Growth lever simulator helps you see where revenue growth will actually come from before you invest time, spend, or headcount.
Most leadership teams try to grow by pushing the most visible lever, usually traffic or lead volume. That can work, but it’s often the most expensive lever and the least reliable one.
This tool gives you a simple way to compare four growth levers side-by-side:
traffic volume
conversion rate
average order value (pricing)
retention (repeat purchase frequency)
You enter your current baseline, adjust the sliders, and the simulator shows the projected annual revenue change.
Enter monthly averages to calibrate.
Adjust levers to see the highest ROI path.
The growth lever simulator lets you test “what if” scenarios without rebuilding your funnel, changing your pricing, or launching a new campaign.
It answers questions like:
If we increase conversion by 10%, what happens to revenue?
If we raise average order value by 5%, does it outperform buying more traffic?
If we improve retention, what does that do to annual run rate?
Which lever gives the biggest impact for the least effort?
This is not a forecasting tool. It’s a leverage tool.
It helps leaders choose where to focus first.
The growth lever simulator is useful for:
founders and CEOs who need clarity on growth priorities
COOs who want predictable execution targets
CMOs who want to reduce “more traffic” as the default answer
revenue leaders comparing funnel and pricing initiatives
teams aligning marketing, sales, and retention under one model
It’s also useful when:
growth feels stuck even though activity is high
CAC is increasing
conversion is inconsistent
retention is flat
pricing decisions are made without clarity on impact
The simulator uses a simple revenue model based on four inputs you provide.
Baseline inputs:
monthly visitors (traffic)
conversion rate (%)
average order value (AOV)
retention frequency (repeat purchases per year)
Then it calculates annual baseline revenue using:
Annual Revenue = Traffic × Conversion Rate × AOV × Retention × 12
The sliders apply percentage increases to each lever so you can test scenarios and compare tradeoffs.
This structure is intentionally simple. Simple models are easier to align a leadership team around.
If you want to use the simulator well, it helps to understand what each lever typically represents in real operations.
Traffic is input volume.
Traffic improvements usually come from:
paid acquisition
SEO and content distribution
partnerships
outbound and audience building
Traffic is powerful, but it often increases CAC unless the rest of the system improves.
If you increase traffic without improving conversion or retention, you often just pour more volume into a leaky bucket.
Conversion rate is efficiency.
Conversion improvements usually come from:
clearer positioning and offer clarity
better landing page structure
faster follow-up (for lead-gen funnels)
better qualification
stronger proof and objection handling
Conversion is often the highest leverage lever because it improves the output from the same input.
AOV is pricing and packaging.
AOV improvements usually come from:
packaging changes
value-based pricing
upsells and bundles
offer design and guarantees (carefully, without overpromising)
AOV increases can improve revenue quickly, but they must match market willingness to pay and delivery reality.
Retention is compounding.
Retention improvements usually come from:
improved onboarding and time-to-value
customer success systems
product improvements
lifecycle campaigns and reactivation
better customer fit from the start
Retention is powerful because it reduces acquisition dependence and improves long-term profitability.
Step 1: Enter your baseline numbers
monthly visitors
conversion rate
average order value
retention frequency
Step 2: Confirm your baseline annual revenue
This gives you a starting point your team can agree on.
Step 3: Adjust one lever at a time
Start by moving only one slider.
This helps you see which lever creates the biggest change.
Step 4: Compare combined improvements
After single-lever tests, combine realistic changes.
Example:
+10% conversion
+5% AOV
+10% retention
Step 5: Use the results to choose the next initiative
The simulator gives direction, not answers.
Your next step is to choose the highest-leverage initiative you can execute reliably.
The output is most useful when you treat it as a prioritisation tool.
A good interpretation process:
Identify the top lever in your scenario
Which lever created the biggest revenue lift?
Ask what it would take operationally
What systems or improvements would produce that lever change?
Check effort vs confidence
How confident are you that you can achieve that improvement in the next 30–90 days?
Choose one lever to focus on first
Multi-lever strategies are good, but most teams need one clear constraint to fix first.
If your simulator results show traffic dominates, verify your conversion and retention first.
Traffic-driven growth is often the most expensive way to scale.
The growth lever simulator is simple, but teams often misuse it in predictable ways.
If baseline numbers are inflated, the output is misleading.
Use 3-month averages, not best-month numbers.
Traffic often looks easiest to change.
But it can hide system leakage:
poor conversion
weak follow-up
low retention
unclear offer
If delivery or sales capacity is the constraint, improving marketing may not help.
This is not a financial forecast.
It’s a directional model to choose leverage points.
Examples:
raising AOV reduces conversion
increasing volume reduces follow-up quality
pushing retention offers reduces margin
This is why systems thinking matters.
Baseline:
traffic is increasing
conversion is flat
follow-up is inconsistent
Likely leverage:
Improve conversion rate before buying more traffic.
Operational moves:
speed-to-lead standard
qualification rules
landing page clarity
proof and objections
Baseline:
traffic is stable
conversion is stable
AOV is low
retention is flat
Likely leverage:
Test AOV and retention improvements.
Operational moves:
bundles and upsells
onboarding and lifecycle offers
post-purchase emails
time-to-value improvements
The growth lever simulator is most useful if you recognise these patterns:
growth depends on buying more traffic
CAC is rising
conversion fluctuates month to month
retention is flat
pricing hasn’t been reviewed in 12 months
teams disagree on what to prioritise
dashboards exist but decisions still feel uncertain
If these are true, a leverage model helps you pick a focus that reduces wasted effort.
I built tools like this because most growth teams default to volume.
What I typically see:
traffic becomes the “easy button”
conversion and retention are treated as secondary
pricing is avoided because it feels risky
teams run many initiatives without a clear leverage hypothesis
What I prioritize:
establish a baseline everyone agrees on
identify the highest leverage lever
connect that lever to a real operational change
run one focused improvement cycle
review results weekly and adjust
What good looks like:
fewer growth initiatives at once
clearer tradeoffs
improved efficiency before increased spend
more predictable growth without constant pressure
Performance-Driven Systems.
Helping leadership teams scale through clarity, reliable execution, and sustainable growth architecture.
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