ARR per FTE is the single metric that tells you whether your B2B revenue model is built or broken. In Show #08, Nigel Maine sets out why annual recurring revenue cannot be earned by daily activity, why B2B buyers behave like car buyers, why social-media repetition for B2B is a learning mechanism not a virality play, and why MQLs and reverse-IP lookup tell you nothing useful about real intent.
The episode lands the metric every CEO and CFO should be measuring this year. ARR per FTE in many UK SaaS contexts sits at £80–90k. Below that, the GTM model is leaking, and no number of new BDRs will fix it.
The episode then walks through the sX Operating System — six modules, one infrastructure — that replaces fragmented MarTech and inefficient BDR teams with broadcast-grade exposure: Reach, Live, Connect, Ops, Hub and Course.
Watch this if you are responsible for the 2026 number and you already suspect the dashboard is lying.
ARR is annual. Your activity is daily. The two have never matched.
Annual recurring revenue is the metric every B2B says matters, yet every prospecting, marketing and BDR activity in the business is measured on a daily, weekly or monthly cycle. The new ARR you booked this quarter was earned by exposure that happened twelve months ago. The ARR you book next year is being earned, or not earned, right now, by the exposure you choose to create today. Most marketing teams will not step out of the cycle, and most CEOs are afraid of being the one who does. The mismatch is structural and it sits underneath every missed forecast.
Your buyer behaves like someone shopping for a car.
Nobody walks into a showroom on a Monday morning and signs a finance agreement before lunch. Yet B2B GTM teams are expected to compress that same multi-month, multi-stakeholder decision into this week's pipeline review. The buyer's mission is ten years long. The strategy is five years. The tactics play out across three. The current year is operations. No weekly marketing cadence aligns with any of that. The only sustainable lever is to teach prospects how to buy from you and why, continuously, at scale, on a rhythm they recognise.
Social media for B2B is about learning, not virality.
Consumer repetition equals new buyers. B2B repetition equals learning. After ten exposures the prospect notices you. After twenty they trust you. After thirty they email a colleague and say have a look at these guys. That is the model. It has nothing to do with share counts or weekly engagement-rate dashboards. Asking employees to share posts, hoping for viral pickup, replicating Google PPC into LinkedIn, and pointing reverse-IP lookups at a switchboard guess — all of it is theatre. A real B2B repetition plan is a published rhythm: the same total addressable market sees you, hears from you, and learns from you, every single week.
The sales numbers worth tracking are not MQLs.
The sequence to write down: contacts, impressions, reactions, comments, downloads, conversations, appointments. In that order. They are not connected inside the same week, because the buyer is not behaving inside the same week. A reaction this week may come from someone who saw an impression six weeks ago. A comment today may come from someone who downloaded a PDF three months ago. Most marketing dashboards report week-on-week when the buying cycle is year-on-year. That is why they lie.
ARR per FTE is the metric that exposes everything.
Average ARR per full-time employee in many UK SaaS contexts sits at £80–90k. That number tells you the model is broken. Too much cost, too much software, too much theatre, not enough efficient exposure. Bolt sixteen BDRs onto two field salespeople and the ratio collapses. Replace that whole stack with broadcast infrastructure that two salespeople sit at the end of, and the ratio transforms. The sX Operating System — Reach, Live, Connect, Ops, Hub, Course — is the infrastructure that makes the new ratio possible. Begin with the course. Retrain the team. The OS follows. It is no longer a leap of faith at that point. It is the obvious next step.
Transcript
1. ARR is the metric every B2B wants. Yet no one plans for annual engagement.
Annual recurring revenue. ARR. You want sales at a certain rate. In fact, you need sales at a certain rate. And once you've got these deals, you need to keep hold of the revenue, of course you do, that's why you employ Customer Success directors in the first place. But for me, the giveaway is in the description itself. ARR. Annual. Recurring. Revenue. You want ARR, you want to keep ARR, but every single thing you're doing to win it, every bit of prospecting, every bit of marketing, is being measured on daily, weekly, or monthly activity. Annual on the way out. Daily on the way in. The two don't match, and they've never matched.
Everything most businesses do today is based on generating something all the time. Demand generation. Lead generation. Sales generation. Pipeline generation. The language alone tells you where the focus is. And all of it compounds the thinking that selling and marketing are simply a just-in-time exercise. Something to be done immediately. Something that's measured this week. Even though every B2B has a lead time, and every CEO knows it, no one wants to hear that a decision has been postponed. And when it is postponed, somehow it becomes the salesperson's fault. Which, frankly, is mad.
