams.

Where revenue leaks out

Marketing · Leads in
100↓ leak
Sales · Qualified & worked
60↓ leak
Hand-off · Reaches delivery
38↓ leak
Delivery · Becomes revenue
25

The leak is structural — not an effort problem.

Deals leak out at every hand-off. The losses compound through the funnel.

The tell

More activity, same result.

If the team is busier than ever but the numbers have not moved, that is the signature of an architecture problem. Effort is going in. It is leaking out before it reaches revenue. The fix is structural, not motivational.

You cannot out-work a broken revenue architecture.

Fixing the structure

The fix is to define what a qualified opportunity actually is, agree how deals move between teams, and give someone ownership of the hand-offs where revenue currently leaks. It is unglamorous work. It is also where the largest, fastest gains hide.

The takeaways
  • Stalled growth is usually a structure problem, not an effort problem.
  • Deals leak out at the hand-offs between marketing, sales and delivery.
  • Adding more activity to a leaky funnel just enlarges the leaks.
  • Define qualification, fix the hand-offs, and own the gaps between teams.
Find the leak

See exactly where your revenue is leaking out.

A Growth Review runs your business through the Revenue Readiness Framework, pinpoints where growth is lost, and gives you the priority actions to fix it.