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Resources related to metrics and KPI's for startups and VC's.
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Metrics and data
Developing a Successful SaaS Sales Strategy
Founders are tasked with hundreds of responsibilities when starting a business. On top of hiring, financing, and building their product, early-stage founders are generally responsible for developing initial strategies — this includes the earliest sales and market strategies. In this article, we will look to help you craft a successful SaaS sales strategy. We’ll highlight the elements you will want to think of when you start to build your sales motion. This will help your team to understand how to measure the number of potential customers in your pipeline and the growth potential you might see in your revenue numbers. How are SaaS sales different from other types of sales? Like any sales strategy, it is important to start with the basics when looking at a SaaS sales strategy. At the top of your funnel, you have marketing leads that likely find your brand via content, word of mouth, paid ads, your own product, etc. From here, leads are moved through the funnel. In the middle, SaaS companies can leverage email campaigns, events, product demos, etc. to move leads to the bottom of their funnel. However, as the SaaS buying experience takes place fully online — sales and marketing organizations can be creative with their approach. The online experience allows companies to track more robust data than ever before. Additionally, SaaS products have turned into their own growth levers as well — the ability to manipulate pricing and plans has led to the ability for companies to leverage their own product for growth. Related Resource: How SaaS Companies Can Best Leverage a Product-led Growth Strategy The online presence and emergence of product-led growth have led to new sales strategies unique to SaaS companies. Learn more below: 3 Popular SaaS sales models There are countless ways to structure your Saas sales strategy. For the sake of this post, we’ll focus on 3 of the most popular strategies. Learn more about the self-service model, transactional model, and enterprise sales model below: Related Resource: The SaaS Business Model: How and Why it Works Self-service model The self-service model allows prospects to become customers without communicating with your team. As put by the team at ProductLed, “A SaaS self-serve model is exactly what it sounds like. Rather than rely on a dedicated Sales team to prospect, educate, and close sales, you design a system that allows customers to serve themselves. The quality of the product itself does all the selling.” This strategy is typically best for a strong and simple product that typically has a lower contract size. Transactional sales model The transactional model allows you to create income-generating actions where prospects have to become a customer at that point in time. This requires transactional sales models to have high-volume sales that can be supported by a strong sales and customer support team. Enterprise sales model The enterprise model is a strategy to sell more robust software packages to corporations – you will need baked-in features in a prepackaged manner to sell to a fellow business. Enterprise sales is the model that shares the most similarities with a traditional B2B sales funnel. Inbound vs outbound sales In a Saas sales funnel, you are constantly looking to consistently fill your sales funnel with fresh prospects. Once you have prospects you will look to find which prospects are worthy of being qualified and have a high likelihood of converting so you can spend your time communicating with those high-quality prospects. There are two popular strategies for creating fresh prospects that would be defined as inbound and outbound sales strategies. Inbound sales is when you invest in marketing to create prospects reaching out to you – fresh prospects reaching out to your business to ask about your software product. As put by the team at HubSpot: “Inbound sales organizations use a sales process that is personalized, helpful, and directly focused on prospects’ pain points throughout their buyer’s journey. During inbound sales, buyers move through three key phases: awareness, consideration, and decision (which we’ll discuss further below). While buyers go through these three phases, sales teams go through four different actions that will help them support qualified leads into becoming opportunities and eventually customers: identify, connect, explore, and advise.” An inbound strategy typically works best for SaaS companies that need a greater volume of customers and can nurture them and move them through their funnel at scale (e.g. self-service model) Outbound sales on the other hand are having members of your organization reach out to potential prospects to see if they would be interested in using your service. Outbound sales require highly targeted and proactive pushing of your messaging to customers. Generally, outbound sales require dedicated team members to manually prospect and reach out to potential customers. This means that outbound sales organizations do not naturally scale as well as an inbound sales organizations and will likely require a higher contract value. An enterprise model would rely heavily on Outbound sales, while a self-service business model will rely heavily on Inbound sales. The SaaS Sales Process The best Saas sales strategy will be a hybrid of inbound and outbound sales, but all of them should include a sales funnel. This funnel should have stages that help to qualify your prospects. These stages should be: Step 1: Lead generation This activity is often times a marketing activity that gives you contact or business information to explore the fit further Step 2: Prospecting This is where you develop the bio of who is the contact you are reaching out to within the organization. It is always helpful to prospect for someone who can make a buying decision Step 3: Qualifying In this step, you need to understand whether the prospect has the resources to pay for your product and the problem that your product can solve. This step is often the time for you to ask questions of your prospects Step 4: Demos and presenting This is when you will share the features and capabilities of your product with the qualified prospect. You want to show them the different features and where they can get the most value. Step 5: Closing the deal After your demo or a presenting call, the prospect should be pushed to a point where they need to make a decision on whether to buy your product. Step 6: Nurturing Once someone becomes a customer, you need to make sure to nurture them and grow your product offering with their business. This is the most difficult stage. Make sure to share your new product releases, stay in tune with how they are using your product, and build relationships with your customers. Cultivating a robust sales team To create a sustaining sales team, it is important to hire talented and tenacious people to own your sales funnel. They will need to track conversion numbers, stay organized with their outreach to prospects, and grow your funnel over time. There are three key roles within a Saas sales funnel. Those positions within your organization are: Sales development representatives (also known as business development representatives) These members of your team own lead generation, prospecting, and qualifying potential customers on your sales team. They get paid 40-60k/year depending on geographical location and experience. They should be tasked with outreach and drumming up new business. Account executives Account executives should focus on giving product demos, closing deals, and nurturing existing customers. They should be a bit more buttoned up in their approach and have a commission incentive associated with the # of accounts they manage. Sales managers/VPs Sales managers and Vice presidents of sales should take ownership of the data within your sales pipelines. Numbers like # of new leads, # of new qualified leads, # of new customers, # of churned customers, amount of new revenue, and lead to customer conversion %. Growing these sales numbers each quarter. Measuring these numbers weekly, monthly, and quarterly. Making them visible to the rest of the company regularly. 8 Key Elements of a successful SaaS sales strategy One of the most important elements of building a successful business is having a like-minded team around you to support and work with you. Make sure to align with all your team members and hire people with good work ethics and similar values of your company. A good sales team should be competitive, goal-oriented, and metric-driven. The sales managers and VPs will be really crucial in shaping the team dynamics and culture of your business. Hire great people and the numbers will take care of themselves! We’ve identified 8 elements of a successful sales strategy that every Saas sales strategy should include 1. Solidify your value proposition It is so important to understand thoroughly and communicate your product’s core value proposition. If someone decides to buy your product, they should know how to use the product and how to get the most out of it. 2. Superb communication with prospects Communication is of the utmost importance. Make sure your prospects understand your product and how it will help their business. Inform them of new product updates 3. Strategic trial periods An effective strategy is to give potential customers a free trial of your product to understand your value proposition. You want to make sure not to make this trial period too short or too long. Make it strategic so the prospect will understand the value prop but also be encouraged to make a buying decision. 4. Track the right SaaS metrics Tracking your core metrics is vital to success. See a few of those below: Customer Acquisition Cost – the amount of money it takes to acquire a new customer Customer Lifetime Value – the amount of value a customer provides your company over the course of their relationship with you as a customer. Lead velocity rate – the growth percentage of qualified leads month over month. This will help you understand how quickly you are qualifying your leads Related Resources: Our Ultimate Guide to SaaS Metrics & How To Calculate and Interpret Your SaaS Magic Number 5. Develop a sales playbook Every successful sales management team should develop a playbook on how to deploy their resources and where each team member should spend their time. Playbooks are often thought of in sports terms, but they also work wonders in the business world. They will help you do things efficiently and effectively. 6. Set effective sales goals How many new customers does your business hope to bring in next month? This is an important question and one your whole sales team should understand and work towards! 7. Utilize the right tools to enhance the process Your team should have all the resources at their disposal to communicate effectively and track their metrics. As you build out your strategy and team, be sure to give them all possible resources at their disposal. There are tons of great tools out there for teams to make the most out of their time and have direct methods of communication with customers and one another. 8. Establish an effective customer support program A huge part of an effective sales strategy is welcoming potential customers and making sure your existing customers are not forgotten about. When customers reach out, it is important to talk and listen to their issues. Understand what they are needing so your product can continue to evolve. Make sure anyone getting introduced to your product will also have the information they need to use your product successfully. It might be helpful to include this member of your team in your sales meetings and keep them informed as to messaging and efforts for growth! Generate support for your startup with Visible Developing a successful SaaS sales strategy is not an easy task. It will take a hybrid approach of many of the elements listed in this article and will need attentive members of your team to nurture it and test new things. We created Visible to help founders have a better chance for success. Stay in the loop with the best resources to build and scale your startup with our newsletter, the Visible Weekly — subscribe here. Related resource: Lead Velocity Rate: A Key Metric in the Startup Landscape
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Metrics and data
Operations
How to Establish ESG Monitoring and Reporting Practices at Your VC Firm
As we invest in rapidly changing technologies that impact people and the planet, it’s of the utmost importance to consider the unintended consequences—even at the early stage. As the world felt the effects of several major crises in recent times, Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) principles have rightfully risen to the spotlight in the venture capital industry and now play a critical role in investment decision-making. Investors hold a responsibility to guide their portfolio companies in ESG practices, not just because the world is watching—but because companies that are as concerned with their impact as they are with building their products are proven to perform better in the long run. Visible recently hosted an ESG for Venture Capital webinar with Tracy Barba, Head of ESG at 500 Startups and Director at ESG4VC, where she answered the common questions about establishing ESG reporting practices at VC firms. We’ve shared answers to some of those questions below as well as guidance on using Visible for ESG portfolio monitoring. What is ESG for Venture Capital? ESG policies and practices help investors and companies manage their environmental, social, and governance risk and identify opportunities for value creation. VCs—including 500 Startups—are widely embracing the shift. In the 2020 ESG Annual Report spearheaded by Tracy Barba, 500 Startups said their policies include: Environmental criteria to examine how a company performs as a steward of nature. Social criteria to consider a company’s relationship with its employees, suppliers, customers, and communities where it operates. Governance criteria to review a company’s leadership, shareholder rights, executive pay, audits, and internal controls. VC firms can and should provide an ESG framework as startup companies grow. It’s never too early to care—as we’ve seen in the news, large tech companies have found themselves in legal and ethical trouble over issues that could have been resolved in the earlier stages. In How Venture Capital Can Join the ESG Revolution, Stanford’s Social Innovation Review pointed out that eventually, ESG should not be understood as an “add-on” but a core value in a VC leading to better investments and companies. Ethical and legal considerations should not be ignored in the