Then there's the way it's been built. Businesses are being forced by the MarTech industry, and by their advocates, your marketing teams, to use the technologies of the B2C industry. Predominantly marketing automation. Eloqua, Pardot, Marketo, HubSpot. The whole machine. Yet underneath all of that consumer-grade software, those same teams are still applying the 1950s strategies of cold calling and engaging one prospect at a time. Two completely different eras, stitched together, and presented as a coherent strategy.
There are so many factors working against businesses today. Everyone wants a diary full of appointments, but it's rarely the case. And the appointments that do exist are invariably poor quality, because the BDR was desperate, not the prospect. That's not a sales problem. That's a structural problem, and we covered the maths in detail in show 6. One BDR, three hundred dials to find one mildly interested person, working a realistic pool of sixteen hundred companies. Thirty-three years to cover the ground. Thirty-three. So when a CEO says, "we need more appointments next week," they're asking a system that was never built to deliver them.
And here's the rhythm of it. The cycle of B2B is based on week, month, and quarter. Then repeat. Marketing concentrates on this micro activity. Single posts. Asking staff to share posts on their personal profiles. Single cold calls. All of it trying to find the needle-in-a-haystack prospect who's ready to buy today, or this week, or by Friday. Now compare that to how the buyer actually thinks. A serious B2B business works in tens, fives, and ones. A ten-year mission. A five-year strategy. Three years to play out the tactics. The current year for operations. So tell me, how does any B2B marketing activity, run on a weekly cadence, possibly align with that? It can't. It doesn't. And yet that's the standard behaviour we've all accepted.
Now think about your new business prospect. The one who signed up last quarter. The one who became annual recurring revenue on your dashboard. They didn't start looking when they signed up. They started looking about a year ago. Maybe longer. They were quietly watching, reading, learning, comparing, while your marketing team was busy running this week's campaign and chasing this month's MQLs. The ARR you booked this quarter was earned by exposure that happened twelve months ago. And the ARR you'll book next year is being earned, or not earned, right now, by the exposure you're choosing to create, or not create, today.
Marketing people won't step out of the cycle. CEOs are afraid of making the wrong decisions, yet business is bad, and there's no light at the end of the tunnel. Nothing's changing. Same plan, different week. So the metric that everyone says matters, ARR, the one printed on every investor deck, the one every board meeting opens with, is being chased by activity that has no relationship to it whatsoever. That's the gap. That's the show. And once you see it, you can't un-see it.
2. Buying a car versus buying SaaS. The behaviour is identical. The measurement is broken.
Let me ask you something. If you buy a car, what do you actually do? You look. You think. You talk to your partner. You visit the showroom. You take a test drive. You confirm the finance. Then you go away and think some more. Then maybe, maybe, you buy. Nobody walks into a showroom on a Monday morning and signs a finance agreement before lunch. And nobody expects them to. The salesperson doesn't ring you up the next day and say, "I noticed you sat in the seat for eleven minutes, can we book fifteen minutes to discuss next steps?" That would be absurd. So why is it any better for high-value B2B sales?
There's no question about how many prospects your salespeople can talk to. The bottleneck isn't there. The only way you close more deals is if your prospects have already done their thinking before you get to speak to them. That's the warm-up. You want to get them prepped in advance. Teach prospects how to buy from you, and why to buy from you. Teach them. Don't sell to them. Once you grasp that, the entire sequence inverts. Marketing isn't a campaign anymore. It's a curriculum.
This leads you straight into understanding why your prospects do what they do. And why they don't. Why don't prospects buy from us, or from anyone for that matter? Because no is also a decision. And no happens when they're not fully conversant about the options. They didn't say no to your product. They said no because no one taught them how it would deliver an ROI. They couldn't see it. So they defaulted to the safest answer, which is to stay where they are. The deal you lost wasn't lost on price. It was lost months earlier, in the absence of teaching.
Now compare the two species. The objective of a B2C sale is self-gratification. The fulfilment of desire. The new shoes. The holiday. The phone upgrade. The objective of a B2B sale is fundamentally different. It's to solve a problem and achieve a return on investment. They're not the same animal, they don't behave the same way, and they shouldn't be measured the same way. Yet B2Bs haven't been paying attention, because we're being told what to do by people who are guessing, and basing all of it on B2C statistics. We covered this in show 7. Even ChatGPT, when pushed, eventually admits there are no hard B2B-specific stats behind most of what marketers are repeating.
