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असली revenue audit कोई GA4 screenshot नहीं है। यह आपके system के छह layers की forensic जाँच है, जो एक हफ़्ते में ship करने लायक fix list के साथ खत्म होती है।
- An audit is a diagnosis, not a dashboard — it ends in fixes, not charts.
- The six layers: traffic, offer, asset, capture, nurture, retention.
- The three most common leaks we find: dead hero, friction in the form, ghost CRM.
- A good audit names the fix AND the owner AND the deadline.
- If an audit takes longer than 45 minutes, it's probably a consulting pitch.
Why most "audits" are just vanity dashboards
If someone hands you a 40-slide PDF full of bounce rates and impressions, you haven't been audited — you've been measured. A measurement tells you what is. An audit tells you what to do about it.
A good revenue audit is a forensic walk. We're not looking at your dashboard; we're looking at the places where money disappears between a visitor landing on your site and a signed invoice. Those places are almost always the same six.
If the audit doesn't end with a dated, owner-assigned punch list, it's a consulting pitch wearing a lab coat. Ask for the owner column.
The six layers we actually inspect
We don't audit "the website." We audit a system with six distinct layers, each with its own failure modes. Each layer gets a five-minute inspection and a verdict — green, amber, or red — with a named fix.
- Traffic — is it the right traffic, from the right intent, at the right cost?
- Offer — is what you're selling legible in 7 seconds on a phone screen?
- Asset — does your landing page do the one job it was built for?
- Capture — how many qualified leads is the form actually catching?
- Nurture — what happens in the next 48 hours after someone fills the form?
- Retention — how many buyers come back or refer? What's the loop look like?
The three leaks we find on almost every SME site
After running this inspection on 120+ businesses in the last eighteen months, the same three leaks show up over and over. If your site is bleeding money, it's probably here.
The first is the dead hero — a headline that describes the company instead of the customer's problem. We wrote the template fix for this in the 7-second hero section. The second is friction-stuffed forms that ask for everything up front. The third is the ghost CRM: a lead comes in, sits in an inbox, and slowly dies because no one owns the next step — we solved that with your CRM should live in WhatsApp.
If your site is D2C, add a fourth leak: the catalog page. We've seen 40% of paid traffic bounce at the product listing page before ever seeing a product — unpacked in your D2C catalog page is losing you 40% of sales. And if the technical foundation is red on Core Web Vitals, none of these fixes compound — start instead with the 90-minute CWV fix.
“A form is not a contract. Ask for the minimum. You can qualify on the call.”
What a real audit report looks like
The deliverable is two pages, not forty. Page one is a single diagram of your current system with the six layers color-coded by verdict. Page two is a punch list — every fix has an owner, a deadline, and an expected impact range.
We deliberately refuse to include analytics screenshots. Screenshots make people feel measured; punch lists make people ship.
Three things we always fix first
When a business only has a week to act on the audit, we always point to the same three moves. They're cheap, fast, and measurable within the month. If the form is the biggest leak — and it usually is — start with the piece we cover in depth in why your website leaks leads.
The other two often connect to larger structural issues. If the CRM is a ghost, you're missing Layer 4 of the 5-layer revenue stack. If the hero is dead, it's a messaging problem — we fix that as part of a Revenue Systems engagement.
- Rewrite the hero around the customer's job-to-be-done, not your company name.
- Collapse every form to name + email + one qualifier. Move the rest to the call.
- Put a human owner and a 2-hour SLA on every inbound lead.
इस topic पर सवाल
How long does a real revenue audit take?
A focused inspection takes 45 minutes. Anything longer usually means the auditor is building a consulting pitch rather than diagnosing a system.
What's the difference between an audit and an analytics review?
Analytics describes what is — bounce rate, CVR, session count. An audit prescribes what to do about it, with a dated punch list of fixes and an owner assigned to each.
What are the three most common SME conversion leaks?
A dead hero (company-speak instead of customer-problem), friction-stuffed forms (five fields when two would do), and the ghost CRM (a lead sits in an inbox because no human owns the next step).
Writes about revenue systems, SME conversion, and the unglamorous ops work that compounds.