service of achieving rapid growth and swift time to market. As a VC firm, there is a risk in your ownership percentage if a portfolio company were to face legal battles, public scrutiny, and other risks that could have been prevented if they were identified earlier. ESG as a term is often used interchangeably with impact investing. As Tracy Barba points out, impact investing is thinking about the end goal and the impact of the companies you’re investing in. Having a strategy around water or climate is an example of an impact strategy, so you’re filtering deals based on that. ESG is a screening for every company, regardless of the type, measuring their environmental, social, and governance criteria. It’s hard for an early-stage company to know their impact, such as environmental waste, if they don’t have a product yet. That’s why it’s important to map ESG to relevant stages of a company’s development. At an early stage, the goal is to start to have a conversation. It’s much easier to think about how a company affects the environment from the beginning and address any issues upfront rather than fix or replace already-established processes in the future. At later stages, more detailed discussions will be appropriate. Founders overwhelmingly do care and want to consider ESG, but many don’t know when or how to get started. As an investor, you can help them start to think through ESG by adding it as an agenda item on your monthly or quarterly check-ins. An example question is: “Are you tracking your carbon footprint?” Their answer might simply be “Yes”, or it might be, “No we aren’t, but we’d like to. How can we get started?” Why is ESG Becoming More Common in Venture Capital? There is a growing understanding that ESG policies help with customer loyalty, retaining talent, and attracting more investors. It’s beneficial if a company directs time and energy towards making sure they’re operating responsibly. In venture capital, some topics are gaining momentum: Diversity – there are demonstrated benefits to having culturally diverse teams and boards. Gender equality – supporting more women and as founders and funders. Data protection & privacy of users – startups are not exempt from laws such as the GDPR and CCPA which protect the personal data privacy of consumers. Environmental impact trends – caring about carbon emissions, ethical sourcing of materials, waste management, etc. It’s important to be mindful of regulations and how they can change over time. The Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) in Europe aims to prevent greenwashing and to increase transparency around sustainability claims (source: Eurosif). While the SEC currently only recommends ESG disclosure, it may also create firm rules in the future. Companies may start measuring and reporting their ESG progress in preparation for new regulations. More than ever, founders care about being backed by VCs they align with. VCs can drive a positive shift by integrating ESG into their own operations. Showing that you care as an investor is integral in instilling ESG policies into your portfolio. How To Monitor ESG Metrics Across your VC Portfolio You can start tracking ESG metrics across your portfolio by sending them an annual questionnaire. 500 Startups, for example, collects their founder diversity info on a quarterly basis, measuring their progress over time and benchmarking to the VC industry. Founders already get asked for a lot of information, so to encourage their participation in your ESG questionnaires, ask fewer questions and use simple yes/no answers whenever possible. With Visible, you can fully customize your ESG reporting questions using Requests. Preview of an ESG Request in Visible below — View best practices for collecting metrics with Visible below: You can track answers and hold founders accountable for how they are going to implement best practices, how they are going to hire, etc. ESG questionnaires are not meant to penalize startups, but to get a sense of where they currently are—they may only just be starting to think about tracking and monitoring their water usage or diversity, for example. Once they gain customers, the questions you ask them will grow more detailed. If an early-stage company feels they do not have the resources or bandwidth to manage ESG concerns, you can help them get started by simply putting an employee manual or non-discrimination policy on the agenda for your next check-in. Remember, it’s going to be more expensive if they wait longer to implement those practices. Tips for ESG Fund Reporting External consultants can help VC firms evaluate their policies and processes across recruitment, HR, and deal flow, and recommend ways to improve. Since external consultants collect data across venture capital firms, they can educate them about best practices and compare how they are doing relative to the entire industry. Tracy Barba, Head of ESG at 500 Startups, reported that working with external consultants like Diversity VC was helpful in providing them with an external validation point. This type of industry benchmarking is now growing as a field and becoming more common practice. Resource: How to increase Diversity at your VC Fund How to Incorporate ESG Into Your Portfolio Support Now that you’ve gathered ESG data from your portfolio companies and identified opportunities for improvement, what’s next? VC firms can take the initiative to provide education, tools, training, and resources for their companies—whether in-house or through outside service providers and consultants. 500 Startups provides a vast array of ESG resources for their founders and the public, including webinars, which are available on their website: ESG for Early-Stage. Resource: Portfolio Support Best Practices for Venture Capital Investors Tracy Barba’s nonprofit ESG4VC aims to provide education, office hours, and research for venture capital firms to help establish standards and encourage movement in a positive direction across the industry. It’s been said that we can’t fix what we can’t measure. When it comes to improving the impact business has on the environment, workers, and communities, investors can be proactive in incorporating ESG policies at the very early stages so that everyone can benefit. View Examples of How to Request Metrics in Visible below:
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Metrics and data
7 Startup Growth Strategies
Raise capital, update investors and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days. Whether a venture-backed startup looking to attack a massive market or a bootstrapped business, startups are generally in pursuit of growth. One of the main competitive advantages of a startup is the ability to test new growth strategies and move quickly compared to its predecessors. Related Resource: The Understandable Guide to Startup Funding Stages Finding a growth strategy or channel can make or break a company. In order to best help you find and develop the growth channels that work best for your business, we’ve laid out a few key strategies below: 1. Develop a strong value proposition First things first, you need to develop a strong value proposition. As put by the team at Investopedia, “A value proposition refers to the value a company promises to deliver to customers should they choose to buy their product. A value proposition is part of a company’s overall marketing strategy. The value proposition provides a declaration of intent or a statement that introduces a company’s brand to consumers by telling them what the company stands for, how it operates, and why it deserves their business.” This should be used at the backbone of your growth strategies and can be used to define your channels, messaging, and overall growth strategy. It is important to be thoughtful when laying out your value proposition — talk to customers, potential customers, and other stakeholders to help construct your value proposition. Related Resource: How to Easily Achieve Product-Market Fit 2. Understand and embrace your target audience After you’ve laid out your value proposition, you need to define the market and audience you would like to target. This is similar to creating your ideal customer profile. As put by the team at Gartner, “The ideal customer profile (ICP) defines the firmographic, environmental and behavioral attributes of accounts that are expected to become a company’s most valuable customers. It is developed through both qualitative and quantitative analyses, and may optionally be informed by predictive analytics software.” Related Resource: How to Write a Business Plan For Your Startup Identify why a customer wants your product or service If you’ve properly laid out your value proposition, this should be fairly easy. If you understand the value you are offering your customer, it should be straightforward why they would want to purchase your product or service. Segment your overall market For modeling purposes, you will likely start with your market as a whole. From here, it is important to narrow down your target and hone in on your specific segment in a market. For example, if you are selling snowboards your total addressable market might be every outdoors person but you’d likely want to hone in your market to just anyone that has snowboarded in the last X years. Related Resource: Total Addressable Market vs Serviceable Addressable Market Research the market Once you’ve honed in on your market, you need to make sure you are an expert in all things related to the market. When reaching out to potential customers, chances are they will turn to you for best practices on the market and space. To go above and beyond, come equipped with the right knowledge. Choose the segmented market After researching and analyzing the different markets, make the choice. Pick your segmented market and make sure you have the messaging and product in place to win the market. 3. Research and analyze your top competitors Inevitably, when speaking and targeting potential customers you will be compared to your competitors. In order to best combat any pushback, you need to come prepared. In order to best grow you need to understand how your product or service compares to competitors. If you can understand your strong points (and weak points) in comparison to competitors you’ll be able to better tailor your messaging and campaigns. 4. Establish smart key performance indicators As the old adage goes, “you can’t improve what you don’t measure.” When testing and finding growth strategies, it is important to have the right KPIs in place to track your performance. Related Resource: Startup Metrics You Need to Monitor Depending on the growth strategy or campaign will dictate what metric you should track. Check out a few examples below: Return on investment (ROI) One of the most common KPIs to track in relation to a growth strategy is return on investment. In order to continue investing in a growth strategy, you need to make sure it is generating returns. As put by the team at Investopedia, “Return on investment (ROI) is a performance measure used to evaluate the efficiency or profitability of an investment or compare the efficiency of a number of different investments. ROI tries to directly measure the amount of return on a particular investment, relative to the investment’s cost.” Churn rate On the flip side, growth can be fueled by improving your churn rate. If you’d like to grow your current customer base, focusing on churn rate is a surefire way. Learn more about tracking and improving your churn rate below: Related Resource: Our Ultimate Guide to SaaS Metrics Customer acquisition cost As we wrote in our post, “Customer Acquisition Cost: A Critical Metrics for Founders,” customer acquisition cost is “The sum of the amount that it takes your business to acquire a customer, including time from your sales representatives and marketing and advertising expenses.” By monitoring your customer acquisition costs, you’ll be able to determine what channels make the most sense for your business. A surefire way to fuel growth is by improving your CAC. For example, if you are running ads at a high cost that do not convert to customers, chances are you’d be better suited to reallocate those costs to a better converting channel with lower acquisition costs. Customer lifetime value As put by the team at NetSuite, “Customer lifetime value (CLV) is a measure of the total income a business can expect to bring in from a typical customer for as long as that person or account remains a client.” By monitoring your customer lifetime value, you’ll be able to boost margins and warrant spending more on acquisition costs. Learn more about customer lifetime value below: Related Resource: Defining Customer Lifetime Value for Startups: A Critical Metric 5. Scale wisely and effectively In the early days of building a business, the old adage goes, “do things that don’t scale.” However, as you find your rhythm and have a valuable product with growth strategies that work, it is time to scale. During uncertain times, it is especially important to scale efficiently to work towards profitability. Scaling involves taking your existing channels and growing them at scale (and ideally improving margins). This means making smart hires that will take certain areas of your business to the next level. Related Resource: Scaling != Growth 6. Continuously review your business model As you find the growth strategies and channels that work best, it is important to be consistently evaluating your business model. Markets and customer needs change quickly so it is important to make sure you are staying ahead of them. This means that you are likely evaluating your different acquisition channels, your product, and your hiring plans. If you find your business is most capable of executing in a certain area (for example, product-led growth), you might want to consider hiring and building your product around product-led growth. Related Resource: How to Write a Business Plan For Your Startup 7. Engage your investors to build relationships Once you have found the growth strategies that work best for your business, you’ll need to make sure you have the resources in place to grow and scale. This is capital and talent. One of the most common ways to source capital for a startup growth strategy is by raising venture capital. You’ll want to make sure that you are engaging with current and potential investors along the way to improve your odds of raising venture capital. Related Resource: How To Write the Perfect Investor Update (Tips and Templates) Related Resource: Top VCs Investing in the $100 Billion Creator Economy Grow your startup with Visible Finding the right growth strategies for your business is only half the battle. Having the resources in place to track your key growth metrics will help you make informed decisions along the way. Raise capital, update investors and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days.
