Revenue Planning Tool

Lead Flow to Projected Revenue Calculator

Start with your current lead volume and see what revenue your funnel will actually produce — plus CAC, LTV, and payback analysis.

Step 1
Current Lead Generation

Enter your current monthly lead generation and contract details.

Recurring vs. project revenue split
Step 2
Funnel Conversion Rates

Defaults are conservative B2B benchmarks. Update with your actual percentages if known.

Results
Projected Revenue
Annual MRR Revenue
Annual Project Revenue
Total Annual Revenue
New MRR Clients / Year
Step 3
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

Enter your monthly sales & marketing expenses to calculate unit economics.

Unit Economics
CAC Analysis
Monthly New Customers
CAC
Customer LTV
LTV:CAC Ratio
CAC Payback Period
Assessment
CAC Health Check
Your LTV:CAC Ratio
Target Range
3:1 – 5:1
Status
Max Affordable CAC (1:3)
Recommendation
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Common Questions
Let's Answer Some of Your Questions

While this calculator can help you identify whether your current lead flow is sufficient to achieve your annual revenue goals, it can also raise a lot of questions. Here are the most common ones — but if you'd like a personalized analysis for your company, let's talk.

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A good CAC is not just about the lowest possible cost — it's about efficiency and profitability relative to your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). The most widely accepted benchmark is:

Aim for a CAC:LTV ratio of 1:3 or better (i.e., for every $1 spent to acquire a customer, you generate at least $3 in gross profit from that customer over their lifetime).

This ensures your business remains profitable after accounting for acquisition costs and ongoing service delivery.

Customer Acquisition Cost for professional services companies can vary significantly depending on the specific sector, target client size, and sales cycle length. However, industry research provides useful benchmarks:

Legal Services: $749 – $1,300 per client
IT & Managed Services: ~$454 per client
Financial Services: ~$784 per client
Business Consulting: ~$656 per client (startups)

Lead: Any individual or organization that has shown initial interest in your product or service. This interest can be as simple as visiting your website, subscribing to a newsletter, or filling out a contact form. At this stage, leads are unqualified — they may or may not fit your ideal customer profile, and their intent to buy is not yet clear.

Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL): A lead that has demonstrated a higher level of engagement with your marketing efforts and is more likely to become a customer compared to other leads. MQLs are typically identified by actions such as downloading a whitepaper, repeatedly visiting your website, or engaging with marketing emails.

Sales Qualified Lead (SQL): An MQL that has been vetted and accepted by the sales team as meeting specific criteria for a potential sale. SQLs have shown clear intent to buy, have a need for your product or service, have the budget, and have the authority to make a purchasing decision.

Opportunity: A qualified prospect that has moved further down the sales funnel and is seriously considering making a purchase. At this stage, the sales team is actively working with the prospect, discussing pricing, terms, and specific solutions. Opportunities meet criteria such as budget, authority, need, and timeline (BANT) at a bare minimum.

Lead — Top of Funnel
MQL — Middle of Funnel
SQL — Lower Middle of Funnel
Opportunity — Bottom of Funnel

For the purposes of this calculator, we kept the pre-filled conversion rates at the low-end to default to a conservative estimate. If your actual conversion rates are lower than the default, you have a lead quality issue that needs to be addressed.

A lead to MQL conversion rate below 25% suggests:

  • Lead Quality Issue: The leads entering your funnel may not fit your ideal customer profile or show enough intent.
  • Inefficient Marketing Spend: Resources may be wasted attracting unqualified or poorly targeted leads.
  • Misaligned Qualification Criteria: Your definition of an MQL may be too strict, or your marketing and sales teams may not be aligned on what constitutes a qualified lead.
  • Gaps in Lead Nurturing: Leads may not be receiving the right content or follow-up to move them further down the funnel.

If your actual conversion rates are lower than the default, you have a qualification issue that needs to be addressed. A MQL to SQL conversion rate below 15% suggests:

  • Lead Quality or Qualification Issues: Marketing may be passing leads that don't meet sales' criteria, or your lead scoring/nurturing process may be too broad or not targeted enough.
  • Sales and Marketing Misalignment: There may be a disconnect between how marketing defines an MQL and what sales considers a true SQL.
  • Sales Process Inefficiencies: Slow follow-up, lack of personalization, or poor handoff between teams can reduce conversion rates.

If your SQL to Opportunity rate is below 50%, it may signal a sales process issue:

  • Lead Quality Issues: Many SQLs may not be truly qualified or ready for a sales conversation, leading to high drop-off at this stage.
  • Misaligned Qualification Criteria: The definition of an SQL may be too broad, or not aligned with what your sales team considers a real opportunity.
  • Ineffective Sales Process: Slow follow-up, lack of personalization, or poor handoff between teams can reduce conversion rates.
  • Poor Sales Enablement Tools: Bad demos, sales decks that don't speak to ICP-driven pain points, or unclear value drivers leading to pricing objections can all drastically lower your conversions.
  • Sales and Marketing Misalignment: Disagreement between marketing and sales on what constitutes a qualified lead can result in unproductive pipeline stages.

If your actual conversion rates are lower than the default, you have a pipeline quality issue that needs to be addressed. A close rate below 15% suggests:

  • Low Pipeline Quality: Many opportunities entering your pipeline may not be well-qualified or are unlikely to close from the outset.
  • Poor Qualification or Discovery: Sales teams may be advancing deals without fully understanding or addressing the buyer's true needs, leading to stalled or lost deals.
  • Misaligned Sales Process: There could be a disconnect between how opportunities are defined and what actually constitutes a real chance of closing.
  • Resource Waste: Time and effort are being spent on deals that have a low likelihood of success, reducing overall sales efficiency.
  • Competitive or Market Challenges: Intense competition, market saturation, or economic headwinds can also depress close rates.