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

Focus effort on the 20% of activities that drive 80% of results, systematically eliminating low-yield work to maximise output per hour invested.
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The Pareto Principle often called the 80/20 rule says that a small share of inputs usually creates the bulk of the outputs. Economist Vilfredo Pareto noticed in 1896 that 20 per cent of Italians owned 80 per cent of the land; the same uneven pattern shows up almost everywhere:
In B2B growth work, the rule is a thinking tool, not a fixed ratio. Your split might be 70/30 or 90/10, but the message is unchanged: a few high-leverage activities create most results, and the long tail creates noise.
The Pareto Principle matters because it systematically identifies where to focus scarce resources for maximum impact, whilst most organisations distribute effort evenly across all activities regardless of yield. Applying the principle means analysing your customer base to identify the 20% that deliver 80% of profit, then orienting sales and customer success toward serving and expanding those relationships whilst potentially exiting low-value segments. It means examining content performance to find the handful of pieces driving most conversions, then producing more in that vein rather than maintaining a scattered editorial calendar. For channel strategy, it often reveals that 1-2 channels generate most pipeline whilst 5-6 others consume budget and attention for marginal returns. The principle doesn't suggest ignoring the 80%, but rather recognising that different segments deserve different intensity of focus your top 20% of customers might receive dedicated account management, whilst the remaining 80% are served through automated systems and self-service. The framework is especially valuable during resource constraints: when you must cut 30% of marketing budget, Pareto analysis shows which 30% of spend generates only 5% of results, allowing surgical cuts rather than across-the-board reductions that harm high-performing programmes. The principle also guards against democratic decision-making fallacies: stakeholders advocating for "fair" distribution of resources across all products or segments may feel equitable, but such approaches starve your most productive assets whilst overinvesting in marginal ones. Organisations that rigorously apply Pareto thinking typically discover they can eliminate 50% of activities whilst maintaining 95% of results, then reinvest that liberated capacity into doubling down on highest-yield opportunities.
Export leads by source, revenue by client, or trial sign-ups by blog post. Keep one metric per table so you can sort it without confusion. If data quality is shaky, fix tracking first; the rule only helps when inputs and outputs line up.
Order the list from largest to smallest contribution. Mark where cumulative output crosses roughly 80 %. You will spot a short, steep section the “vital few” and a long, flat tail. In a SaaS funnel, five nurture emails might account for almost all conversions; the rest just add noise.
Improving a proven lever by 10 % often beats launching something untested from scratch.
Archive under-performing ads, sunset unused features, or batch low-value admin once a week. Reclaiming those hours funds deeper work on the 20 % that counts.
Markets shift; yesterday’s star article can fade. Schedule a recurring 80/20 review each quarter, ideally right before OKR planning, so next cycle’s goals reflect what is now driving results.
The Pareto Principle turns “work smarter” from a slogan into a method: identify the few inputs that power most outcomes, invest more there, prune the rest, and repeat. In growth marketing, the habit of quarterly 80/20 reviews keeps focus on the campaigns, clients and experiments that truly move pipeline and revenue.
How do you make all four engines work together instead of in isolation?


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.
Richard Koch
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Use Pareto thinking to pick channels, ideas and customers. Cut the long tail and double down on what works.
Track predictable monthly subscription revenue to monitor short-term growth trends and make faster decisions than waiting for annual revenue reports.
Build distribution through your personal brand and network where your expertise and story attract customers who trust you before your company.
Measure the percentage of customers who stop paying to identify retention problems and calculate the true cost of growth in subscription businesses.
Focus your entire organisation on the single metric that best predicts success at your current growth stage, avoiding distraction and misalignment.
Estimate the maximum revenue opportunity if you captured 100% market share to size your opportunity and prioritise which markets to enter first.
Connect triggers to actions across systems so repetitive tasks happen automatically and teams can focus on work that requires judgement instead of admin.
Drive acquisition and expansion through product experience where users discover value before sales conversations and upgrade based on usage.
Focus resources on high-impact business mechanisms where small improvements generate disproportionate results across the entire customer journey.
Block extended time for cognitively demanding tasks requiring sustained focus, maximising valuable output whilst minimising shallow distractions.
Enable tools to exchange data programmatically so you can build custom integrations and automate processes that vendor-built integrations don't support.
Document your ideal customer's role, goals, and challenges to tailor messaging and prioritise features that solve real problems they actually pay for.
Structure experiments around clear predictions to focus efforts on learning rather than random changes and make results easier to interpret afterward.
Identify the fundamental factors that directly cause business expansion, concentrating resources on activities that generate measurable results.
Plan how you'll reach customers and generate revenue by choosing channels, pricing, and sales models that match your product and market reality.
Document your repeatable processes in clear, step-by-step instructions that ensure consistency, enable delegation, and capture institutional knowledge.
Prioritise tasks systematically by sorting them into urgent-important quadrants, focusing effort on high-impact activities.
Define pipeline progression steps to standardise how reps advance opportunities and give managers visibility into where deals stall or convert unexpectedly.
Assign credit to marketing touchpoints that influence conversions to understand which channels work together and deserve budget in multi-touch journeys.
Set ambitious goals and measurable outcomes that cascade through your organisation, creating alignment and accountability for strategic priorities.
Group customers by acquisition period to compare behaviour patterns and identify which acquisition channels and time periods produce the best long-term value.