investors
Metrics and data
The Standard Metrics to Collect for VC Portfolio Monitoring
Visible supports hundreds of investors around the world to streamline their portfolio monitoring. One of the most common questions we receive is — what metrics should I be collecting from my portfolio companies? Everyone from Emerging Managers writing their first checks to established VC firms ask this question because they want to make sure they're monitoring their portfolio companies in the most effective way possible. The Standard Metrics Value-Add Investors Should be Monitoring It’s important to know which metrics are the best to collect from portfolio companies so that investors can extract the maximum amount of insight from the least number of metrics. This streamlined approach is easiest for founders and allows investors to get what they need to provide better support to their companies, inform future investment decisions, and have good records in place for LP reporting or fundraising. Below we outline the six most common metrics investors collect from portfolio companies. 1) Revenue Definition: Money generated from normal business operations for the reporting period; also known as ‘net sales’. We recommend excluding ‘other revenue’ from secondary activities and excluding cash from fundraising. Revenue tells you how a company’s sales are performing. This metric is a key indicator for how a business is doing. It can be analyzed to understand if new marketing strategies are working, how a change in pricing might affect the demand for a good or service, and the pace of growth in a market. By asking for revenue from just ‘normal business operations’ you’re excluding money a company could also be making from secondary activities that are non-integral to their business. This helps keep the revenue data more precise, allows you to compare the metric more accurately across the portfolio, and will allow you to use it more accurately in other metric formulas such as Net Income. Visible helps over 400+ VCs streamline the way they collect data from companies with Requests. Check out a Request example below. 2) Cash Balance Definition: The amount of cash a company has in the bank at the end of a reporting period. Cash Balance is an important indicator of ‘life expectancy’. This metric is essential to track because it tells you about the financial stability and risk level of the company. There’s no bluffing with this Cash Balance metric. A company either has a healthy amount of cash in the bank at the end of its reporting or they don’t. Cash balance also gives you an idea of how soon a company will need to kick off its next round of financing. 3) Monthly Net Burn Definition: The rate at which a company uses money taking income into account. The monthly burn rate will be positive for companies that are not yet profitable and negative for companies that are considered profitable. Net burn is usually reported as monthly and calculated by subtracting a company’s ending cash balance from its starting cash balance and dividing that by the number of months for the period. We recommend collecting this metric from companies on a quarterly basis but still asking for the monthly rate — this helps rule out any one-off variability. Monthly Net Burn = (Starting cash balance – ending cash balance) / months Monthly Net Burn is an indicator of operational efficiency. This metric becomes even more relevant during market downturns when the focus shifts from growth at all costs to growth with operational efficiency. This is a good metric to benchmark and compare across all companies in your portfolio. You can also use this metric to calculate a key metric, Cash Runway. 4) Cash Runway Definition: Cash runway is the number of months a business can survive before it runs out of cash. It can be calculated as: Runway = Cash Balance / Monthly Net Burn Cash runway tells you when a company will run out of cash. This metric is essential because it determines when a company needs to kick off their next fundraising process, usually, it’s when they have 6-8 months of runway left. If you see one of your companies hit a cash runway of six months or less, you should be reaching out to see if they need support or guidance on their fundraising efforts. While Runway is definitely considered a key metric, you don’t need to ask your companies for it since it can be calculated easily with other data you should already have on hand (Cash Balance & Monthly Net Burn Rate). 5) Net Income Definition: Net income is a company’s total earnings (or profit) after all expenses have been subtracted. It is calculated by taking a company’s revenue and subtracting all expenses, including operational expenses, interest expenses, income taxes, and depreciation and amortization. Net Income = Revenue – Total Expenses Net Income is an indicator of profitability. If net income is positive, meaning revenue is greater than a company’s total expenses, it is considered profitable. This is a metric that startups should have readily available since it’s the ‘bottom line’ of an Income Statement, making it very easy to report. This metric can also be used in a formula to calculate Net Profit Margin, total expenses, and cash runway. 6) Total Headcount This is the total number of full-time equivalent employees excluding contractors. Contractors are excluded because of the variability of the nature of contract work — a contractor may only work a few hours a month or they could work 20 hours per week. This variability will cause back-and-forth clarification between you and your companies which wastes time. This metric gives you insight into company growth and operational changes. This metric is important to track because it’s a reflection of decisions made by the leadership team. If there’s an increase in headcount, the leadership is investing in future growth, on the other side, if there’s a major decrease in total headcount it could be because the leadership team has decided to reduce burn by letting people go or employees are churning. All are post-signs of operational changes worth paying attention to. Check out an Example Request in Visible. Suggested Qualitative Questions to Ask Your Companies While metrics are the best way to aggregate and compare insights across your portfolio, you may also be wondering which qualitative questions you should ask portfolio companies as well. Qualitative prompts can be a concise and valuable way for startups to share more narrative updates on company performance with their investors. Below we outline the two most common qualitative questions investors ask portfolio companies as well as suggested descriptions. 1) Recent Updates & Wins Description: Please use bullet points and share updates related to Sales, Product, Team, and Fundraising. This will be used for internal reporting and may also be shared with our Limited Partners. We suggest asking companies for bullet points on these four categories because it’s a focused way for investors to understand the narrative context behind a company’s metrics. With your companies’ permission, this narrative update can also serve as the foundation for your tear sheets for your LP reporting and your internal reporting. 2) Asks Description: How can we best support you this quarter? You can make your reporting processes more valuable for your portfolio companies by asking your companies if there are specific ways you can provide support to them in the next quarter. Once you have responses from your portfolio companies, you can take action on their requests and you’ll be able to extract support themes to inform the way you provide scalable portfolio support. Monitor Your Portfolio Companies Seamlessly With Visible It’s important to know which are the most important metrics to collect to ensure your portfolio data collection processes are streamlined and valuable both for you and your companies. In this article, we highlighted Revenue, Net Income, Cash Balance, Runway, Net Burn Rate, and Total Headcount as the top metrics to collect from all your portfolio companies. With Visible, its also easy to ask for any custom metric and assign it just to specific companies. Investors of all stages are using Visible to streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting processes. Book some time with our team to learn how Visible can automate your portfolio monitoring processes. Visible for Investors is a founder-friendly portfolio monitoring and reporting platform used by over 400+ VCs.
