How long does it take you to answer the question "is my business healthy?" If the honest answer involves opening three spreadsheets and reconciling a bank feed, you don't have a dashboard — you have an archive. Gino Wickman caps the scorecard at 5-15 numbers. Verne Harnish puts them in front of the CEO every single week. Mike Michalowicz compresses the entire economics of a company into one denominator he calls "Profit per X." Different frameworks, same verdict: a working dashboard answers the health question in five minutes or it isn't working.
What follows is the full instrument panel for a service platform business — a company built on a diagnostic methodology, a network of certified practitioners, and recurring revenue. Twenty-one numbers split across three cadences: seven you watch weekly, seven you confirm monthly, seven you inspect quarterly.
Treat twenty-one as a ceiling, not a starting point. Every metric you bolt on past that line adds noise faster than it adds insight. The rule is simple: want to track something new? Retire something old first.
Three Cadences, One Question
Why the Dashboard Splits Into Weekly, Monthly, and Quarterly
The three groups aren't arbitrary buckets. They map to how fast information moves through a service business.
Leading indicators are predictive. When one of them turns down, revenue follows roughly 4-8 weeks later. That lag is your intervention window — enough time to act before the problem reaches your bank account. These get a weekly look.
Lagging indicators are confirmatory. They tell you what already happened, which makes them useless for early warning but essential for verification: were the weekly signals accurate, and did your interventions actually work? These get a monthly review.
Health metrics are structural. They barely move week to week, because they describe the architecture of the business rather than its activity. You read them quarterly, and you read them as trends across 3+ months — never as single data points.
Before the 21: Pick Your Critical Number
The One Metric the Whole Company Rallies Around
Harnish has a name for the metric that outranks all the others in a given quarter: the Critical Number. The discipline is to choose exactly one, declare it at the start of the quarter, and make it impossible to miss — in every meeting, every report, every partner communication. A company that weights all twenty-one numbers equally moves none of them meaningfully.
For a practitioner-network business, the Critical Number tends to migrate as the company matures:
- Year 1 — Assessments Completed. The only question that matters early is whether practitioners actually use the methodology. No delivered assessments, no business.
- Year 2 — Certification Renewal Rate. Now the question becomes retention: do practitioners get enough value to stay? Below 80%, fix the model before growing it.
- Year 3 — Revenue per Active Partner. Finally, ecosystem economics: are partners genuinely thriving, or merely certified and dormant?
The Weekly Seven
Leading Indicators — Fifteen Minutes, Red/Yellow/Green
1. Cash Collected. Not revenue recognized, not invoices issued — money that landed in the account this week, measured against the monthly target. Harnish treats this as the oxygen metric: whatever the revenue line claims, this number decides whether the bills get paid.
2. New Leads Generated. Assessment requests, booked discovery calls, inbound inquiries. Target: 10+ per week. This is the earliest read on whether marketing is working, long before the downstream numbers confirm it.
3. Content Published. Articles, posts, and podcast episodes shipped across the ecosystem. Target: 5+ per week. Content is the top of the demand flywheel that produces assessment requests — and when publishing slows, lead flow slows 4-6 weeks behind it.
4. Assessments Completed. In a diagnostic-led business, this is the bedrock activity metric — the canary for the entire pipeline. Target: a growing trend, 5+ per week once you reach 25 partners. Nothing downstream moves if assessments aren't being delivered.
5. Proposals Sent. Assessments open opportunities; proposals turn them into revenue. Target: 3-5 per week per active salesperson. Lots of assessments paired with few proposals means the bridge between diagnosis and engagement is broken.
6. Pipeline Value. The total value of proposals currently in play. Target: 3x your quarterly revenue goal. Slip below 2x and there simply isn't enough opportunity in motion to make the quarter.
7. Partner Activity Rate. The share of certified partners who delivered at least one assessment this week. Target: 40%+ in any given week. Twenty-five certified practitioners with five actively delivering isn't a network — it's five consultants sharing a logo.
Run this review in fifteen minutes flat. Mark each number red, yellow, or green against its trend. Every red gets one owner and one week to come back with a diagnosis. The review itself is not the place to solve anything — identify and assign, then move on.
If you run Wickman's L10 meeting, the fit is natural: the first five minutes cover these seven numbers, and any red that needs real discussion goes onto the IDS list, where the team actually solves problems instead of admiring them.
