Most growth-stage companies don't have a tactics problem. They have an architecture problem. They're running disconnected campaigns - a few ads here, some content there, an email blast when someone remembers - without a coherent system underneath it. Every individual tactic might be executed well. But without architecture, none of them compound.
Revenue Architecture is the framework Mark developed across 15+ years and dozens of engagements to fix this. It's not a collection of best practices. It's a system with five interconnected pillars that, when built correctly, creates a marketing engine that generates more and more revenue per dollar invested as time goes on - the compounding effect that separates market leaders from everyone else.
The question it answers: Who exactly are we selling to, why do they buy, and how do we reach them?
The Demand Foundation covers ideal customer profile definition (not just firmographics - behavioral triggers and buying committee mapping), positioning strategy (what makes you the obvious choice for your specific ICP), and the messaging hierarchy that translates your differentiation into language buyers respond to. Every other pillar fails if this one is wrong.
Key outputs: ICP document, positioning statement, messaging matrix, competitive differentiation map
The question it answers: What channels create the most efficient, scalable pipeline?
The Acquisition Engine is the channel strategy and execution infrastructure that creates consistent top-of-funnel demand. This includes: channel selection and prioritization (most companies run 5-7 channels at sub-threshold investment; Revenue Architecture typically concentrates on 2-3 channels funded properly), content and SEO architecture for compounding organic demand, paid acquisition frameworks, and outbound systems for sales-assisted channels. The Acquisition Engine is designed to be measurable from day one - every channel has a defined CAC target and a 90-day performance threshold.
Key outputs: Channel strategy, SEO architecture, content system, paid media playbook, 90-day launch plan
The question it answers: What happens to demand between first touch and closed deal?
Most companies have a leaky funnel - leads enter at the top and quietly disappear before reaching sales. Conversion Infrastructure maps every stage of the buyer journey and builds the systems that advance prospects through it: landing pages optimized for conversion, nurture sequences that accelerate timeline to purchase, lead scoring that surfaces the best opportunities for sales, and the handoff SLAs that ensure no lead falls through the cracks. This pillar is where the biggest quick wins typically live - optimizing what already exists is often faster and higher-ROI than building new acquisition channels.
Key outputs: Funnel audit, landing page optimization, nurture sequence architecture, lead scoring model, MQL/SQL definitions
The question it answers: What's actually working, why, and what should we do next?
Revenue Intelligence is the measurement, attribution, and reporting infrastructure that converts marketing activity into clear business decisions. This includes: multi-touch attribution so you know which channels are really driving revenue (not just which ones got the last click), CRM data quality and pipeline visibility, marketing-sales alignment dashboards, forecasting models, and the reporting cadences that keep leadership teams making informed decisions instead of gut-feel ones. Most companies that fail at marketing don't fail because they picked the wrong channels - they fail because they couldn't tell which channels were working.
Key outputs: Attribution model, CRM architecture, marketing dashboard, forecasting model, QBR reporting framework
The question it answers: How do we build moats that make our marketing progressively harder to replicate?
The Compounding Layer is what separates companies that grow and plateau from companies that grow and accelerate. It's the set of assets and systems that compound in value over time: brand authority (thought leadership, press, community, earned media), customer success marketing (case studies, referral systems, expansion revenue playbooks), and ecosystem development (partnerships, integrations, co-marketing). These are the investments with the longest time horizon and the highest long-term ROI - and the ones most companies neglect because they don't show up in next quarter's pipeline numbers.
Key outputs: Brand authority program, case study system, referral infrastructure, partnership marketing playbook
Full assessment of all five pillars. ICP refinement, positioning work, channel audit, funnel mapping, measurement infrastructure review. Deliverable: Revenue Architecture Blueprint - a comprehensive document that maps current state, gaps, and prioritized build sequence.
Build Pillar I completely (positioning and messaging). Launch Pillar II top 2 channels. Fix most critical Pillar III conversion gaps. Establish Pillar IV baseline reporting. Begin Pillar V with case study development.
Scale what's working in Pillar II. Optimize Pillar III conversion rates based on real data. Refine Pillar IV attribution as data accumulates. Add Compounding Layer elements - brand content, partnership development.
All five pillars operating. Focus shifts from building to optimizing and compounding. Processes documented for eventual handoff or team scale. Revenue Architecture becomes self-sustaining.
The framework applies at every stage, but the emphasis shifts as the company grows.
80% Pillar I (ICP and positioning) + 15% Pillar II (1-2 channels) + 5% Pillar IV (basic measurement). Get the foundation right before scaling. The most expensive mistake at this stage is scaling a broken demand foundation.
40% Pillar II (acquisition scale) + 30% Pillar III (conversion optimization) + 20% Pillar IV (revenue intelligence) + 10% Pillar V (compounding). This is the stage where systematic execution creates the moat.
35% Pillar V (compounding assets - brand, partners, community) + 30% Pillar IV (sophisticated attribution and forecasting) + 20% Pillar II (channel expansion and efficiency) + 15% Pillar III (retention and expansion). Compounding becomes the primary driver of long-term advantage.
The Revenue Architecture Framework is the foundation of every fractional CMO engagement Mark takes on. Every company gets a customized version built for their specific ICP, stage, competitive context, and available resources.
A standalone engagement: 2-week intensive to assess all five pillars, map your current architecture, identify the highest-priority gaps, and deliver a 90-day build roadmap your team can execute. Best for companies that have internal execution capacity but need strategic direction.
Mark builds and runs the Revenue Architecture for your company over 6-18 months. Ongoing strategic leadership, team management, and accountability for outcomes across all five pillars. Best for companies that want a partner who owns the build end-to-end.