Calculator
Plotly Graph
This preview uses sample values until you calculate your own results.
Example Data Table
| Year | Revenue | SEO Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | $120,000 | Baseline year before major content expansion. |
| 2022 | $144,000 | Technical fixes improved indexing and page speed. |
| 2023 | $175,000 | Higher rankings increased traffic and conversions. |
| 2024 | $214,000 | Better landing pages lifted revenue efficiency. |
Formula Used
Year-over-Year Growth %
Growth % = ((Current Year Revenue − Previous Year Revenue) ÷ Previous Year Revenue) × 100
Overall 3-Year Growth %
Overall Growth % = ((Year 3 Revenue − Base Revenue) ÷ Base Revenue) × 100
Compound Annual Growth Rate
CAGR = ((Year 3 Revenue ÷ Base Revenue)1/3 − 1) × 100
Average Annual Increase
Average Annual Increase = (Year 3 Revenue − Base Revenue) ÷ 3
These formulas help compare raw revenue growth, annual pace, and compounding performance across a three-year period.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the first year in your comparison range.
- Choose your currency symbol and decimal precision.
- Input the base revenue and the next three yearly revenues.
- Click the calculate button to generate the result section.
- Review total growth, CAGR, yearly changes, and the graph.
- Download a CSV or PDF copy when needed.
FAQs
1. What does this calculator measure?
It measures year-by-year revenue change, total three-year growth, CAGR, average yearly growth, and a next-year projection based on historical pace.
2. Why is CAGR important?
CAGR smooths uneven yearly changes into one annualized rate. It makes performance comparisons easier across campaigns, websites, or SEO programs.
3. Can I use declining revenue values?
Yes. The calculator handles lower future revenues and shows negative changes wherever your performance fell during the three-year period.
4. What should I use as the starting revenue?
Use the earliest full-year revenue in your comparison window. Consistent reporting periods make growth analysis much more reliable.
5. Should I use gross or net revenue?
Use one consistent revenue definition across all years. Mixing gross and net figures will distort growth rates and weaken decisions.
6. How can this help Web and SEO planning?
It connects revenue trend reading with traffic, content, and conversion work. That helps prioritize stronger pages, campaigns, and budgets.
7. What if refunds or seasonality affect my numbers?
Include them if they belong in your official revenue reporting. For deeper analysis, run separate comparisons using normalized values.
8. Is the next-year projection guaranteed?
No. The projection only extends the historical compound rate. Real results can change with rankings, pricing, demand, or conversion shifts.