Watch how this plays out. Month one, the campaign starts. The advert says to the prospect, "We solve your problem." The prospect looks at it and says to himself, "We don't have a problem." End of conversation. End of campaign. Now fast-forward. Some months later, that same prospect now does have a problem. Where's the vendor? Off the radar. Long gone. So the vendor reverts to AI scrape and spam. Hundreds, thousands of emails, automated, dialling at scale, only to annoy more CEOs. When all they had to do was stay visible. That's it. Stay visible. The lead time can be months. It can be years. Salespeople are expected to seek out and sell, hoping somehow to compress the buyer's decision-making process into this quarter's pipeline review.
But the buyer isn't compressing anything. The buyer may have a ten-year mission. A five-year strategy. Three years to play out the tactics. Operations in the current year. The vendor's big problem is they want to find buyers at the magical intersection of "researched the market" and "now waiting to select a supplier." But here's the punchline. By the time the buyer gets to that intersection, they already know who they favour. Why? Because that vendor was the one they were learning from, quietly, all along.
Two things in life we can be assured of. Pain. And the fear of future pain. When we're buying, we don't always understand the consequences of not buying. So a good seller will build out the problem. If you don't do this, then that will happen. And if you don't do that, then this will happen. And by the end of the conversation, metaphorically, you're dead. For want of a nail, the ship was sunk. I heard a closer once say it like this. "How can I communicate with you that you might be making a mistake, without you getting upset with me?" Supposedly it triggers doubt. It probably does.
But the real question isn't a closing technique. The real question is one we have to ask ourselves. Are we conformists, or are we rule-breakers? Because conformists keep running campaigns to people who aren't ready, on cycles the buyer doesn't recognise. Rule-breakers do something completely different. They teach. Continuously. At scale. And they let the buyer come to them, in the buyer's time, not the vendor's.
3. Social media isn't what we think it is for B2B. Stop asking staff to share. Build a repetition plan.
Even social media isn't being used the same way as consumers do it. As B2Bs, we're asking colleagues to repost in an attempt to increase distribution. We're tapping people on the shoulder, "could you share this on your profile?" We're treating every supposedly active mechanism as something that has to be triggered manually. The whole point of an automated, always-on platform, and we've turned it into a shoulder-tap exercise. It's exhausting, it doesn't scale, and the team resents it.
Let's go back a bit, because you can't fix this without seeing how we got here. Back in the 1980s and 90s, businesses only had mailshots. They tried it once, maybe twice a year. If it didn't work, they stopped. Until something new came along, or someone had a different idea. Then in the early 2000s, there were constant campaigns, always different. CMOs in B2B were told to keep being creative. Different every time. Different theme, different headline, different colour, different angle. But here's the thing. Being creative isn't the same as being repetitive. And in B2B, repetition is what works. That's why no one notices you. You've been chasing creativity when you should've been chasing consistency.
Two short lines, then I'll move on, because if you take nothing else away from this segment, take these.
Consumer repetition equals new buyers.
B2B repetition equals learning.
Read those again. They're not the same sentence. The consumer hears the same jingle and a new buyer enters the funnel. The B2B prospect sees you ten times and starts to learn. After twenty exposures they trust you. After thirty they email a colleague and say, "have a look at these guys." That's the model. And it has nothing to do with virality, share counts, or the engagement-rate dashboard your CMO keeps showing you on the second Tuesday of every month.
Sales is a numbers game. We both know that. But B2Bs aren't working with the largest number, and they're not working with the largest data set. All of us have tried to cold call one at a time. Marketing via LinkedIn is just an extension of copying Google Pay-Per-Click, which achieves minimal success. Not much better than website forms with demand-gen pages firing into lead-scoring engines and reverse-IP lookup. I've said this before, and I'll say it again. Reverse-IP lookup is a very bad way of trying to sell. It tells you a company visited your site. It doesn't tell you a person was interested. And then you point a BDR at a switchboard with a guess about who to ask for. Madness.
