Most small business owners track revenue and leave it there. That single number tells you what happened — it tells you nothing about why, and nothing about what to fix.
The right KPIs change that. They turn vague feelings about your business into specific, actionable signals. They tell you whether your sales process is broken, your margins are leaking, your team is burning out, or your customers are quietly leaving.
This guide gives you concrete KPI examples across every major business function — finance, sales, marketing, operations, HR, and customer service. For each one, you’ll get the formula, a realistic worked example, and benchmarks you can actually use.
By the end, you’ll know which metrics matter most for a business at your stage, and how to start tracking them without building a spreadsheet empire.
What Is a KPI?
A Key Performance Indicator (KPI) is a measurable value that shows how effectively a business is achieving a specific objective. KPIs are not just any metric — they are the metrics tied directly to outcomes that determine whether your business grows, stalls, or declines.
The difference between a metric and a KPI: revenue is a metric. Revenue growth rate is a KPI. One describes the present; the other measures direction and momentum.
Why KPIs Matter More at the Small Business Stage
At a large company, underperformance in one department gets absorbed by others. At a small business, one leaking department can sink the whole operation.
Small businesses have less margin for error, less data to work with, and less time for analysis. That is exactly why choosing the right KPIs — a small, focused set — matters more, not less, than it does for enterprises.
Three things good KPIs do for a small business owner:
- Replace gut instinct with evidence. You stop guessing and start knowing.
- Focus attention. When everything feels urgent, KPIs tell you what is actually urgent.
- Create accountability. Numbers that are tracked get improved. Numbers that aren’t tracked drift.
Finance KPIs Every Small Business Should Track
Financial KPIs tell you whether the business is structurally sound. High revenue means nothing if your margins are thin and cash is always tight.
1. Gross Profit Margin
Formula:
(Revenue − Cost of Goods Sold) ÷ Revenue × 100
Worked example: A retail shop earns $180,000 in revenue. Cost of goods sold is $108,000. ($180,000 − $108,000) ÷ $180,000 × 100 = 40%
| Performance | Gross Profit Margin |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 25% |
| Average | 25% – 45% |
| Excellent | Above 45% |
Note: Benchmarks vary significantly by industry. Service businesses typically run 50–70%. Product businesses run 30–50%.
Gross margin is your most fundamental efficiency number. If it’s shrinking, your pricing or your supplier costs need attention before anything else.
2. Net Profit Margin
Formula:
Net Profit ÷ Revenue × 100
Worked example: The same retail shop has $180,000 in revenue and $27,000 in net profit after all expenses. $27,000 ÷ $180,000 × 100 = 15%
| Performance | Net Profit Margin |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 5% |
| Average | 5% – 15% |
| Excellent | Above 15% |
3. Operating Cash Flow
Formula:
Net Income + Non-Cash Expenses − Changes in Working Capital
Profitable businesses fail because of cash flow problems, not because of bad products. Track this monthly without exception.
Worked example: Net income is $12,000. Add back $2,000 in depreciation. Working capital increased by $4,000 (you collected less than you invoiced). Operating Cash Flow = $12,000 + $2,000 − $4,000 = $10,000
| Performance | Trend |
|---|---|
| Poor | Negative or declining 3+ months |
| Average | Positive but volatile |
| Excellent | Consistently positive with a growing buffer |
Explore the full set of small business financial metrics in the finance KPIs library.
Sales KPIs That Show Whether Your Pipeline Is Healthy
Revenue is the outcome. Sales KPIs measure the inputs that produce revenue — and they tell you where the process is breaking down.
4. Lead Conversion Rate
Formula:
(Leads Converted to Customers ÷ Total Leads) × 100
Worked example: Your team contacted 120 leads last month. 18 became paying customers. 18 ÷ 120 × 100 = 15%
| Performance | Lead Conversion Rate |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 5% |
| Average | 5% – 20% |
| Excellent | Above 20% |
A low conversion rate points to one of three problems: poor lead quality, a weak sales process, or a mismatch between what you promise and what you deliver. Each requires a different fix.
5. Average Transaction Value (ATV)
Formula:
Total Revenue ÷ Number of Transactions
Worked example: $90,000 in monthly revenue from 600 transactions. $90,000 ÷ 600 = $150 average transaction value
Growing revenue without growing transaction count is more profitable than growing volume. Track ATV alongside total revenue.
