Calculator Inputs
Use the responsive form below. It shows three columns on large screens, two on tablets, and one on mobile devices.
Example Data Table
| Period | Active Partners | Converting Partners | Partner Leads | Qualified Leads | Opportunities | Proposals | Closed Deals | Revenue | Cost | Activation Rate | Overall Conversion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | 120 | 48 | 960 | 420 | 180 | 110 | 52 | $286,000 | $78,000 | 40.00% | 5.42% |
| Q2 2026 | 135 | 58 | 1,040 | 468 | 214 | 132 | 61 | $331,500 | $84,200 | 42.96% | 5.87% |
Formula Used
1) Partner Activation Rate
Partner Activation Rate = (Converting Partners ÷ Active Partners) × 100
2) Qualification Rate
Qualification Rate = (Qualified Leads ÷ Partner Leads) × 100
3) Opportunity Rate
Opportunity Rate = (Opportunities ÷ Qualified Leads) × 100
4) Proposal Rate
Proposal Rate = (Proposals ÷ Opportunities) × 100
5) Close Rate
Close Rate = (Closed Deals ÷ Proposals) × 100
6) Overall Lead-to-Close Conversion
Overall Conversion = (Closed Deals ÷ Partner Leads) × 100
7) Return on Investment
ROI = ((Total Revenue − Program Cost) ÷ Program Cost) × 100
8) Customer Acquisition Cost
CAC = Program Cost ÷ Closed Deals
9) Pipeline Efficiency Score
Pipeline Efficiency Score = (Qualification Rate + Opportunity Rate + Proposal Rate + Close Rate) ÷ 4
How to Use This Calculator
Step 1
Enter your reporting period so the result summary and export files clearly identify the timeframe.
Step 2
Add your active partner count and the number of partners that actually produced measurable pipeline or revenue activity.
Step 3
Fill in each lead stage from partner leads through qualified leads, opportunities, proposals, and closed deals.
Step 4
Enter revenue, program cost, and average sales cycle days to evaluate profitability and operating efficiency.
Step 5
Press the calculate button. The results appear above the form, directly below the header, exactly where performance review is easiest.
Step 6
Review the funnel graph, rate graph, summary table, and bottleneck stage to find where partner performance weakens.
Step 7
Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the current calculation for reporting, internal review, or client sharing.
FAQs
1) What does partner conversion rate measure?
It measures how effectively partner-sourced leads become closed customers. This version also shows stage-by-stage movement, making leaks and slowdowns easier to identify.
2) Why track partner activation separately?
Activation rate shows how many partners actually generate pipeline. A large partner roster can look healthy while very few partners contribute meaningful results.
3) What is a good overall conversion rate?
There is no universal benchmark. Good performance depends on industry, deal size, partner quality, sales cycle length, and how strictly your team defines qualified leads.
4) Why can ROI be negative?
ROI turns negative when program cost exceeds revenue from partner-sourced deals. That usually signals weak conversion, poor partner fit, or overspending on enablement.
5) What does the bottleneck stage mean?
The bottleneck stage is the step with the lowest conversion rate. Improving that stage often creates the fastest lift in total partner-sourced revenue.
6) Should I include only closed-won revenue?
Yes, for the cleanest profitability reading. Including projected revenue can inflate ROI and hide weaknesses in actual close performance.
7) Can this calculator help compare quarters?
Yes. Use the example table format or export feature to store each period, then compare rates, CAC, revenue efficiency, and partner activation trends.
8) Why might my stage counts trigger warnings?
Warnings appear when a later funnel stage is larger than an earlier stage. That usually means your source data or stage definitions need review.