Now here's the perception problem, and this is where CEOs need to be honest with themselves. The perception is that there's no other way. So businesses sit there hoping for viral posts. Hoping the next one kicks off. The expectation is that you can have what consumers have. Massive websites. Millions of people buying from Amazon. The exposure of a celebrity. There's also the possibility, the hope, that someone will become an overnight success. You just have to look at America's Got Talent, or Britain's Got Talent. Society says you can get popularity, instantly. But there's nothing of the sort for B2Bs. Nothing. We don't advertise on television because of the cost. But our marketers don't even try to get expansive, large-scale exposure by other means. And it's because of this inherent lack of creativity in B2B marketing that a sales business has no option but to keep cold calling and maintaining a one-to-one growth strategy. No one's exploiting any other option. And the maddening part is, all you need to do is what we're suggesting. And it costs pennies.
Let me put numbers on it. Show 7 covered the 300-to-1 cold call ratio. Show 6 covered the maths, the 33.33 years it would take a single BDR to work through the realistic 1,600-company active pool. Even with sixteen BDRs you're spending over a million pounds a year just to feed two field salespeople with appointments. A million. Pounds. To replicate, badly, what a broadcast model does effortlessly. Because broadcasters have always understood audience. Frequency. Reach. Repetition. They figured this out decades ago. B2B never joined those numbers up.
So when someone says, "social media doesn't work for B2B," what they actually mean is, "we tried to use it like B2C and it didn't work." Of course it didn't. The platform isn't the problem. The plan was. A real B2B repetition plan looks completely different. It's not a daily post pleading for a like. It's a published rhythm, week in and week out, where the same total addressable market sees you, hears from you, learns from you, every single week, without anyone on your team having to beg a colleague to share anything. Set the rhythm, hold the rhythm, and stop measuring it on Tuesday afternoon.
4. Revisit your sales numbers. The old ones. Exposure. Reactions. Engagement. Downloads. Visits. Conversations. Appointments.
[SALES STAGES SLIDE]
There are so many phases and stages we go through, talking about the product. You already know them. So here are the facts and here's why you need to change the order you're looking at them in. It's not the number of impressions versus contacts that counts. It's the engagement, the reactions, and the comments. That's where the signal is. However, we still need to know what the impressions and contact numbers are, because without those we can't complete the equation. You need both ends. The volume at the top, and the engagement that comes out the bottom. One without the other tells you nothing.
So here's the sequence I want every CEO and every CFO to write down. Contacts. Impressions. Reactions. Comments. They are not necessarily connected in terms of distribution. That's the trick. A reaction this week might come from someone who saw an impression six weeks ago. A comment today might come from someone who downloaded a PDF in March. The numbers don't line up neatly inside the same week, because the buyer isn't behaving inside the same week. This is why most marketing dashboards lie. They report week-on-week, when the buying cycle is year-on-year.
Now compare salesXchange's statistics versus typical statistics. Why is it so different? It's because of repetition. We have a weekly live show. From this we process a static video posted on YouTube. That's then processed into multiple ten-minute clips for YouTube and LinkedIn, each with their own unique UTM codes so we know exactly which assets are driving which downloads. In addition, the full video gets processed into multiple shorts, between one and three minutes long. The live show audio is also processed into a podcast on Buzzsprout, and distributed to twelve different RSS podcast platforms including Apple and Spotify.
Let me say that again, because it matters. One live show. One hour of recording. Five or six ten-minute clips. Twenty-five or thirty shorts. A podcast on twelve platforms. From a small number of connections, that single hour produces around 30,000 views per month. And that's just me. One person. This isn't because I have lots of contacts. It's because YouTube's algorithm multiplies the exposure on my behalf. The platform does the distribution, not me. Compare that to your team manually asking colleagues to share posts.
While we're on numbers, let me bring in the proof points from the last few shows. In six weeks of putting open-access PDFs on the website, with no paid media, no LinkedIn ads, no Google ads, no retargeting, no gating, we had over 600 downloads. The most recent week alone delivered around 210. That's not a marketing campaign. That's compounding exposure. The PDFs introduce the live show. The live show introduces the podcast. The podcast introduces the shorts. The shorts introduce the website. Somebody listens on a Tuesday and downloads a PDF on a Friday. Somebody watches a clip and books a meeting three weeks later. None of it is captured by a single MQL form, and that's exactly the point.
What all the statistics in the world tell us is simple. The more we let people and businesses know what we're doing, the more we attract. This isn't new. This goes back to the 1930s and a chap called Dale Carnegie, who wrote How to Win Friends and Influence People. It was simple then. The more you tell your story to, the more you'll sell. There was a process then, and there's a process now. Both required effort. Today it requires some different technologies. But the objective is exactly the same. Sell more. At a cost that makes sense. That's it. That's the whole game.
