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How to Forecast Your Revenue (Even with No Sales Yet)

January 3, 2026
in Finance
Reading Time: 7 mins read
0

You might think you need sales before you can forecast revenue.

But in reality?
You need a forecast before the sales come in.

Revenue forecasting isn’t about being perfect—it’s about planning. It helps you set goals, make smart decisions, and avoid flying blind.

Even if you’re just getting started, you can create a simple forecast using what you know (or can reasonably guess).

Here’s how to do it—step by step.

1. Start with one offer

Don’t try to predict revenue across five different products or services. Focus on one for now—your main offer.

It could be:

  • A service package
  • A physical product
  • A digital course
  • A subscription or membership

Choose the one you’re actively promoting or building your business around.

2. Estimate your price

This part’s easy: What will you charge per sale?

If it’s a service, include your base rate.
If it’s a product, include your markup.
If it’s a subscription, multiply the monthly cost by the number of expected months.

You don’t need the perfect price—just a clear starting point.

Example:
$100 per coaching session
$49 per product
$29/month subscription

3. Estimate your conversion rate

Next, ask: How many people who see your offer will actually buy?

Typical benchmarks:

  • Cold audience (ads, organic traffic): 1–2%
  • Warm leads (email list, referrals): 5–10%
  • Hot leads (calls, DMs): 20%+

If you have no data yet, assume 1–3% for cold outreach or 5–10% for a warm email list.

Example:
You expect 500 people to visit your site, and you estimate a 2% conversion rate → 10 sales.

4. Multiply it out

Now, multiply:
Number of leads or visitors × conversion rate × price = forecasted revenue

Example:
500 website visitors × 2% = 10 sales
10 sales × $100 = $1,000 revenue forecast

This isn’t about accuracy—it’s about direction. And it helps you plan your goals, marketing, and expenses around something tangible.

5. Create low, medium, and high projections

Since you’re working with estimates, build three versions of your forecast:

  • Low: Conservative traffic or conversion
  • Medium: Realistic average
  • High: Optimistic if things go well

Example:

  • Low: 300 visitors × 1% × $100 = $300
  • Medium: 500 visitors × 2% × $100 = $1,000
  • High: 800 visitors × 3% × $100 = $2,400

This gives you a range to work with—and prepares you for multiple outcomes.

6. Track and adjust monthly

Forecasting is not “set it and forget it.” It’s something you update as real data comes in.

Each month, compare your forecast to what actually happened:

  • Did your conversion rate surprise you?
  • Did more people visit your page than expected?
  • Did a new platform outperform others?

Use this info to adjust next month’s plan. Forecasting gets better over time.

Action Step
Choose one offer and create a simple revenue forecast for the next 30 days. Estimate your traffic, conversion rate, and price. Then build a low, medium, and high version of that forecast. Use it to set clear, trackable sales goals this month.

Tags: Finance

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