The free Revenue Recovery tool runs entirely in the browser on five high-level inputs you usually already know — no data export, no email, no involvement from us. That makes it ideal for self-serve portfolio screening: run it once per company, record each estimated recoverable range, and sort the list to get a ranked map of where recoverable revenue concentrates across the book. It's a benchmark-calibrated triage, not the full diagnostic — good enough to decide where to look closely, in an afternoon's work.
- Self-serve by design — browser-only, five inputs, no data export, no email.
- Run it per company to build a comparable, ranked portfolio map.
- It's triage, not the diagnostic — a screen to decide where to look closely.
- An afternoon's work turns a vague sense of opportunity into a defensible queue.
Why it's self-serve by design
Most "calculators" on vendor sites are email-capture traps — a number held hostage behind a form. The Revenue Recovery tool is built the opposite way on purpose. It runs entirely in your browser, takes five high-level inputs an operating partner typically already has for any portfolio company, and returns a benchmark-calibrated recoverable-revenue range immediately, with no email and no data leaving the page. The reason for that design is trust: we would rather you form your own view across the portfolio first and come to a conversation already knowing roughly where the opportunity is than gate the one number that helps you decide. Self-serve isn't a limitation here; it's the point.
Building the portfolio screen
Turning the single-company estimate into a portfolio screen is mechanical. Open the tool, run it once for each portfolio company using that company's revenue and relationship inputs, and record the estimated recoverable range each time. Twenty or thirty companies takes an afternoon. Then sort the list by the midpoint of each range. What you have built is a ranked map: a comparable, like-for-like view of where the recoverable revenue concentrates across the entire book, produced without involving a single portfolio-company CEO, IT team, or vendor. That map is the artefact that turns "we should look at revenue recovery sometime" into a specific, prioritised plan.
Run the first portfolio company through the tool.
Five inputs, 90 seconds, in your browser. No data export, no email. Then repeat across the book.
Open the free tool →Reading the map
A ranked map tells you more than which company is largest. Read it for concentration: if a few companies hold most of the estimated recoverable revenue, your first engagements are obvious and the rest can wait. Read it for surprises: a mid-size company with an unexpectedly large estimate usually means a relationship-heavy model with significant dormancy — often the most convincing first proof. And read it against the triage rubric — relationship-driven revenue, recoverable upside, data readiness, hold-period fit — so the company you pick first scores well on more than raw size. The tool gives you the upside axis quickly; you supply the other three from what you already know about each company.
Where the tool stops
It's worth being clear about the tool's edge so you use it well. It is a screening estimate built from published sector benchmarks applied to high-level inputs; it is deliberately conservative and it does not name a single relationship. It tells you where to look, not what to do. The full diagnostic — the one that reconstructs the relationship history, scores each source against its own baseline, and produces the named, prioritised recovery list — is the next step for the companies the screen surfaces. Think of the free tool as the portfolio-wide flashlight and the diagnostic as the work that follows where it points. On qualifying $30M+ engagements that work carries our 3× fee recovery guarantee: we recover at least three times our fee, or we keep working at no additional fee until we do.
FAQ.
Can an operating partner use the free tool without us being involved?
Yes. It runs entirely in the browser on five high-level inputs an operating partner usually already knows — no data export, no email, no involvement from Innovation Park. It's designed for self-serve use, including running it across many portfolio companies to produce a first, comparable view of where recoverable revenue concentrates.
How accurate is the free tool's estimate?
It's a benchmark-calibrated estimate, not a diagnostic. It applies published sector dormancy rates to your inputs for a conservative range — good enough to rank companies and decide where to look closely, not a substitute for the full diagnostic that surfaces named relationships. Treat it as triage.
How do you turn tool estimates into a portfolio screen?
Run the tool once per company using each company's inputs, record the estimated recoverable range, and sort the list. The result is a ranked map of where recoverable revenue concentrates across the portfolio — an afternoon's work that turns a vague sense of opportunity into a comparable, defensible queue for full diagnostics.
How to start.
Here is the fastest path to a real answer. No leap. A stair.
Run the free tool
Five inputs. Sixty seconds. Browser-only. Run it across the book to build the screen. No email required.
Which portco first
Combine the tool's upside axis with the four-factor triage rubric.
Book a 30-min qualification call
Julia or Tyler personally. Bring your screen; we'll pick the first diagnostic. No pitch.