The 21-Metric Dashboard: What to Track Weekly, Monthly, and Quarterly
7 leading indicators, 7 lagging indicators, 7 health metrics. Designed to tell you the health of your business in under 5 minutes.
Gino Wickman insists on 5-15 numbers. Verne Harnish wants them on the CEO's desk weekly. Mike Michalowicz tracks "Profit per X" as the single economic denominator. The consensus across every operational framework: if you can't assess your business health in under five minutes, you're tracking the wrong things.
For a service platform business — one built on a diagnostic methodology, a certified practitioner network, and recurring revenue — the 21 metrics below cover everything that matters. Seven leading indicators reviewed weekly. Seven lagging indicators reviewed monthly. Seven health metrics reviewed quarterly.
The common mistake is tracking too many metrics. More data creates noise, not clarity. If you add a metric beyond these 21, remove one. The dashboard should answer one question in five minutes: is this business healthy?
At any given point, one of these 21 metrics will matter more than the others. Harnish calls it the "Critical Number." Identify it each quarter and rally the entire organization around it.
The 7 Leading Indicators
Weekly Review — 15 Minutes at the End of Your L10
Leading indicators tell you what's coming. They're predictive — if they're trending down, revenue will follow in 4-8 weeks. That's enough warning to intervene before the damage shows up in your bank account.
1. Assessments Completed. The most fundamental activity metric in a diagnostic-driven business. Target: growing trend, 5+ per week at 25 partners. If assessments aren't being delivered, nothing else in the pipeline moves. This metric is your canary.
2. Proposals Sent. Assessments create opportunities. Proposals convert them. Target: 3-5 per week per active salesperson. A high assessment count with a low proposal count means the bridge isn't working — practitioners are diagnosing but not converting.
3. Pipeline Value. Total value of proposals in active pipeline. Target: 3x your quarterly revenue target. If pipeline value drops below 2x, you don't have enough opportunity in play to hit your numbers.
4. Content Published. Articles, posts, podcast episodes released across the ecosystem. Target: 5+ per week. Content drives the demand flywheel — the top of the funnel that generates assessment requests. When content slows, leads slow 4-6 weeks later.
5. Cash Collected. Not revenue. Not invoiced. Cash in the bank this week. Target: on track for monthly target. This is Harnish's oxygen metric — the one that tells you whether you can pay your bills regardless of what the revenue numbers say.
6. New Leads Generated. Assessment requests, discovery calls booked, inbound inquiries. Target: 10+ per week. This metric tells you whether your marketing is working before the downstream metrics confirm it.
7. Partner Activity Rate. Percentage of certified partners who delivered at least one assessment this week. Target: 40%+ at any given week. A network of 25 certified practitioners where only 5 are actively delivering isn't a network — it's five consultants sharing a logo.
The weekly review takes 15 minutes. Flag anything off-trend with a simple red/yellow/green. Assign one person to investigate each red metric before next week. Don't problem-solve in the review — just identify and assign.
Wickman's L10 meeting format works perfectly here. Spend the first five minutes checking these seven numbers. Save the deep analysis for the IDS section of the meeting, where the team can actually solve what they've identified.
The 7 Lagging Indicators
Monthly Review — 30 Minutes, Separate Meeting
Lagging indicators tell you what already happened. They're confirmatory — they validate whether the leading indicators were accurate and whether your interventions worked. Review these monthly.
8. Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR). Total certification and subscription revenue. Target: growing month over month. This is the metric that ultimately determines your business's valuation multiple. When MRR exceeds 80% of total revenue, you're in subscription territory.
9. Revenue per Active Partner. Total ecosystem revenue divided by active partners. Target: growing quarter over quarter. This is the "Profit per X" denominator. If this number is climbing, the ecosystem is healthy. If it's flat or declining, either your partners aren't effective or your market is saturating.
10. Average Deal Size. Average value of closed engagements. Target: growing; 30%+ above single-option benchmark. When you shifted from single proposals to three-tier proposals, deal size should have jumped. If it hasn't, the three-tier presentation needs work.
11. Win Rate. Proposals won divided by proposals sent. Target: 40%+ for qualified pipeline. Below 30%, something in the sales process is broken — likely the diagnostic-to-revenue bridge. Above 60%, you may not be reaching high enough or pricing aggressively enough.