The Monthly Seven
Lagging Indicators — Thirty Minutes, Its Own Meeting
8. Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR). Combined certification and subscription revenue. Target: up month over month. No metric does more to set your eventual valuation multiple — and once MRR passes 80% of total revenue, you're operating a subscription business, not a project shop.
9. Average Deal Size. Mean value of closed engagements. Target: growing, and 30%+ above your old single-option benchmark. Moving from one proposal to a three-tier proposal should have lifted this number visibly; if it didn't, the three-tier presentation itself needs work.
10. Win Rate. Proposals won over proposals sent. Target: 40%+ on qualified pipeline. Under 30%, something in the sales process is failing — usually the diagnostic-to-revenue bridge. Over 60%, you're probably aiming too low or pricing too timidly.
11. Revenue per Active Partner. Ecosystem revenue divided by active partners — the "Profit per X" denominator applied to a network. Target: rising quarter over quarter. Climbing means a healthy ecosystem; flat or falling means partners aren't effective or the market is saturating.
12. Time to First Engagement. Days from certification to a practitioner's first paid client work. Target: under 90 days. Anyone who hasn't landed a client within three months of certifying is at serious risk of drifting away — this number is the truest test of your sales enablement.
13. Cross-Referral Rate. The share of engagements that produce a referral to another practitioner. Target: 20%+. This is the network effect made measurable: when practitioners routinely pass clients to each other, the ecosystem is doing what it was built to do.
14. Client Satisfaction (NPS/CSAT). Average client rating of engagement quality. Target: 4.5/5.0, or NPS 50+. Treat it as your quality early-warning system — a slide here usually traces back to newer practitioners who haven't fully absorbed the methodology yet.
Don't keep the monthly numbers in the founder's drawer. Share the dashboard with every partner. Practitioners who can see the network's collective performance benchmark themselves against their peers — and peer pressure outperforms any directive you could issue from the top.
The Quarterly Seven
Health Metrics — The Structural Inspection at Your Quarterly Summit
15. Founder Time Allocation. What share of the founder's hours go to Designing the business versus Doing the work. Target: 50%+ on Designing by Year 2. This is Gerber's foundational measure — a founder still buried in delivery in Year 2 is proof the system isn't functioning. Track it without mercy, and let the team see it.
16. Partner Retention Rate. The percentage of partners who renew certification each year. Target: 80%+. There is no purer product-market fit test: if practitioners won't pay the annual fee again, the model itself is failing. Below 70% you have a structural problem, not a sales problem.
17. Partner NPS. Would your partners recommend the ecosystem to a colleague? Target: 50+. Remember who your primary customer is — it's the practitioner, not the end client. If partners won't advocate for the network, the growth engine stalls.
18. Certification Renewal Rate. Of partners eligible to renew, how many do so on time. Target: 85%+. This is subtly different from retention: it separates the enthusiastic renewals from the eventual ones. A pattern of late renewals signals ambivalence — partners who aren't leaving but aren't excited either.
19. Thought Leadership Output. Published pieces plus speaking engagements, per partner, per quarter. Target: growing within each tier. This isn't a vanity count — publishing partners attract their own clients, while silent partners stay dependent on the network to feed them leads.
20. Cash Conversion Cycle. How many days pass between spending a dollar and recovering it. Target: trending toward zero, then negative. The shift from project billing to annual subscriptions should compress this number steadily, quarter after quarter.
21. Benchmarking Data Volume. Total assessments accumulated in the aggregated database. Target: 100+ by the end of Year 1, 500+ by the end of Year 2. This is the data flywheel: more assessments produce better benchmarks, and better benchmarks make every subsequent assessment worth more. No volume growth, no flywheel.
"A dashboard you can't read in five minutes isn't a dashboard. Keep cutting numbers until the health of the business is obvious at a glance."
Once a quarter, publish all twenty-one numbers to the whole ecosystem. Publication is the accountability mechanism: partners see where they sit relative to the network, and everyone learns which measures the founder actually cares about. Transparency is what keeps an entire ecosystem aligned on a single definition of healthy.
The Operating Rhythm
21 Numbers, 3 Reviews, 1 Critical Number
Put it together and you get a complete operating rhythm for a service platform business. Fifteen minutes a week on the leading indicators, so problems surface while there's still time to act. Thirty minutes a month on the lagging indicators, so you know whether the signals — and your responses to them — were real. A quarterly look at the structural seven, so the foundations get inspected before they crack.
And running through all of it, one Critical Number per quarter that everyone — founder, team, practitioners — can recite without looking it up. That's what it means to read your business in five minutes.