founders
Metrics and data
How to Calculate Runway & Burn Rate
Building a venture-backed startup is difficult. On top of building a useful product, hiring a great team, and attracting qualified customers, founders need to be a 1 person finance team (in the early days). When just starting and scaling a business, founders likely have no dedicated finance team in-house to lean on for insights. Founders need to rely on their own financial savviness (hopefully with the help of an accounting firm) to keep finances in check. In order to efficiently grow your business, you need to have an understanding of your cash position. Learn more about calculating and tracking your startup runway below. Related resource: The Only Financial Ratios Cheat Sheet You’ll Ever Need What is Startup Runway? A startup runway is exactly what it sounds like — it is the amount of time (generally in months) a startup can operate before it runs out of money. For a profitable business, this metric likely means little. However, an early-stage startup that has yet to monetize its product or service will need to pay close attention to its runway. Related Resource: The Understandable Guide to Startup Funding Stages Your startup runway will inform how you hire, develop products, and finance your business in the coming months and years. What is Startup Burn Rate? The first component of your startup runway is your burn rate. According to Investopedia, “The burn rate is typically used to describe the rate at which a new company is spending its venture capital to finance overhead before generating positive cash flow from operations. It is a measure of negative cash flow.” Related Resource: Startup Metrics You Need to Monitor Simply put, the burn rate is the amount of money your business is “burning” every month. For example, if your business is spending $5,000 a month on salary, $1,000 on software, and $500 on office space but has yet to bring in any revenue your burn rate would be $6,500. Your burn rate is generally the input that you can dictate the most when it comes to extending your cash runway. Formula for Startup Runway Calculating your runway is simple and something that every startup founder should hone, especially in the early days. To calculate your runway, simply take your beginning cash balance and divide it by your monthly net burn rate as shown below: Related Resource: 6 Metrics Every Startup Founder Should Track Real-Life Example of Startup Runway For a real-life example of calculating a startup’s runway — let’s take an early-stage venture-backed company that raised a few million dollars in VC money and has been at it developing its product. At the beginning of the most recent period, their cash balance is $320,000 and their monthly burn rate is $20,000. You’d simply divide $320,000 by $20,000 to get a runway of 16 months. How Much Startup Runway Should You Have? There is no right or wrong answer when it comes to determining how long your cash runway should be. Your company’s stage, current market, and business model might impact how long your runway should be. As a general rule of thumb, it is suggested that seed and series A companies have a runway of 12-18 months Formula for Burn Rate Like startup runway, burn rate is a straightforward formula — especially for founders who have their cash statements and metrics in place. To calculate your burn rate, simply take your beginning cash balance, subtract your ending cash balance and divide that by the # of months over the given period. Typically it is better to calculate your burn rate over a longer period of time as a single month could be lumpy as expenses vary from month to month. Related Resource: What is a Startup’s Annual Run Rate? (Definition + Formula) Real-Life Example of Startup Burn Rate For a real-life example of calculating a startup, let’s take a startup that raised $3M and already had $200k in the bank bringing its cash balance to $3.2M. Fast forward 6 months and their cash balance is now $2.6M. Using the burn rate formula that would mean their monthly burn rate is $100K ($3.2M – $2.6M = $600K / 6 months = $100K) as shown below: Ways to Extend Startup Runway and Reduce Burn Rate As we mentioned earlier, the easiest way to manipulate your runway and extend your runway is by controlling your monthly burn rate. Learn more about how to extend your runway below: Drive More Sales First and foremost, the best way to extend your runway is by driving more sales. Of course, this is likely already a goal of your business (unless your business is not ready to monetize your product or service). By driving more sales you’ll be able to increase your cash balance and in turn, extend your startup’s runway. Cut Non-Essential Expenses The most straightforward way to extend your startup’s runway is by cutting non-essential expenses. This can feel difficult as it can impact your team’s day-to-day operations — however, this can be done in a thoughtful manner that extends your runway. For example, consolidating software or removing marketing channels that might not be performing well is a good way to extend the runway. Utilize Corporate Credit Cards and other Funding Sources You can also get creative with the financing options that your business leverages. While venture financing might take months to get cash into your bank account, new funding options could be of interest. Learn more about alternative ways to fund your business below: Related Resource: Checking Out Venture Capital Funding Alternatives Track Runway With Visible Runway is a vital metric for early-stage startups. Every startup founder should be in tune with their runway and use it to inform spending decisions and strategy for the coming months and years. Tools and software are a great way to keep tabs on your finances. Track key metrics, send investor Updates, and track the status of your next fundraise with Visible. Give it a free try for 14 days here. Related resource: What is Internal Rate of Return (IRR) in Venture Capital
investors
Metrics and data
Portfolio Data Collection Tips for VCs
Getting regular, high-quality, and actionable data from portfolio companies is important. It allows investors to make better investment decisions, provide better support to companies, and share meaningful insights internally across the firm and with LPs. This practice should also be highly valuable for founders. They should be able to share wins and challenges and seek support from their investors. The reporting process should only take companies 3 minutes to complete (if not, something may be wrong with how the investor is asking for structured data or the reporting company may not be as familiar with their key metrics as they should be). Below are some best practices to make sure you get: High response rates from companies Structured data (comparing apples to apples) Actionable insights Set Reporting Expectations Early On ✔️ Tip: Set expectations during the onboarding process (if not sooner) It’s way easier to set reporting expectations with companies early on (and with fewer companies) rather than changing your reporting requirements a few years into your relationship with portfolio companies. Some investors choose to outline their reporting expectations in a side letter as a part of the investment documents. It's recommended that investors also have a dedicated conversation around reporting expectations during the onboarding process. Related Resource: A Guide to Onboarding New Companies to Your VC Firm When and How Often to Collect Portfolio Data ✔️ Tip: Collect data at a predictable frequency Set the expectation that you will be sending a Request for company data the same time every reporting cycle. Visible has data that shows that Mondays are great due dates and if you’re sending out quarterly Requests for data, we suggest giving your companies 2-4 weeks after quarter close to get their information back to you. Don’t randomly switch between the 10th, the 30th, etc. This makes it difficult for founders to prioritize your reporting requirements and gives the impression that your due dates don’t really matter. Visible makes scheduling data Requests and subsequent reminders a breeze for investors. Investors can select the due date, email notification dates, and customize the messages that will get sent out to portfolio companies. ✔️ Tip: Collect data at an appropriate frequency We recommend the following cadences. This is 100% customizable as every fund is different. Weekly – Companies in an accelerator program Monthly – Pre-seed investments Quarterly – Pre-seed, Seed, Series A, Series B + investments What Data to Collect from Portfolio Companies ✔️ Tip: Less is more Don’t send a Request asking for ‘nice to have’ metrics. Only ask for the information you really need and are going to use. We suggest starting small, getting a rhythm, and expanding the data as needed. Metrics ✔️ Tip: Ask for only 5-15 metrics Depending on how closely you work with companies, ask for 5-15 metrics and no more. If you’re not taking actionable next steps based on a metric (ex: reporting to LP’s, providing more hands-on support, informing investment decisions) then it's likely you don't need to be asking for it. The most common metrics investors ask for include: Revenue Cash Balance Cash Burn Headcount Runway Related resource: Which Metrics Should I Be Collecting from Portfolio Companies View examples of data Requests in Visible. ✔️ Tip: Use a metric description to reduce back-and-forth If you are asking for Burn and don’t provide context, you might get 15 different variations. Should it be negative? Should it be trailing 3 months or the current month? Should it include financing? Be descriptive about what you want. Qualitative Questions to Ask Portfolio Companies ✔️ Tip: Define what type of information you're looking for As an investor, it's a great idea to give companies the opportunity to share support requests on a regular basis. Consider including a description to clarify what type of support your firm can provide companies. Additionally, most investors also ask for companies to report narrative highlights and lowlights from the question. It's important to clarify what type of information you're actually looking for so companies are not wasting time sharing information an investor is not actually going to use. Implementing a Portfolio Monitoring Platform ✔️ Tip: Notify your companies two weeks in advance Introducing Your Companies to Visible As the most founder-friendly solution on the market, we ensure that requesting data is a frictionless process for founders. This means founders don’t need to create an account in order for Investors to get value out of the platform (ie: No log-in required!). Still, it's a great idea to give your companies notice about the adoption of Visible so they can keep an eye out for the first Request that will land in their inbox. Feel free to use our Intro Copy Template to notify your companies about the adoption of Visible two weeks in advance of your first Request deadline. Customize Your Domain Investors can white-label the automatic emails that are sent from Visible so that the emails use their firm's domain. You can also customize the sender address to anyone at your firm. Visible's Customer Support All Visible customers get world-class support and a dedicated Investor Success Manager. We provide an efficient, hands-on onboarding experience, training for new team members, and support on an ongoing basis. Visible is trusted by over 350+ VC funds around the world to help streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting.
