This is the first deep dive in our Enterprise Value Model series. If you missed the introduction from Brian Blaha, start here: Five Levers That Separate Firms Building Enterprise Value from Firms Talking About It.
Every managing partner can tell you what their revenue did last year. Fewer can tell you why, clearly enough to know whether it’s likely to happen again.
That gap is the whole story of top-line growth as a lever. It’s the most visible number in the firm and the easiest one to misread, because growth on a P&L and growth in enterprise value are not the same test. A firm can grow revenue every year for a decade and still be worth less than it looks, if the growth doesn’t hold up to three questions: where did it come from, what kind of revenue is it, and can the firm explain it.
Start with attribution. If two partners retired tomorrow, would next year's number look roughly the same, or would it fall off a cliff?
Firms rarely ask this directly, so they rarely know the answer. Growth that traces back to a handful of individual relationships is real, and it counts this year. It also carries a discount, because it disappears the moment those people do. The firms building enterprise value have made growth an institutional capability rather than a personal one: coverage across the partnership, pipeline that isn't tied to any single name, and a client base that stays with the firm because of the firm.
Attribution also means being honest about how much of recent growth the firm actually drove. Price increases across the profession have run in the 5 to 10 percent range in recent years, according to industry pricing surveys, and consolidation has pushed displaced clients toward firms that did nothing to win them. A lot of top lines grew for reasons that had little to do with strategy, and that kind of growth is the easiest of all to mistake for a capability. The test is the same. If the tailwind stops, does the number still move?
This is not a case against strong rainmakers, or against taking a rate increase when the market allows it. It's a case against depending on either as the entire growth strategy. Concentration in a few people, or in market conditions the firm doesn't control, is exactly the kind of risk that gets found and priced in a transaction, and it's worth finding first internally.
Not all growth is the same texture. A multi-year advisory engagement and a one-time compliance project can add the same dollar to the topline and mean completely different things about the firm.
Recurring, embedded work says something durable about the client relationship and the firm's position in it. Episodic project revenue says something about last year, not necessarily this one. Firms that track the mix, not just the total, can see whether their growth is building a base or just filling a gap that reopens every January.
Capacity makes the choice sharper. Most firms are short on people, not on opportunities, so every engagement the firm takes on is time it can't spend somewhere else. When capacity is the real constraint, taking whatever revenue shows up isn't a neutral decision. Work that fills the schedule this quarter but doesn't fit where the firm is headed comes at the expense of work that would have built the base. The question isn't only whether revenue repeats, but whether it's the revenue worth spending the firm's limited capacity on.
The firms getting this right treat revenue quality as a metric worth managing on its own, alongside the topline. The ones that don't tend to find out the hard way, usually when a slow year exposes how much of the "growth" was never going to repeat.
Ask a managing partner where growth came from this year and the honest answer at most firms is some version of “a bit of everything.” New clients, a rate increase, a strong renewal season, maybe a small acquisition. All true, and none of it specific enough to act on.
Firms building enterprise value can break the number apart: this much from new logos, this much from expanding existing relationships, this much from pricing, this much from an acquisition. That level of clarity isn’t a reporting exercise for its own sake. It’s what makes growth repeatable, because a firm that knows which lever produced the result can pull it again on purpose instead of hoping the year repeats itself.
This isn't only about firms preparing for a sale. A firm planning to stay independent still needs to know if its growth is solid enough to keep building on, or if next year's plan depends on a number that won't repeat. A firm looking to acquire needs the same clarity, because a strong top line is often what makes a firm an attractive buyer in the first place.
When a firm understands where its growth comes from, it usually finds that the best of it traces back to a specific kind of client. That clarity becomes a foundation. Knowing the profile the firm serves best gives partners the comfort to pursue more of it and pass on the rest, and it's what lets the firm scale on purpose instead of by accident.
Sell, stay independent, or acquire: the growth rate on the page can look identical either way. What it's made of is what tells the real story.
Revenue going up will always feel like progress, and most of the time it is. But top-line growth only becomes an enterprise value lever, not just a good year, when the firm can stand behind where it came from, what it's made of, and whether it happens again.
That's the work behind this lever: building growth the firm can explain, in the language a buyer, an investor, or a board would use to ask the question. Growth is top of mind for nearly every firm we're talking to right now, and organic growth most of all. That's exactly why it's worth getting right. The firms that pull ahead won't be the ones with the biggest number this year, but the ones who can keep producing it on purpose.
Next: Margin Expansion, why revenue growing faster than cost only tells half the story, and what actually separates a firm’s margin from its peers.
Winding River Consulting works with professional services firms building the operating and leadership capabilities that turn growth into enterprise value. Schedule a conversation with David at dtoth@windingriverconsulting.com to explore where your firm’s top line growth would hold up under a closer look.