Glossary

The terms that actually matter inside the engine.

Plain-language definitions for the language founder-led or family-owned B2B operators actually use. Built so the next person who sits in your conference room (or asks an AI assistant about your business) gets the same answer you would give.

Revenue engine

The connected system of marketing, sales, and customer success that produces growth. In a founder-led or family-owned B2B firm, the revenue engine is the set of repeatable processes that take a stranger and turn them into a paying customer, then expand that customer over time. Most stalled engines aren't broken at one function; the breakdown is at the hand-offs between them.

Fractional CRO

A Chief Revenue Officer engaged on a part-time or interim basis, typically two to three days a week, who owns the full revenue system: marketing, sales, and customer success. Unlike a consultant, a fractional CRO operates inside the business, attends internal meetings, owns outcomes, and is accountable for results. Unlike a full-time CRO, the engagement flexes with the business and avoids the $400K+ comp load.

RevOps (Revenue Operations)

The function that aligns the systems, data, and processes across marketing, sales, and customer success so the revenue engine produces predictable output. RevOps owns the CRM, forecasting, reporting, and the operational connective tissue between revenue teams. In smaller founder-led businesses, RevOps often starts as one analyst inside finance and grows into its own function as revenue scales.

Founder-led business

A company where the founder is still actively involved in day-to-day operations, key decisions, and major customer relationships. Most founder-led businesses hit a structural ceiling somewhere between $5M and $15M in revenue when the founder's personal capacity becomes the binding constraint. Breaking through that ceiling requires building systems that produce growth without the founder in every meeting.

Family-owned business

A company where ownership and frequently leadership sit with one family across one or more generations. Family-owned businesses face the same revenue-engine scaling challenges as founder-led businesses plus an added layer: succession, role clarity between family members, and the cost of unresolved family dynamics carrying into the boardroom. The structural fixes are the same; the political cost of implementing them is higher.

CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)

The fully-loaded cost to acquire a new customer, including marketing spend, sales compensation, tooling, and overhead allocated to acquisition. Calculated as total acquisition spend divided by new customers acquired in the period. CAC without context is just a number; CAC paired with payback period and customer lifetime value is the actual signal.

CAC payback period

The number of months it takes to earn back the cost of acquiring a customer through gross margin from that customer. Healthy benchmarks: under 12 months for SMB, 18 to 24 months for mid-market, up to 36 months for enterprise. Beyond 36 months and growth starts consuming the cash it produces, which is how venture-funded businesses look profitable on a slide and broken on a cash-flow statement.

Net Revenue Retention (NRR)

The percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers in a period, accounting for expansion, contraction, and churn. NRR above 100% means the existing customer base grows revenue without any new logos. NRR below 90% in a subscription business is a structural problem: you are filling a leaky bucket faster than it drains, and the cost of doing that goes up every quarter.

Pipeline coverage

The ratio of open pipeline to quota in a given period, by sales stage. Healthy coverage is typically 3x to 4x of quota at the start of a period. Coverage below 3x means the team has to win an unrealistic percentage of deals to hit the number, which is the leading indicator of a missed quarter four to six weeks before the miss shows up in the forecast.

Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL)

A lead that has met the marketing-defined threshold for sales follow-up, usually based on firmographic fit and behavioral signals (content downloads, page visits, form fills). MQLs that don't convert to SQLs at a reasonable rate (typically 20% to 40%) signal a definition problem between marketing and sales, not necessarily a quality problem.

Sales Qualified Lead (SQL)

A lead that sales has accepted as worth pursuing based on fit, need, budget, and timing. The MQL-to-SQL conversion rate is one of the highest-signal metrics in a stalled revenue engine because it exposes whether marketing and sales actually share a definition of a real opportunity, or whether they're each optimizing for their own number.

Founder's Syndrome

A stage-of-growth pattern where the founder's grip on every decision, hire, and relationship stops scaling with the business. The traits that built the company (tight control, instinct over process, personal involvement in every deal) become the constraint on the next chapter. It is not a character flaw; it is the predictable transition point between $2M and $10M in nearly every founder-led company. Recognizing it is the first move out of it.

Sales cycle

The elapsed time from first qualified opportunity to closed-won, measured by stage and segment. Cycle length lengthening quarter over quarter is one of the earliest signals of a market shift, a positioning problem, or a buyer-confidence issue. Watch cycle by segment, not the aggregate; the aggregate hides where the slowdown actually lives.

Forecast accuracy

How close the predicted period-end revenue lands to the actual number. Forecast accuracy below 80% means the operating team is making investment decisions on unreliable signal. The cause is usually inconsistent stage definitions and missing exit criteria between stages, not rep dishonesty. Tighten the stage definitions and accuracy improves before pipeline does.

Stalled revenue engine

A revenue system that is no longer producing growth at the rate the business needs, despite the same or higher input spend. The defining feature of a stall is that adding more inputs (headcount, agency spend, tools) doesn't change the output. The constraint is structural, not capacity-based. More fuel in a broken engine just produces more expensive stagnation.

Embedded operator

A senior leader who works inside the business as part of the operating team rather than from the outside as an advisor or consultant. Embedded operators attend internal meetings, own outcomes, and are accountable to the same metrics as the rest of leadership. Revved for Growth operates this way; the model is built around being in the room when it matters, not behind a deck after the fact.

Revenue diagnostic

A structured assessment of where a revenue engine is actually leaking, mapped stage by stage across marketing, sales, and customer success. A real diagnostic looks at conversion rates, cycle times, hand-off quality, and segment-level performance, then identifies the single highest-leverage constraint to fix first. The output is a sequenced fix list, not a deck.

Win rate

The percentage of qualified opportunities that convert to closed-won. Win rate decline at constant pipeline coverage is a more urgent signal than pipeline shrinkage because it indicates a positioning, pricing, or competitive problem rather than a top-of-funnel issue. Win rate by segment exposes where the offer actually lands; aggregate win rate hides the answer.

Sales-marketing alignment

The structural condition where sales and marketing share one revenue target, one definition of a qualified opportunity, and one documented hand-off process. True alignment is structural, not cultural; offsites and shared Slack channels don't fix incentive misalignment. If marketing is paid on lead volume and sales is paid on closed revenue, the friction is built into the org chart.

Customer success

The function responsible for onboarding, adoption, retention, and expansion of existing customers. In any business where renewal and expansion produce meaningful revenue, customer success reports to the CRO; reporting to product or operations creates a structural disconnect between acquiring and keeping customers. CS is the third leg of the revenue engine, not a post-sale service function.

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