founders
Operations
Metrics and data
Customer Stories
Kickstarting a Marketplace with Trey Closson, CEO of Amplio
About Trey Trey Closson is the CEO and Founder of Amplio — a platform for proactively identifying the risks of tomorrow’s supply chain. Prior to starting Amplio, Trey spent time at Flexport and Georgia Pacific. Trey joins us to break down his first year as a founder and what he has learned from transitioning from operator to founder. Episode Takeaways A couple of key topics we hit on: The current state of the global supply chain issues How Amplio found their first customers How Amplio is using pilot programs to scale their customer base The importance of relentless focus Why founders should invest in community Why building a startup is a marathon, not a sprint Watch the Episode Give episode 6 a listen below (or give it a listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you normally consume podcasts)
founders
Metrics and data
6 Metrics Every Startup Founder Should Track
One thing that is important, as a startup founder, is to track your financial metrics each month to measure the health of your business. At Visible, we help you curate and send investor updates. We recommend you send these monthly. With our mission being to improve a founder’s chance of success, monthly updates are a huge part of staying on that path to success. Monthly investor updates help you keep your investors in the loop. They help to keep investors engaged and provide you a time to reflect on what work was done over the course of the month. Monthly updates are a great tool for accountability and gaining perspective on whether your startup is growing or not We strongly recommend you send monthly updates. Especially once you have raised venture capital Part of these updates should be an inclusion of charts/metrics that help you measure the health of your business. Your investors will enjoy getting updates and seeing your core metrics grow over time. You should also allow metrics to help you to understand what to prioritize within your startup. Your investors will care about seeing these because it shows how fast you are spending their money, but will also give you insights into a few different things. It will give you insight as to when you might need to raise money again. It will give you insight as to how much time you have to run the business while keeping your current expenses constant. It might signal you to hire more to get over key humps in the business, like developing your product or spending more resources on sales. It might show you need to be more efficient when allocating your marketing dollars. It might be the case that you should ignore these metrics altogether and just focus on what’s in front of you each day. Every startup is unique and we understand it’s not a one size fits all approach. Related Resource: What Should be in an Investor Data Room? The financial metrics we recommend tracking are: Cash on hand Burn Rate Run rate Revenue Revenue Growth Engagement metrics (churn, user growth, retention, this one varies) Cash on Hand Cash on hand is the amount of cash you had at the end of the month last month. This can be found on your Balance Sheet. How to track in Visible: Connect accounting integration (Quickbooks, Xero, etc.) Create chart with Total Bank Accounts as Metric Chart Period → Custom period: Custom period: Last 6 months & Previous Period Monthly Cash Burn Monthly burn rate is defined as the cash on hand at the end of this month minus the cash on hand at the end of the previous month. This will give you the difference of cash between the two amounts. Allowing you to know how much cash exited your account! How to track in Visible: Add an insight to chart Previous period change Chart on Separate Y-Axis Months of Runway Run Rate is a bit more complicated. Run rate calculates the amount of months you have left to run the company given your current cash on hand and monthly burn. This number depends on your burn rate staying constant. More than likely your burn rate will not remain constant (it will increase. Run rate is calculated by taking Cash on hand/(Monthly Burn Rate). This will yield you the number of months you have left to operate your business with expenses staying constant. How to track in Visible: Export Monthly Balance Sheets from accounting software into google sheets Manually calculate Monthly Burn (ex. Feb Cash – Jan Cash) Calculate Months of Runway Cash on hand/ Monthly Burn Rate Integrate sheet into Visible Add Months of runway to Total Bank Accounts Chart Save Chart Related resource: Strategic Pivots in Startups: Deciding When, Understanding Why, and Executing How Revenue Revenue is the amount of cash that you received in payments from your customers (over the course of the past month). How to track in Visible: Pull Revenue from your accounting integration Revenue is the top line of your income statement Create a chart Measure previous 6 months Related Resource: EBITDA vs Revenue: Understanding the Difference Revenue Growth Revenue growth is a true barometer for success for your startup. It shows how much your revenue has increased over the prior period. If you have revenue growth, it should signal to you that you are on the right track and continue to execute at a high level. How to track in Visible: Add an insight to chart Previous period change % Chart on Separate Y-Axis Engagement Metrics An engagement metric is something that is unique to your individual business. The manner of it would relate to the type of business your run (marketplace app, Saas product, or physical product). It should directly relate to your revenue growth. Things like churn/retention could be your engagement metric. For Airbnb, it could be the number of nights booked. For Uber, it could be # of rides completed per week. Having healthy engagement metrics should drive your revenue and allow you to feel good that you are building something people love. Tracking is Visible will vary based on your metric. Early on, just track it manually! Cash on hand, burn rate, and runway are very much metrics for your own sanity. These relate to the lifeblood of the business and how long you can be certain your company will be in existence. We recommend maintaining a conservative level of spend for the first few months after raising a seed round. It is much easier to increase spend than it is to decrease. By starting conservatively, you will have good context as to how much you can increase your burn rate to find the sweet spot for growth and trimming your runway. Revenue, revenue growth, and engagement metrics are really ways for you to measure how well you have done in the latest period. It is really important to decide as a team what your North star metric is and work towards that goal together. These sort of standard metrics will help align your team and work to accomplish your goals together. The goal with Visible as a product is to help you as a founder measure these metrics and update your investors. That way you can measure these core financial metrics (Cash on hand, Burn Rate, Runway) right off the bat when starting your trial with Visible. Setting you up for success after raising a Seed round. you will be set up for success to measure the proper metrics and keep your investors filled in. This way you can spend the majority of your time building a great product that people love. Related Resource: A Guide to Building Successful OKRs for Startups In conclusion, measuring the core financials of your startup (or business) is really good practice. It will help you maintain accountability and measure growth. We recommend you track the core 6 metrics each month of Cash on hand, Burn Rate, Run rate, Revenue, Revenue Growth, and market-specific Engagement metrics. These will help you to get the most out of your fundraising dollars and to maximize growth!
founders
Hiring & Talent
Metrics and data
A User-Friendly Guide to Startup Accounting
In a startup, there are a million things going on at all times. The last thing on a founder’s mind is most likely not balancing the books and managing the daily ins and outs of company finance – other than ensuring there is a cash runway to work with. But as your business grows, it’s critical to have a grasp on all elements of your company’s books to ensure your company can grow and scale in an effective way and avoid costly financial errors down the line. Why Does Accounting Matter to Startups? In a startup, typically cash is always tight and you’re operating on a short runway. This makes accounting even more critical for your business. Measuring, processing, and communicating the source and destination of every dollar is crucial to ensure smart business decisions can be made. After your startup raises a round of funding and takes on outside investors, accurate accounting is, even more, a crucial element to have under control in your startup. With outside eyes monitoring every way, you’re spending their investment, ensuring you have a tight grip on and understanding of your company’s accounting will make or break your business. Related Resource: Building A Startup Financial Model That Works What is Your Business Structure? What is Your Business Structure? Depending on how your organization is formally classified, the accounting required will be slightly different. All formal, for-profit businesses are classified as 1 of 5 different business entity types. The 5 different business entities are: Business Entities Types Sole Proprietorship is an enterprise that is owned and run by a single person. Specifically, there is no legal distinction between the owner of the business and the business entity. A sole proprietorship does not always work alone as it is possible for the sole proprietorship to employ other people. Sole proprietorships are also known as sole tradership, individual entrepreneurship, or simply as a proprietorship. Partnership – When two or more individuals operate a business based on an oral or written agreement, that is legally considered a partnership. An agreement on the protocols and terms of the partnership is not required to consider a business entity to be considered a formal partnership, it’s best practice for one to be in place. Similar to a sole proprietorship, a partnership entity business has no legal distinction between the owners of said business. C Corporation – in the United States, under federal income tax law, a C Corporation is any business entity or enterprise corporation that is taxed separately from its owners. Unless the corporate elects otherwise, most for-profit corporate businesses in the United States are automatically considered a C Corporation. S Corporation – An S Corporation is a privately held company that makes the decision to be taxed under the Subchapter S of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code, or IRS, federal income tax law. By making a valid election, the S-corporation’s income and losses are divided among and passed through its shareholders. The individual shareholders must then report the income or loss on their own individual income tax returns. Limited Liability Company (LLC) – An LLC is a business that’s structure is allowed and dictated by individual state statutes. Each state can adjust and use different regulations to structure an LLC so it’s critical for business entities to check what different regulations are allowed for an LLC state to state. Owners of an LLC are referred to as members and typically, most states do not restrict ownership. So members could be individual owners, corporations, other LLCs, or in some cases even foreign entities. Most states also do not have a maximum number of members restriction in place on LLCs and most also permit “single-member” or sole owner LLCs. The main restriction on LLCs comes into play when considering the types of private businesses that do not qualify to be LLCs such as banks and insurance companies. Understanding the Two Methods of Accounting Now that the 5 primary business entities have been defined, the two methods of accounting need to be understood. Depending on the type of business entity, a different method may be used. Accrual Basis Accounting This specific accounting method allows a company to record its revenue before receiving the physical payment for the product or service that has been sold. Public companies are required to use accrual basis accounting. Most companies making above $5M a year in revenue use accrual basis accounting. This is typically the preferred method of accounting for private companies as it is generally more reflective of a company’s actual revenue. Cash Basis Accounting On the opposite end of the spectrum to accrual basis accounting, cash basis accounting only records the revenue in a company’s book of business when the cash transaction has physically occurred for the product or services sold. C Corporations and Partnerships are not allowed to use cash basis accounting unless they total under 5M a year in revenue for 3 tax years in a row. Related resource: What is a Schedule K-1: A Comprehensive Guide What Types of Financial Records Should Your Startup Keep? Once you’ve determined the type of accounting most appropriate for