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Growth leadership
How do you make all four engines work together instead of in isolation?

Build self-reinforcing systems across demand generation, funnel conversion, sales pipeline, and customer value that create continuous momentum.
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A growth engine is a self-reinforcing part of your business that, once running, continues to generate revenue with less and less manual push. My framework has four engines Demand Generation, Marketing Funnel, Sales Pipeline, and Contract Value. Each engine handles a stretch of the customer journey, and together they form one continuous loop: attract the right people, convert them, close deals, then expand and retain accounts. Improve any single engine and revenue rises; improve all four and the gains compound.
Growth engines matter because they transform random marketing activity into systematic, compounding progress. Most organisations operate with disconnected tactics LinkedIn campaigns here, email sequences there, ad-hoc sales follow-ups that don't reinforce each other or create momentum. The engine framework forces you to see how components interconnect mathematically: leads × conversion rate × win rate × average deal value = revenue. This reveals where growth actually breaks down. Perhaps you generate abundant leads (strong demand generation) but few convert to opportunities (weak funnel), making additional lead generation wasteful until you fix conversion. Or perhaps your funnel works brilliantly but deals stall in pipeline (weak sales process), indicating that more top-of-funnel investment helps nothing. By treating each stage as a distinct engine with measurable throughput, teams can diagnose precisely where effort yields highest returns. The discipline also enables experimentation velocity: you can test improvements to individual engines whilst holding others constant, cleanly measuring impact. Organisations that implement the four-engine model report 25-35% faster growth because they systematically address actual bottlenecks rather than guessing where to invest. The framework also clarifies ownership different teams naturally own different engines improving accountability and coordination across marketing, sales, and customer success.
Track leads generated, funnel conversion, win rate, and average contract value. Multiplying these four numbers shows current revenue potential.
Whichever metric drags the total down is the first focus. For example, strong lead flow but low meeting bookings points to a funnel issue.
As one engine improves, re-calculate the full equation. Even modest lifts 10 % more leads, 5 % higher win rate stack into meaningful revenue jumps.
Once an engine performs at benchmark, shift focus to the next weakest link. Maintaining this rotation keeps the whole growth machine humming and protects against future plateaus.
How do you make all four engines work together instead of in isolation?

Build the dashboards and data pipelines that show your growth engines in one view so you can spot bottlenecks and make decisions in minutes, not meetings.

The wrong tools create friction. The right ones multiply your output without adding complexity. These are the tools I recommend for growth teams that move fast.
Analyse last cycle's results across all twelve metrics, identify the highest-leverage improvements, and set priorities that compound into the next period.
Pressure-test your strategy against market shifts, performance data, and team capacity so your direction stays relevant and ambitious.
Sean Ellis
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A practical framework for experiments and insights. Build loops, run tests and adopt a cadence that ships learning every week.
Sean Ellis
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A tour of growth case studies. Identify engines, spot patterns and design experiments that fit your context.
Verne Harnish
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Practical tools for scaling a company. Use rhythms, scorecards and priorities to keep a growing team aligned.
See how Random Rick, Specialist Steve, and Solid Sarah compare side by side and why a structured system always wins.
Document your ideal customer's role, goals, and challenges to tailor messaging and prioritise features that solve real problems they actually pay for.
Identify the fundamental factors that directly cause business expansion, concentrating resources on activities that generate measurable results.
Measure which marketing activities drive desired outcomes to allocate budget toward channels that actually generate revenue instead of vanity metrics.
Turn satisfied customers into active promoters who systematically bring qualified prospects into your pipeline at near-zero acquisition cost.
Calculate how many users you need in experiments to detect meaningful differences and avoid declaring winners prematurely based on insufficient data.
Connect tools so data flows automatically between systems to eliminate manual entry, keep records current, and enable sophisticated workflows across platforms.
Track revenue growth from existing customers through expansion and contraction to prove your product delivers increasing value over time.
Define how you're different from alternatives in a way that matters to customers to guide all messaging and ensure consistent market perception.
Select metrics that reveal whether you're achieving strategic goals to track progress and identify problems before they become expensive to fix.
Calculate your true growth trajectory by measuring the rate at which your business grows when gains build on previous gains over multiple periods.
Capture specific user actions in your product or website to understand behaviour patterns and measure whether changes improve outcomes or create friction.
Group customers by acquisition period to compare behaviour patterns and identify which acquisition channels and time periods produce the best long-term value.
Maintain an unchanged version in experiments to isolate the impact of your changes and prove causation rather than correlation with external factors.
Prioritise tasks systematically by sorting them into urgent-important quadrants, focusing effort on high-impact activities.
Log emails, calls, and meetings automatically to understand what drives deals forward and coach reps based on actual behaviour rather than guesswork.
Identify what you do better or differently that competitors can't easily copy to defend margins and win customers consistently over time.
Articulate the specific outcome customers get from your solution to communicate why they should choose you over doing nothing or using alternatives.
Drive acquisition and expansion through product experience where users discover value before sales conversations and upgrade based on usage.
Build distribution through your personal brand and network where your expertise and story attract customers who trust you before your company.
Track your user journey through Acquisition, Activation, Retention, Referral, and Revenue to identify which stage constrains growth most.