6. Sales Cycle Length
Formula:
Total Days to Close All Deals ÷ Number of Deals Closed
Worked example: You closed 10 deals last month. The total days from first contact to close across all 10 deals was 140 days. 140 ÷ 10 = 14-day average sales cycle
| Performance | Sales Cycle (B2C small business) |
|---|---|
| Poor | More than 30 days |
| Average | 10 – 30 days |
| Excellent | Under 10 days |
See more examples and formulas in the sales KPIs library.
Marketing KPIs That Justify Every Dollar You Spend
Marketing without measurement is a donation. These KPIs tell you what’s working, what’s wasting money, and where to double down.
7. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
Formula:
Total Marketing + Sales Spend ÷ Number of New Customers Acquired
Worked example: You spent $6,000 on marketing and sales last month. You acquired 40 new customers. $6,000 ÷ 40 = $150 CAC
The number only means something in context. If your average customer spends $150 once, you are breaking even on acquisition. If they spend $600 over their lifetime, you have a healthy business.
| Performance | CAC vs. Average Order Value |
|---|---|
| Poor | CAC ≥ first-order value |
| Average | CAC = 25–50% of first-order value |
| Excellent | CAC < 20% of first-order value |
8. Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)
Formula:
Revenue Generated from Ads ÷ Ad Spend
Worked example: You ran $2,000 in paid social ads last month. Those ads directly attributed to $8,000 in revenue. $8,000 ÷ $2,000 = 4x ROAS
A 4x ROAS is generally the floor for profitability in most product-based small businesses, once you account for COGS and overhead. Below 3x and most businesses are losing money on paid acquisition.
9. Email List Growth Rate
Formula:
((New Subscribers − Unsubscribes) ÷ Total Subscribers at Start of Period) × 100
Worked example: You started the month with 2,000 subscribers. You gained 120 new ones and lost 20. (120 − 20) ÷ 2,000 × 100 = 5% monthly growth rate
Operations KPIs That Prevent Costly Inefficiencies
Operational KPIs measure the engine of your business. A broken operations process silently increases costs while reducing output quality.
10. On-Time Delivery Rate
Formula:
(Orders Delivered on Time ÷ Total Orders) × 100
Worked example: You fulfilled 280 of 300 orders on time last month. 280 ÷ 300 × 100 = 93.3%
| Performance | On-Time Delivery Rate |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 85% |
| Average | 85% – 95% |
| Excellent | Above 95% |
11. Inventory Turnover
Formula:
Cost of Goods Sold ÷ Average Inventory
Worked example: COGS for the quarter was $120,000. Average inventory value was $30,000. $120,000 ÷ $30,000 = 4x inventory turns per quarter
Low inventory turnover means capital is sitting on shelves instead of working. High turnover means you are selling efficiently — but if it’s too high, you risk stockouts.
See the full operations metrics breakdown in the operations KPIs library.
HR KPIs for Small Business Teams
When you have a small team, one departure or one disengaged employee has outsized impact. These KPIs tell you whether you are building a stable, productive team.
12. Employee Turnover Rate
Formula:
(Number of Employees Who Left ÷ Average Number of Employees) × 100
Worked example: You had an average of 20 employees this year. 4 left. 4 ÷ 20 × 100 = 20% annual turnover
| Performance | Annual Turnover Rate |
|---|---|
| Poor | Above 30% |
| Average | 15% – 30% |
| Excellent | Below 15% |
High turnover costs between 50% and 200% of an employee’s annual salary when you factor in recruiting, onboarding, and lost productivity (industry estimate). For a small team, that cost is not abstract — it shows up directly on your P&L.
13. Revenue Per Employee
Formula:
Total Revenue ÷ Number of Full-Time Equivalent Employees
Worked example: $720,000 in annual revenue with 6 full-time employees. $720,000 ÷ 6 = $120,000 revenue per employee
This is one of the clearest efficiency metrics for a small team. Track it quarterly. If revenue grows but this metric stagnates, your headcount growth is outpacing your revenue growth.
Explore benchmarks and formulas in the HR KPIs library.
Customer Service KPIs That Protect Your Revenue
Acquiring a new customer costs 5–7x more than retaining an existing one (industry estimate). Customer service KPIs measure whether you are protecting the revenue you already have.
