The Operating Cadence

The operating cadence. How a leadership team actually runs the week.

Most advice on SaaS metrics tells you what to measure. Almost none tells you how to actually run on them — the weekly rhythm of a scorecard, a tight meeting, and owned action that turns a dashboard into a company that moves. This series is that operating system, drawn from sixteen years of running a weekly cadence (and an EOS-style L10) at a bootstrapped SaaS: how to build the scorecard, run the meeting, hold the line on accountability, read signal from noise, and make the whole thing stick past month two.

Why weekly beats monthly
The right rhythm for $1–10M ARR
Monthly lets a problem compound for thirty days before anyone notices. Why a weekly cadence catches issues while they're still small — and why weekly is the rhythm that actually fits a company doing $1–10M in ARR.
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Building your scorecard
The 10–15 numbers that matter
How to choose the handful of numbers worth looking at every single week — and why a scorecard with fifty metrics is far worse than one with twelve. The art is in what you leave off.
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Leading vs lagging indicators
Manage the inputs, not the outcomes
You can't manage revenue weekly — but you can manage the activities that produce it. The single most important distinction on any scorecard, with concrete leading-indicator examples by function.
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Every metric needs a goal
A number without a target is just data
Why every line on the scorecard needs a weekly goal, how to set ones that are real rather than aspirational, and what the red and green are actually there to do.
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Running the weekly meeting
The 90 minutes that run the company
The agenda and flow of a tight weekly leadership meeting — what to cover, in what order, how long it should take, and how to keep it from drifting into a status update or a rabbit hole.
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Rocks, issues, and to-dos
Turning numbers into action
The machinery that converts an off-track metric into an owned action — so the scorecard changes what the team does, not just what it can see.
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One owner per number
Accountability the scorecard enforces
Why every metric needs a single name next to it, and how the weekly rhythm turns ownership from a value on the wall into a habit the team actually lives.
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Solve issues, don't just discuss them
Identify, discuss, solve
How disciplined teams actually work an issues list to resolution — instead of rehashing the same complaints, meeting after meeting, with nothing ever closing.
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Reading the scorecard
Signal vs noise
Week-to-week variance versus a real trend — when a red is a fire and when it's just Tuesday. How to read the board without overreacting to every wobble or ignoring the slow drift.
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Getting the team to actually use it
Why cadences die, and how to keep yours alive
The hardest part isn't building the cadence — it's making it stick past month two. The honest reasons cadences fizzle out, and what keeps one running for years.
Coming soon
The cadence failures we lived through
The anti-patterns, from experience
Too many metrics, no owners, the meeting that became a status update, data that's late or wrong, the founder who dominates the room — the failure modes we hit, and the fixes that worked.
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From weekly to quarterly to annual
The full operating system
How the weekly rhythm rolls up into quarterly priorities and annual goals — connecting the cadence to strategy, so the week always serves the year instead of drifting from it.
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This is the cadence Upbeat was built to run.

Everything in this series — the scorecard, the weekly meeting, the owned actions, signal over noise — is exactly what Upbeat puts in front of your leadership team every Monday, so the rhythm runs itself instead of living in a spreadsheet someone forgets to update.

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