your startup, it’s critical to have a clear understanding of the broad types of financial materials you should be keeping track of and recording for said accounting practice. A good rule of thumb is to keep everything related to the financial arm of your business, and when possible, make multiple copies as backups for key financial items and hold onto these items for at least 3 to 7 years after their existing date. An overview of the items that your startup should be holding onto and keeping in their financial records includes: Receipts from business expenses Bank statements Bills Tax Forms for both your business and employees Contracts that outline the services or products you are selling Contracts with vendors you are purchasing services from Receipts from any tax-deductible donations or contributions made by your business entity Overall, it’s critical to establish a system early on for maintaining detailed records of every documented transaction or financial movement that occurs within or in relation to your business. Related Resource: How to Calculate Runway & Burn Rate The Relationship Between Recordkeeping and Accounting A big part of the practice of measuring, processing, and communicating about financial information, aka accounting, is the process of recordkeeping. Recordkeeping is the process of keeping track of the history of an organization’s activities, or in some cases a person’s activities, by creating and storing these as consistent formal records. What is Record-Keeping or Bookkeeping? Recordkeeping relates to accounting as a form of recordkeeping specifically for financial activities. A clear recordkeeping process is the backbone and foundation of a good accounting process. Without it, accurate processing and measurement simply cannot occur. Knowing recordkeeping, or bookkeeping as it’s sometimes known, is the backbone of the accounting process, it’s important to establish weekly and monthly recordkeeping tasks to ensure your process is rock solid from the early days of your business. We’ve got some recommendations to get you started. Recommended Weekly Recordkeeping Tasks 1. Record all transactions into your books Decide on a single source of truth to maintain ongoing documentation of your financial records. This single source of truth is often referred to as a “book”. We recommend a digital source of truth as well as a written source of truth or physical copies of each record as a backup barring any issue with the digital book. Set time for yourself every week at the same time to record all financial transactions from that week in your book and ensure the records are saved, backed up, and filed in an organized manner. Doing this on a weekly basis will prevent missed recordings of financial records as they get backed up week over week. 2. Segment Your Transactions In addition to recording each transaction in your books on a weekly basis, take it a step further and segment your transactions into categories. This will provide an additional layer of organization and allow for extra audit and thoroughness on how your finances are flowing into and out of your business. Segments could include items like revenue, bills paid, taxes, etc. 3. Digitize Your Receipts It can’t be emphasized enough – keep a digital record of your receipts. Just as we recommend keeping a physical copy of your books and digital transactions as backup, the same is true for physical receipts – digitize everything and make it a consistent practice to back up each digital record. The more risk you can mitigate in losing financial records, the more accurate your accounting will be in the long run. Recommended Monthly Recordkeeping Tasks 1. Consolidate your bank accounts On a monthly basis, you should be taking a deeper look at your financial records. A big task to accomplish on a monthly basis is consolidation. Take a look at all accounts open and related to your business entity and consolidate said accounts into as few accounts as possible. This will ensure that no accounts get forgotten over time leading to missed transactions or balances in the accounting records. A monthly practice of consolidation is a foundational recordkeeping habit for your business. 2. Pay your bills (on time) It’s a slippery slope when your business gets behind on its bills. Set monthly reminders for all recurring bills and pay them on time. It’s critical to keep an accurate record of all financial transactions and missed or late bills can throw off the overall financial accuracy of your accounting. Additionally, late bills often are additional fees, which for a startup strapped for cash, can be detrimental to your business. 3. Keep Good Records Be as picky as possible. On a monthly basis, go through your records and clean up any sloppy entries. Reevaluate your system often to make sure the information your tracking is as accurate and efficient as possible. Good records are the foundation of your accounting process and ultimately the financial accuracy of your business. Related Resource: 4 Types of Financial Statements Founders Need to Understand The Benefits of a Good Accounting System After you’ve established strong weekly, and monthly record-keeping tasks as the foundation of your accounting system, your measurement, and communication of the financial state of your business via accounting is underway. The benefits of a good accounting system have many ripple effects throughout your business. Smoother Management of the Business Most business decisions are made based on the financial state of the business. A good accounting system will ensure that the decisions being made are based on a clear and accurate process leading to an overall much smoother management of the business as a whole. Reduced Time and Costs of Audits Time is money in business and lost time going back through financial records that are not maintained correctly. Huge errors in your accounting system can even lead to fines from the IRS or expensive consultancy fees needed to bring in external auditors to fix said errors. Establishing a strong accounting system early in your business can prevent this. Your Investors will Thank You Investors are trusting you with their capital. If you have a smooth system in place to record, measure, and communicate all financial details aka an accounting system, you will always be prepared to answer and address all oversight and detailed questions from your investors. If they have a constant, clear picture of the status of their investment, they will be satisfied and can spend their time helping the business grow. Should You Do Accounting In-House or Outsource? Finally, you may be wondering if your accounting process should be something managed within your business or outsourced to a professional accounting firm. While your total revenue is under 100k, or even 500k, you can most likely manage that as a founder or with a singular financial hire in-house. As you start to climb in revenue and take on external investments, consider the cost of an in-house financial team; Under 5M dollars, it may make more sense to outsource to an accounting firm and spare the headcount. However, if you have any special tax circumstances, it may make sense to invest in an in-house team if the cost of external services billed hourly ends up being more than the cost of headcount in-house. In-house accounting can also be beneficial because it ensures you have dedicated staff only working on your books, as opposed to an outside source managing multiple clients. Related Resource: How to Choose the Right Law Firm for Your Startup Related Resource: 7 Essential Business Startup Resources Sign up For Visible Today - Your Startup Hub Accounting is a critical practice all startups should establish early on in their business. When measuring and reporting out metrics to your stakeholders, consider Visible as a central reporting point of your startup hub. Create an account and get started now.
founders
Metrics and data
Customer Stories
Finding the Balance While Building a Marketplace with the Founders of ChefPrep
About Josh & Elle Josh Abulafia & Elle Curran are the Co-founders of ChefPrep. ChefPrep is a marketplace for ready-made meals that are prepared by award-winning restaurants, delivered to your door. Josh and Elle join us to break down their journey as startup founders. Episode Takeaways A few key topics we hit on with Elle and Josh: How ChefPrep validated their core thesis Why ChefPrep decided to focus on the supply side Key marketplace metrics they track Building barriers to entry in marketplaces Why tracking the right data is vital to startup success Building their company operating system Watch the Episode Give episode 5 a listen below (or give it a listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you normally consume podcasts):
investors
Metrics and data
[Webinar Recording] SaaS Company Benchmarking with Christoph Janz of Point Nine Capital
Christoph Janz, a Managing Partner of Point Nine Capital, started his career in 1997 as an entrepreneur and has since invested in many SaaS businesses (like Zendesk, Algolia, Typeform, Contentful, and more). Christoph has made a name for himself by not only investing in top-notch SaaS companies but by being a guide when it comes to all things SaaS metrics, data, and benchmarking. Christoph joined us on March 22nd to discuss all things SaaS metrics and benchmarking. A few topics we discussed: The 5 ways to build $100M business What it takes to raise financing in SaaS How Christoph thinks about portfolio company benchmarking
founders
Metrics and data
Key Metrics to Track and Measure In the eCommerce World
As eCommerce startups begin to evolve, so do the metrics and KPIs around them. In 2020 alone, eCommerce totaled over $4.2 trillion. With the explosion of Amazon, Shopify, Casper, Warby Parker, and Allbirds, shopping online has become the norm in the United States. As more eCommerce and direct-to-consumer (DTC) companies begin to scale and exit, the funding options and growth plans are scaling as well. In order to best launch, scale, and fund your e-commerce startup you will need to make sure you have the proper metrics and key performance indicators (KPIs) in place to track and improve. Related Resource: Our Google Sheet Template to Track eCommerce Metrics Related Resource: 20+ VCs Investing in E-commerce and Consumer Products Related Resource: Top Trends and Leading VCs Investing in D2C Brands: A Comprehensive Guide for 2024 Defining Metrics According to eCommerce Tracking and monitoring metrics across the eCommerce sales & marketing funnel is vital. With thinner margins, a larger customer base, and less predictability than a software company, there are countless touchpoints and conversion points that eCommerce leaders need to keep their eye on. Metrics are used to measure the overall health of your business. While some metrics can fall into the “vanity:” category, there are certain metrics that should be monitored and tracked to ensure your business is healthy. We’ll continue to dig into the most vital metrics for eCommerce metrics to track later in this post. Defining Key Performance Indicators or KPIs in eCommerce On the flip side, there are key performance indicators (KPIs) that can be tracked and monitored for an eCommerce startup. KPIs should be used to track individual objectives for your business that you believe are crucial to growth and success. KPIs should be periodically updated and reviewed to make sure they are relevant to your most recent objectives. As the name implies, they should be “key” to the success of your business moving forward. Related Resource: The Startup Guide To Building Successful OKRs (Examples Included) KPI vs. Metrics: What’s the Difference? As we previously mentioned, KPIs and metrics can have slightly different meanings and importance for your business. While metrics are something that naturally evolve and are tracked, they are generally used to measure the overall health of your business. Different metrics will have different levels of importance. Some metrics might be considered “vanity” metrics while others might be crucial to the success of your business. On the flip side, we have KPIs that are intentionally picked and tracked to improve certain aspects of your business. KPIs are generally tied into a specific objective or goal for your business and is something you are focused on improving for periods of time. As the team at BrightGauge puts it, “Let’s start with a basic tenet: metrics support KPIs. KPIs may be made up of a variety of different metrics that give you a full picture of your team’s progress toward a goal. If the business goal is to create 20% more sales qualified leads (SQL) over the next year, original/new website visits alone may not provide you with the data you need. However, understanding how that metric translates into other site interactions, like form completions and downloads, is vital. If the analysis has created a correlation between downloads and SQLs, then website visitors and new downloads become KPIs rather than just metrics.” How is eCommerce Success Measured? Nowadays almost anyone can launch an eCommerce site but the key is to understand your customers and be able to make strategic decisions based on evidence. This evidence and your overall eCommerce success is measured through KPIs and various metrics. Also, it is important to understand that not all metrics are as valuable as others. Identifying the right KPIs to track will help you improve the overall success of your eCommerce business. The Best eCommerce Metrics to Keep Track of There are various metrics you can use to keep track of your success but this may vary based on the company. For most, we have seen these metrics be key and we’ve broken them down by categories: Customer Breakdown Metrics (Impressions, Reach, Engagement), Acquisition Metrics (Email Click-Through Rate, Cost Per Acquisition or CPA, Organic Visitor Acquisition Rate, Social Media Engagement) Customer Behavioral Metrics (Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate, Checkout Abandonment, Micro to Macro Conversion Rates, Micro to Macro Conversion Rates, Average Order Value or AOV, Sales Conversion Rate) Customer Retention Metrics (Customer Retention Rate, Customer Lifetime Value or CLV, Repeat Customer Rate, Refund and Return Rate, Churn Rate) Advocacy Metrics (H4 Net Promoter Score, Subscription Rate, Program Participation Rate) A few years back Dave Ambrose, Managing Partner at Steadfast Ventures, shared a template full of KPIs for eCommerce startups and founders. Since Dave’s original template, we’ve surveyed a few of our customers and friends to make some tweaks and add in new metrics. Special thanks to Dave and the team at Italic for allowing us to share their key KPIs. Italic is an eCommerce company that sells “unbranded luxury goods straight from the source.” With $13M in venture funding and customers across the globe, it is vital for Italic to keep a tab on their metrics across the funnel. Check out our Guide to E-Commerce Metrics (with Google Sheet Template)! 