So compare what you're doing, and how much exposure you're actually getting. We both know appointments come from persistent exposure. Yet as B2Bs, we've been totally ineffective at it. Not because the tools don't exist. Because the tools aren't known by the people we've employed to carry out this work. They've been trained on lead-gen forms and email cadences and sequence platforms. They haven't been trained on broadcast.
Now let's land the metric of all metrics. ARR per FTE. Average ARR per Full-Time Employee in many UK SaaS contexts sits at around £80,000 to £90,000. £80k. Per head. Per year. That's it. That's the number that exposes everything. Too much cost. Too much software. Too much theatre. Not enough efficient exposure. If you bolt sixteen BDRs onto two field salespeople and call it a go-to-market team, your ARR per FTE collapses. If you replace that whole stack with a broadcast infrastructure that your two salespeople sit at the end of, ARR per FTE doesn't just improve, it transforms.
And one final telling sign. The salespeople who keep their jobs the longest are the ones who generate their own business and make their own appointments. It's never the ones who closed the most marketing-qualified leads. Think about what that tells you about the value of an MQL.
5. The approach to adopting new technologies. The sX Operating System, with live streaming embedded in the business.
So where does this leave us? Let me say it bluntly. The only currency that's valid within B2B is the ability to make the appointment. The entire marketing operation has to culminate in that single activity. Without the appointment, there is no sale. So all focus, and all effort, must be geared towards a prospect actively wanting to have a conversation with a salesperson. Nothing else matters. Not the open rate. Not the impressions. Not the dashboard. The appointment.
There's been no real change in how B2Bs get in front of prospects. Yet that's the only way you grow. So any change now has to be instigated by CEOs. Not anyone else. Because the people who've been making the decisions about engagement and exposure have been relying on B2C statistics, and most CEOs, CFOs and salespeople will quietly agree, because there's never enough business. Your marketing team are doing it wrong. The trouble is, if they knew they were wrong, they'd have told you, and your direction would have changed by now. But they don't know, and you don't know either, because as a CEO you've got too many other things to deal with. It's a bitter pill to swallow. We've been misled for twenty years, and the only people it's served is the MarTech SaaS industry.
When I say wrong, I mean their approach. The way they maintain activity. The way they measure activity. Even how they set up outbound, hoping it'll trigger inbound. It couldn't be more wrong, or more misplaced. We've got so used to social media and asking employees to share with their contacts. But how many businesses are combining email and banner advertising to drive traffic to a live show? Inviting prospects to watch online, anonymously, with no forced appointment, no webinar form, just open access? Because that's what buyers actually want.
Annual recurring revenue can only come from exposure. And that exposure has to come from multiplying what you already have. That's where the sX Operating System comes in. Six modules, one infrastructure, designed for B2B from the ground up. Let me walk you through them.
[sX REACH SLIDE]
sX Reach. This is sX Social plus sX Email plus sX Banner. The always-on, multi-channel exposure layer. Hundreds of pre-prepared assets. Posts published on a schedule, not a whim. Email reaching the same audience repeatedly so they learn from you over time. Banner advertising bringing the right traffic to the website and the live show. Three channels, one orchestration, repeating week in and week out. No employee shoulder-tapping. No begging for shares. No 9am Monday panic about today's post. It runs.
[sX LIVE SLIDE]
sX Live. The in-office broadcast studio. This is the heartbeat. One live show a week. From that single hour you produce a YouTube video, five or six ten-minute clips, twenty-five to thirty shorts, and a podcast distributed to twelve platforms. One hour in. Hundreds of distributed assets out. The studio sits in your office. It costs pennies compared to a marketing department. And it does what no marketing campaign can do: it puts the human, the voice, the body language, the authenticity, in front of your total addressable market every single week.
[sX CONNECT SLIDE]
sX Connect. Independent discovery and appointment booking. AI agent research of the company and the individual before the meeting. Automated preparation of the sales deck, tailored to that prospect. Automated drafting of the proposal. The buyer self-serves. The buyer self-educates. The buyer remains anonymous until they're ready to book. And when they do book, your salesperson walks into the meeting already prepared, with the deck and the proposal sitting there. No BDR. No qualification call. No discovery calendar invite. The buyer arrives ready, and so do you.