14. Customer Retention Rate
Formula:
((Customers at End of Period − New Customers Acquired) ÷ Customers at Start of Period) × 100
Worked example: You started Q2 with 400 customers. You acquired 60 new ones and ended with 420. (420 − 60) ÷ 400 × 100 = 90% retention rate
| Performance | Customer Retention Rate |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 75% |
| Average | 75% – 90% |
| Excellent | Above 90% |
15. Net Promoter Score (NPS)
Formula:
% Promoters (score 9–10) − % Detractors (score 0–6)
Worked example: You surveyed 100 customers. 55 gave a 9 or 10. 15 gave a 6 or below. 55% − 15% = NPS of 40
| Performance | NPS |
|---|---|
| Poor | Below 0 |
| Average | 0 – 40 |
| Excellent | Above 50 |
An NPS above 50 is a genuine competitive advantage for a small business. It means your customers are actively recommending you — and that is the most cost-effective growth lever available to a small operation.
Mid-Article CTA: Ready to See the Full Picture?
The KPI examples above cover the fundamentals. But once you know which metrics matter for your type of business — retail, restaurant, service, ecommerce — the picture gets sharper.
Explore KPIs specific to your industry:
Or download a ready-to-use KPI dashboard template and start tracking this week.
How to Choose the Right KPIs for Your Small Business
Fifteen KPIs is too many to actively manage at one time. Most small businesses should focus on 5–7 core metrics at any given stage.
Use this prioritization framework:
Step 1 — Identify your current constraint. Is the business struggling to acquire customers, to retain them, to deliver profitably, or to manage cash? Your highest-priority KPIs sit at the constraint.
Step 2 — Assign one owner per KPI. A metric with no owner is a metric that doesn’t improve. Even in a team of three, every tracked number needs a name next to it.
Step 3 — Set a baseline before setting targets. You need at least 90 days of data to understand what normal looks like. Set targets after you understand your baseline, not before.
Step 4 — Review on a fixed cadence. Weekly for operational KPIs (conversion rate, cash flow, on-time delivery). Monthly for strategic KPIs (retention rate, NPS, revenue per employee). Quarterly for structural KPIs (gross margin, turnover rate).
Step 5 — Drop KPIs that stop driving decisions. A KPI you track but never act on is noise. Remove it. Replacing a stale metric with a better one is not failure — it is maturity.
Common KPI Mistakes Small Business Owners Make
Mistake 1: Tracking too many metrics More data does not mean better decisions. Owners who track 20 KPIs typically act on none of them. Start with 5. Add metrics only when you have the capacity to respond to what they tell you.
Mistake 2: Using lagging indicators only Revenue, profit, and customer count are lagging — they tell you what already happened. Pair every lagging KPI with a leading indicator. Conversion rate leads revenue. Employee satisfaction leads turnover. NPS leads retention.
Mistake 3: Reviewing KPIs without a response protocol A KPI review that ends without a decision is a meeting. A KPI review that ends with a specific action assigned to a specific person with a specific deadline is a management system. Define in advance: if this metric drops below X, we do Y.
Frequently Asked Questions
What KPIs should a small business track first? Start with gross profit margin, customer acquisition cost, lead conversion rate, customer retention rate, and operating cash flow. These five cover the financial health, sales efficiency, and customer stability of almost any small business. Add department-specific metrics once you have a baseline on these.
How often should a small business review its KPIs? Operational KPIs (cash flow, conversion rate, on-time delivery) should be reviewed weekly. Strategic KPIs (gross margin, NPS, revenue per employee) should be reviewed monthly. Structural KPIs (annual turnover rate, year-over-year growth) should be reviewed quarterly.
What is the difference between a KPI and a metric? Every KPI is a metric, but not every metric is a KPI. A metric is any measurable data point — website visits, invoices sent, items in stock. A KPI is a metric tied directly to a strategic objective. If the number doesn’t drive a decision or reflect progress toward a goal, it’s a metric, not a KPI.
How many KPIs should a small business track? Most small businesses should actively manage 5–7 KPIs at any given time — across all departments combined. More than that creates noise. The goal is focus, not comprehensiveness.
Can the same KPI mean different things for different businesses? Yes. A 20% customer retention rate is catastrophic for a subscription software company and completely normal for a one-time-purchase gift shop. Always benchmark KPIs against businesses with the same model, not just the same industry.