Guide Vantage · 1 min read

How do I calculate the ROI of Vantage?

Model Vantage ROI by quantifying three components: principal time recaptured, pipeline quality improvement, and reduced dependency risk from encoding the principal’s judgment.

The return on Vantage comes from three primary sources:

  1. Time recaptured from manual pipeline review
  2. Pipeline quality improvement from better prioritization
  3. Reduced dependency risk from encoding the principal’s judgment

Below is how to model each component and how they roll up into a simple ROI framing.

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1. Time recaptured

What to measure

Estimate how many hours per week the principal currently spends on activities that Vantage automates or accelerates:

  • Reviewing which accounts to pursue
  • Coaching reps on prioritization
  • Re-evaluating deals that came in misqualified

How to calculate

  1. Estimate weekly hours saved:
    • Let H = principal hours per week that Vantage recaptures.
  2. Determine principal’s effective hourly rate:
    • Let R = principal value per hour (e.g., $400/hour).
  3. Annualize the time value:
    • Annual time value = H × R × 52

Typical range

  • A typical engagement recovers 3–6 hours per week of principal time in steady state.
  • At a $400/hour principal value, that is:
    • Low end: 3 × $400 × 52 ≈ $60,000 per year
    • High end: 6 × $400 × 52 ≈ $120,000 per year

This recovered time alone often covers the cost of Vantage.

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2. Pipeline quality improvement

This is harder to model precisely, but the most common signal is conversion rate.

When your team works from a prioritized list that reflects your actual evaluation standard (rather than each rep’s personal judgment), they spend more time on the accounts that matter. The typical outcome is a higher conversion rate on pursued accounts, not simply more activity.

What to measure

  • Historical conversion rate from opportunity to close.
  • Total pipeline value over a given period.

How to calculate

  1. Let P = total pipeline value over a period (e.g., $2,000,000).
  2. Let CR_base = baseline conversion rate (before Vantage).
  3. Let CR_vantage = projected or observed conversion rate with Vantage.
  4. The improvement in conversion is ΔCR = CR_vantage − CR_base.
  5. Incremental revenue = P × ΔCR.

Example

  • Pipeline P = $2,000,000
  • A 10% absolute improvement in conversion rate (e.g., from 20% to 30%) yields:
    • Incremental revenue = $2,000,000 × 0.10 = $200,000

Even modest conversion gains on a meaningful pipeline can dwarf the cost of Vantage.

Related: Why Vantage costs $25K upfront · Cheaper alternatives · Is Vantage right for your business

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