[sX OPS SLIDE]
sX Ops. Cradle-to-grave telemetry and reporting. One screen showing the lot. Impressions to reactions to engagement to completed forms to completed proposals to meetings attended to final proposals sent, and finally to pipeline change. Every UTM. Every asset. Every prospect journey. End-to-end. So when the board asks, "what's marketing actually doing?", you don't show them activity. You show them attribution from first touch to closed ARR. That's the difference between dashboards and decisions.
[sX HUB SLIDE]
sX Hub. The integrated LLM intranet, with training built in. Your team's internal knowledge, your processes, your scripts, your assets, all sitting behind one AI-native interface. Onboarding accelerates. Sales conversations become consistent. Customer Success has the same answers as Sales. The whole company speaks the same language because the language lives in one place.
[sX COURSE SLIDE]
sX Course. Thirty hours of online video, twenty modules, around 179 short videos, plus eighty worksheets and downloads, all CPD-certified. This is how you transform the thinking of current B2B marketers. Because installing the OS without retraining is just buying more software. The course comes first. The infrastructure follows. CEO, VP of Sales, ideally an open-minded CMO. Once they understand what's gone wrong, the OS isn't a leap of faith anymore. It's the obvious next step.
6. What do you think? Where do we go from here?
So let me bring it all together. The real problem in B2B isn't a lack of mechanisms or technology to achieve large-scale exposure. The technology is right there. It's been there for years. The real problem is the willingness of marketing people to adopt the technologies that would actually deliver large-scale exposure. The mechanisms exist. They're just not being used. And in some cases, marketing has been actively dissuaded from engaging with them, by MarTech SaaS people whose entire business model depends on you not knowing there's another way. Who knows what they truly intended. But the problem itself is real, and it sits squarely on the shoulders of the salespeople and the CEOs who are expected to deliver the figures, when no one else can.
That's the show in one paragraph. Let me give you the through-line one more time, because by now you should be able to see it without me pointing at it.
ARR is annual. Your activity is daily. The two have never matched.
Your buyer behaves like someone shopping for a car. They look, they think, they test-drive, they go away, they come back. You can't compress them. You can teach them. That's the only lever you've got.
Social media and consumer-style campaigns weren't built for you. Repetition for B2B isn't virality. It's learning. Let your market see you, hear you, and learn from you, every single week, on a rhythm they can recognise.
The sales numbers that matter aren't MQLs and form-fills. They're exposure, reactions, engagement, downloads, visits, conversations, and finally appointments. In that order. Track that, and you'll know what's actually happening, instead of what your dashboard wishes were happening.
And ARR per FTE, the number we put on the front of this show, is the only metric that exposes the truth. Eighty grand per head, in many UK SaaS contexts, tells you the model is broken. Replace the BDR army and the MarTech sprawl with broadcast infrastructure, and that number doesn't just tick up. It transforms.
That's what the sX Operating System is for. Reach. Live. Connect. Ops. Hub. Course. One installed infrastructure that does the work of an entire fragmented stack, and does it on a rhythm the buyer actually recognises. We built it because nobody else has. We've been running it on ourselves for months, and the proof is in the numbers we keep showing you. 600+ downloads in six weeks, no paid media. 1,500 B2B email contacts. 30,000 views a month, off the back of one weekly hour in front of the camera. That's not a campaign. That's an operating system.
So now. What do you think? You've got two choices, and they're starker than they've ever been. Choice one. You stay where you are. You keep the marketing team you've got. You run another year of the same campaigns, on the same cycle, measured the same way. And you hope this year is different. It won't be. We both know it won't be. Choice two. You start with the course. You retrain your go-to-market team so they can see what you're starting to see. And then, once the thinking is in place, the infrastructure follows. The OS isn't a leap of faith at that point. It's the obvious next step.
Don't begin with another platform. Don't begin with another agency promising better lead generation. Don't begin with another form-type strategy. Begin with understanding. Take your time. Go to the website. Look at the CEO section. Look at the audit. Look at the data-fill form and the meeting booking page. Read the open-access PDFs. Watch the previous shows. There's no gate. Nothing's hidden. We don't cold call. We never will. We broadcast. And when, and if, you're ready, so are we.
That's it from me for this week. ARR per FTE is the only metric that matters because it's the only one that tells you whether the entire system is working, or whether you're just paying people and platforms to look busy. So have a look at your number. Compare it to ours. And ask yourself whether the team you've got, on the cadence they're running, can ever move that figure where you need it.
Thanks for watching. I hope this one's sown a few seeds. I'll see you next Thursday, same time, same place. Have a great week. Bye for now.