1) Customer Breakdown Metrics Impressions, reach, and engagement track different elements of how your content is coming across to your audience (how many people see it, how often they see it, and how much they engage with it). These metrics are important to track because it allows you to track your return on investment (ROI) and give you a clearer understanding overall of how well your content is performing. Impressions Impressions measures how many times your content showed up in front of someone’s eyes, regardless of whether they interacted with it or not (i.e how many times your ad showed up in their feed). Even if the same person saw it twice it would be recorded as two impressions. Possible tools: Sprout Social, and Google Analytics, (can view total Web impressions). Reach Reach on the other hand tracks how many people saw your content- the qualification here is that the view is unique and every person is recorded only once. So even if the ad in someone’s feed showed up multiple times the reach would still be counted as one. Possible tools: Sprout Social and Hootsuite Engagement This metric reveals how people are interacting with your content. Whether it be through a click, like, comment, or reshare- any and all interactions are recorded. Possible tool: Hootsuite. Acquisition Metrics Acquisition metrics give you insight into how your social channels, content, and ads are performing in terms of customer acquisition. Email Click-Through Rate Click-through rate is a metric that tells you the percentage of people who clicked on a link within the email out of how many people opened it, to begin with. A click rate on the other hand measures this based on how many people were sent the email vs how many people opened it (the CTR). Possible tool: Campaign Monitor Cost Per Acquisition or CPA When using a cost per acquisition model you paying for every action that your audience is completing whether that be a form submission, download, or sale. In short, if they click and convert from your ad you pay. Marketers prefer this method since you only need to pay once your customer completes the desired action. When you are able to break down what your cost is per acquisition you are able to most accurately measure whether the content you creating is compelling enough for people to convert/ to what extent your audience wants to engage with it. Possible tools and methods to track: Generate link codes for affiliate marketing or social by utilizing UTM parameters CRM systems such as Hubspot Using AdWords to export PPC campaign data Building custom links using promotional codes for internal campaigns When submitting an action add a form field asking how your customer found the campaign Organic Visitor Acquisition Rate When someone lands on your website from an unpaid source (google/ any search engine) then this is considered organic traffic and results are driven through SEO (search engine optimization). Landing Page Traffic gives you insight into the top pages that people are arriving at your website from. This lets you know what topics people are interested in and how well your pages are performing for SEO. Looking at bounce rates and session durations is also important to understand how engaged people are with your articles. Possible tool: Insider and Google Analytics Social Media Engagement Tracking social shares, followers, comments, and likes is a good way to monitor how engaged your audience is with your social media content. This is why there is a focus on creating quality content. If people like what you’ve created they are more likely to want to engage with your content, brand and eventually share it with their followers. You can keep track of which channels and content are producing the most shares and convert them into leads. Then spend more time on the channels and types of content that your audience is engaging with most. Strong social signals also help you rank higher organically within Google. Possible tools: Sprout Social, Hoosuite, and Falcon.io Customer Behavioral Metrics Customer behavioral metrics can give you some of the best insight into how customers are responding to your UX/ UI experience as well as your brand/ company. Monitoring their behavior and adapting to changes that might need to be made to help influence decision making, keeps you one step ahead and able to repeat mistakes that cause your customers to convert. Shopping Cart Abandonment Rate The shopping cart abandonment rate is the percentage of your customers that added goods to their cart and left before checking out. Possible tools: Google Analytics allows you to set up cart abandonment tracking and Google sheets to set up cart abandonment measurement. Bolt’s article on how to set both of these up Checkout Abandonment Then there is checkout abandonment which is different than shopping cart abandonment because it tracks how far along in the checkout process a customer gets before they decide to leave. If they’re not advancing in the checkout process then they are essentially abandoning their shopping cart. Micro to Macro Conversion Rates Micro and Macro are the two main types of conversions (when a customer follows through with an action that you want them to take). Just as it sounds, a micro conversion is when a customer takes a small step or a macro- big step to converting. A micro conversion could be someone clicking a link or following you on a social channel. Whereas a macro conversion would be a customer taking the biggest step which is completing a purchase or creating an account. Possible tool: Hotjar Average Order Value or AOV The average order value is the average amount that your customer spends each time they place an order. You can calculate this by dividing the total revenue by the total number of orders. Sales Conversion Rate This metric lets you know how many of your visitors or leads you are converting into sales (or any action that you want the user to take). Sales Conversion Rate= Number of Sales (or conversions) / Number of (qualified) Leads(or visitors) *100 Customer Retention Metrics Customer Retention metrics are important to track and always try to improve upon since new customer acquisition is more expensive and harder to obtain than keeping the customers you have happy and ensuring repeat business. Additional resource: Hubspots 10 Customer Retention Metrics & How to Measure Them Customer Retention Rate A companies customer retention rate measures how many of your overall customers are repeat customers (someone who has purchased from you again). Companies often incentivize this through loyalty programs, subscriptions and other incentives. Keeping customers happy also increases this rate which is why customer feedback surveys can be helpful as well. Possible tools: Segment Additional resources: Hubspots 6 Customer Retention Systems (& Why CRM Should Be One of Them) Customer Lifetime Value or CLV CLV indicates how valuable a customer is to you not just on a per purchase basis but over the entire period of your companies relationship with them(the revenue that one customer generates). If a company is able to increase this value is a huge growth driver. Possible tools: ChartMogal and Hubspot (both are integrations that can be found within Visible- check out all our integrations here) Additional resource: Hubspots How to Calculate Customer Lifetime Value Repeat Customer Rate Repeat customer rate gives you the percentage of customers that have made a purchase more than once. How to calculate: Repeat Customer Rate = the # of customers that made a purchase more than once over a given period of time / your total number of customers for that same period of time. Then multiply that by 100 to get the percentage. Possible tools: Shopify and Stripe Refund and Return Rate The refund and return rate can be calculated as a percentage that shows how much was returned or refunded by customers who initially purchased your services or goods versus the total number that was sold within a certain period of time. How to calculate: Refund and Return Rate = total number returned / total number sold x 100 Churn Rate Churn rate is also known as customer churn, is a metric that calculates the rate at which customers stop doing business with a company. Most often this relates to subscribers who discontinue their plans within a given time frame and is represented as a percentage. Possible tool: ChartMogal Additional resource: Our Ultimate Guide to SaaS Metrics Advocacy Metrics Advocacy metrics are important to the companies that want to put their customer first and provide solutions and strategies that fulfill their customer’s needs. Some companies even hire a customer advocate who analyzes the needs of their customers and helps to build a business strategy around that. Tracking the following metrics will also help give you insights into this. Net Promoter Score NPS is used to gauge the loyalty of a firm’s relationships. It can measure a company, employer or another entity. You have likely received an NPS survey yourself. It’s a score of 1 to 10 usually with a question of “How likely are you to recommend X to your friend or colleague?” X could be your company, your customer support experience, an event, etc. If you answer 1 to 6 you are considered a detractor and at risk of customer churn, 7 & 8 are considered passives, and 9 & 10 are considered promoters. To get your score take % Promoters – %, Detractors. This creates a scale ranging from -100 to 100. 0 to 49 is considered good, 50 to 70 is Excellent and 70+ is World Class. Additional resource: Why We Love Net Promoter Score (NPS) Subscription Rate This is the rate at which you are able to convert users into subscribers, usually paid but can also be a measure of email subscribers for instance. This can be measured to reflect different aspects of your business as well. For example, if you are a SaaS company, like ours, you may be measuring how many subscribers you have for your paid plan as well as how many people subscribe to your newsletter. The latter is also very important to us because it signals whether people find value and are interested in the content that we provide. Program Participation Rate The program participation rate refers to how many customers (or participants) you have enrolled in advocacy programs such as loyalty programs, referral reward systems, or take part in review platforms. The higher the number of participants reflects the greater value of the program. Share Your eCommerce Growth with Contact Visible Check out our E-commerce metric template- which all started a few years back when Dave Ambrose, Managing Partner at Steadfast Ventures, shared a template full of KPIs for eCommerce startups and founders. Since Dave’s original template, we’ve surveyed a few of our customers and friends to make some tweaks and add in new metrics The setup of the template should be simple and ready to use and customize to your own liking out of the box. We’ve set the data to monthly but feel free to change to weekly, quarterly, etc. From here the template is broken down into 4 major metric categories — Customer Breakdown, Acquisition, Behavioral, and Operational. Download the template here and also check out Our Guide to E-Commerce Metrics (with Google Sheet Template). Additional Resources From the Visible blog with a video: Shopify Ecommerce Dashboard Sprout Social’s Social Media Metrics Map Hootsuite’s 19 Social Media Metrics That Really Matter—And How to Track Them Hubspot’s Free Download: Monthly Marketing Reporting Templates