12. Time to First Engagement. Days from certification to first paid client engagement. Target: under 90 days. A practitioner who doesn't land a client within three months of certification is at high risk of disengagement. This metric tells you whether your sales enablement is working.
13. Cross-Referral Rate. Percentage of engagements that generate a cross-referral to another practitioner. Target: 20%+. This is the network effect in action. When practitioners routinely refer clients to each other, the ecosystem is functioning as designed.
14. Client Satisfaction (NPS/CSAT). Average client rating of engagement quality. Target: 4.5/5.0 or NPS 50+. This metric is your quality control early-warning system. A declining satisfaction score means quality issues are emerging — probably from newer practitioners who haven't yet mastered the methodology.
Share the monthly dashboard with all partners. Transparency builds trust. When partners see the network's collective performance, they benchmark themselves against their peers — and peer accountability is more powerful than any management directive.
The 7 Health Metrics
Quarterly Review — Part of Your Quarterly Summit
Health metrics are structural. They don't change weekly or monthly — they reveal whether the underlying architecture of your business is sound. Review these quarterly, looking for trends across 3+ months, not single data points.
15. Partner Retention Rate. Percentage of partners renewing certification annually. Target: 80%+. This is the ultimate product-market fit test. If practitioners don't find enough value to justify the annual fee, the model isn't working. Below 70%, you have a structural problem.
16. Partner NPS. Net Promoter Score from partners about the ecosystem. Target: 50+. Your partners are your primary customers. If they wouldn't recommend the ecosystem to a colleague, the growth engine stalls.
17. Certification Renewal Rate. Percentage of eligible partners who renew on time. Target: 85%+. The distinction from retention: this measures how many renew when prompted versus how many renew at all. Late renewals signal ambivalence — the partner isn't leaving, but they're not enthusiastic either.
18. Thought Leadership Output. Published articles plus speaking engagements per partner per quarter. Target: growing per tier. Thought leadership isn't vanity — it's the content flywheel that drives leads. Partners who publish attract clients. Partners who don't publish stay dependent on the network for leads.
19. Founder Time Allocation. Percentage of founder time on Designing versus Doing. Target: 50%+ Designing by Year 2. This is Gerber's fundamental metric. If the founder is still doing delivery in Year 2, the system isn't working. Track this ruthlessly and share it with the team.
20. Cash Conversion Cycle. Days between spending a dollar and getting it back. Target: trending toward zero or negative. As the business shifts from project billing to annual subscriptions, this number should shrink steadily.
21. Benchmarking Data Volume. Total assessments in aggregated database. Target: 100+ by end of Year 1; 500+ by end of Year 2. This is the data flywheel metric. More assessments create better benchmarks. Better benchmarks make the next assessment more valuable. The flywheel only spins when the data volume grows.
"The most common dashboard mistake is tracking too many metrics. If your dashboard takes more than five minutes to review, it has too many numbers. Simplify until it's fast."
Publish the full 21-metric dashboard to the entire ecosystem quarterly. The act of publishing creates accountability. Partners see where they stand relative to the network. Practitioners see which metrics the founder considers important. Transparency isn't optional — it's the mechanism that aligns everyone around the same definition of health.
The Critical Number
Which of the 21 Matters Most Right Now
At any given point, one of these 21 metrics is more important than the others. Harnish calls it the Critical Number — the single metric that the entire organization rallies around for a quarter.
The Critical Number shifts as the business evolves:
- Year 1: Assessments Completed. Are practitioners actually using the methodology? If they aren't delivering assessments, nothing else matters.
- Year 2: Certification Renewal Rate. Are practitioners finding enough value to stay? If retention is below 80%, the model needs fixing before you grow further.
- Year 3: Revenue per Active Partner. Is the ecosystem economically healthy? Are partners thriving, or are they certified but dormant?
Identify your Critical Number at the start of each quarter. Make it visible — in every meeting, every report, every partner communication. When the entire ecosystem focuses on one number, progress on that number accelerates. When everyone tracks 21 numbers equally, nothing moves meaningfully.
Twenty-one metrics. Three cadences. One Critical Number. That's the operating system for a service platform business. Review leading indicators weekly to catch problems early. Review lagging indicators monthly to confirm trends. Review health metrics quarterly to check the foundations. And at all times, know which single number deserves the most attention.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.