founders
Metrics and data
EBITDA vs Revenue: Understanding the Difference
Raise capital, update investors and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days. As the saying goes, “you can’t improve what you don’t measure.” The most successful startups have a system to track and improve the metrics and financials that are most vital to their business. Before you can set up a system to track your key metrics, you don’t need to understand what specific metrics and financials you should be tracking. At the end of the day, revenue metrics are what makes a business tick. In order to best track your revenue metrics, you need to understand the nuances between different financials and metrics. Related Resource: Startup Metrics You Need to Monitor Learn more about the differences between revenue and EBITDA below: What is the difference between EBITDA and revenue? EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) and revenue are two financial metrics that all startup founders should be familiar with. Simply put, revenue is the topline income a company is bringing in over a period of time. On the other hand, EBITDA is a financial metric used to help measure profitability. Learn more about the intricacies of both EBITDA and revenue below: What is EBITDA? As put by Investopedia, “EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, is an alternate measure of profitability to net income. By stripping out the non-cash depreciation and amortization expense as well as taxes and debt costs dependent on the capital structure, EBITDA attempts to represent cash profit generated by the company’s operations.” Related resource: What is a Schedule K-1: A Comprehensive Guide How to calculate EBITDA There are 2 common ways to calculate EBITDA. Both will generally use a combination of an income statement and a cash flow statement to pull the relevant metrics. Calculate using operating income The first way to calculate EBITDA is by using operating income. For this way, you can simply take operating income and add depreciation & amortization. It will look like this: EBITDA = Operating Income + Depreciation & Amortization Calculate using net income The other common way to calculate EBITDA is by using net income. For this method, you’ll need a few more financials. Net income takes operating income and subtracts non-operating expenses (like interest and taxes) so you’ll need to add those back into EBITDA. It will look like this: EBITDA = Net Income + Depreciation & Amortization + Net Interest Expense + Income Taxes Why is EBITDA an important metric? Oftentimes, EBITDA is considered one of the most important financial metrics that a company can track. This is because it removes any external forces that are impacting a business’s financials and is solely on its profitability trends. This helps companies determine their true valuation and can be easily used to benchmark against similar companies. A more clear understanding of valuation, also means that the company can be properly priced to potential acquisition partners. Related Resource: Startup Metrics You Need to Monitor Pros and cons of EBITDA Like any startup metric, EBITDA comes with its pros and cons. As we laid out above, EBITDA is important because it removes external forces and demonstrates the true financials of a business. When it comes to cons, EBITDA can sometimes lead to confusion. A typical con is that EBITDA gives an unclear look at cash flow and can lead to a misleading understanding of how much cash is truly coming into the business. What is revenue? As put by the team at Investopedia, “Revenue is the money generated from normal business operations, calculated as the average sales price times the number of units sold. It is the top-line (or gross income) figure from which costs are subtracted to determine net income. Revenue is also known as sales on the income statement.” At the end of the day, revenue is the lifeblood of a business. If a business is not bringing in new customers or expanding existing revenue, its livelihood will be short-lived. Most projections and financials will start with revenue as it determines where the money can be allocated across the business. Related Resource: 6 Metrics Every Startup Founder Should Track Net revenue vs. gross revenue Gross revenue is the total income a business brings in over a certain period of time. For example, if you should $5,000 worth of merchandise over the course of a month, your gross revenue would be $5,000. On the flip side, is net revenue. This starts with gross revenue and subtracts your expenses. For example, in the example above your gross revenue is $5,000 and if you incur $2,000 in expenses over the same period – your net revenue would be $3,000. How to calculate total revenue Calculating revenue is very straightforward. To calculate your total revenue simply take the # of units sold and multiply it by the average price. Why is revenue an important metric As we mentioned above, revenue is the lifeblood of a business. At the end of the day, a business needs to generate revenue to fuel growth and sustain salaries, and develop new product. At the end of the day, without revenue, a business will cease to exist. Related Resource: 6 Metrics Every Startup Founder Should Track EBITDA vs. revenue comparison As we laid out above, EBITDA and revenue are both important financial metrics for every business. However, making sure you are properly tracking and understanding your financial metrics is a must. Learn more about the key differences and similarities between EBITDA and revenue below: Key differences between EBITDA and revenue EBITDA and revenue differ mostly in their purpose. On one hand, you have revenue. This is a true measure of sales and marketing activity and is simply based on the performance of your sales efforts. On the other hand, you have EBITDA. EBITDA uses revenue as one of its functions and tailors it to measure your business’s profitability. This takes into account the performance of your business as a whole, not just your ability to add new revenue. Key similarities between EBITDA and revenue While the 2 metrics differ in what they track and measure, they are similar in the fact that they are valuable metrics that every startup should track. Because of their ability to measure how different aspects of your business, it is important to keep tabs on both. Both metrics hold merit and should be used to evaluate different aspects of your business. Which metric do investors prefer? Like most things in the venture capital world, different investors will have different opinions when it comes to EBITDA. Revenue should be a given when it comes to what investors want to see. Investors, especially early stage and growth stage investors, expect to see solid revenue growth to grow into a massive company. On the other hand, there are instances where investors will want to see EBITDA. As we’ve previously mentioned, EBITDA shows a company’s profitability and can be used when setting valuations so investors can have a better understanding of your company’s financial health. Track and share your metrics effectively with Visible Determining what metrics to track for your business is only half the battle. Having the right systems in place to track and share your key metrics is vital to growth. Raise capital, update investors and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days.
founders
Metrics and data
Customer Stories
Getting Over the Cold Start Problem with Nick Loui of PeakMetrics
We are back with another season of the Founders Forward Podcast! This season is all about founders in our community. Our goal is to sit down with startup founders and break down 3 things that have transformed their career or company. About Nick We’ll try to keep the episodes to 10 minutes or less so you can get back to what matters most — building your business. For the first episode, we welcomed Nick Loui, CEO and Founder of PeakMetrics. PeakMetrics uses machine learning to spot trends & predict message resonance across news, social, and TV/radio. In this episode, we break down: Episode Takeaways Getting over the cold start problem Creating value through aggregation Narrowing down your target audience Watch the Episode Give episode 1 with Nick Loui a listen below (or give it a listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you normally consume podcasts) The Founders Forward is Produced by Visible Our platforms helps thousands of founders update investors, track key metrics, and raise capital. Try Visible free for 14 days.
founders
Metrics and data
How to Define & Calculate ARR for Startups (with Formulas)
Introduction ARR, or Annual Recurring Revenue, is a key metric for SaaS startups to understand and track. At a high level, ARR is the annual revenue a startup can expect to make. Zooming in, there are a few more layers that define what ARR really is. Understanding ARR and how to calculate it is critical as you build a successful SaaS startup. Related Resource: Our Ultimate Guide to SaaS Metrics What is ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue) for a Startup? For a startup, ARR, or Annual Recurring Revenue is the profit that they can expect to make in any fiscal year period. However, there are a few requirements that need to be considered for a profit number to truly be ARR. For starters, the revenue model for the startup should be subscription-based, meaning that the product sold is not a one-time purchase but rather a recurring cost. This subscription should be an annual one but can be fulfilled via a variety of billing structures such as monthly billing, bi-annually, or annual payments. The cost of the subscription should be in a dollar amount and always converted into an annual amount. One-off transactions for your products do not count towards ARR. For a startup, ARR is so important because it contributes to their overall valuation. Investors, no matter what stage of startup you are at, will expect founders to know, understand, and track their startup’s ARR. Additionally, because it’s only a number made up of annualized subscription-based profit, ARR will be a distinct, different number than accountings revenue. Why do startups like ARR? Not only is ARR a metric that all investors expect startup founders to know and track, it’s also a favorable metric for founders beyond just pleasing investors. A few reasons why startups like ARR as a metric include: Forecasting and Growth Planning: Company planning is typically done on an annual basis so when revenue is measured with ARR, it makes company planning that much easier. ARR can help inform not only the annual budget but ARR growth predictions as well. A clear forecast can allow leadership to make smarter, more tactical growth moves around hiring, raising rounds of funding, and eventually, exiting or going public with their business. Related Resource: Building A Startup Financial Model That Works Customer Payments: With annual subscriptions, customers are only responsible for a single bill every year. This makes the headache of billing, potential delays in customers’ paying, and chasing down revenue that much easier. When the bill is 1x a year for each customer, it’s a huge time saver and allows for more on-time payments by customers and more predictable work for the finance teams at startups. Related Resource: Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC): A Critical Metrics for Founders Standardized Subscription Terms: Naturally, with software sales, there may be some negotiations around term length for various customers. Most companies have a standard term they prefer (2 years, 18 months, 12 months). With ARR, regardless of term length, each customer’s payments are standardized to one year. This means that payments will always be billed in 12-month increments so all customers produce annual revenue for the business and all billing and contracts are treated the same. Startups love this again for the simplicity for finance teams but also for predictability of growth. Why do investors like ARR? As noted earlier, investors value ARR as a key metric when evaluating startups and their founders as potential investments. A few reasons why investors like ARR as a metric are: Revenue Predictability: This is a big factor for investors to feel confident about an investment. If a product comes with a monthly commitment instead of yearly or a business operates solely on 1-time purchases, this can be a red flag for investors in the business-to-business space. With annualized revenue, there is no risk for seasonality to a product or slow months where monthly or 1-time revenue can not be relied on. With ARR, investors can be ensured that there is clear profitability on an annual basis which provides more security for their investment. Competitive Landscape Insight: In competitive spaces, investors want to align themselves with the company and product that will ultimately come out on top. It can be hard for investors to evaluate the true best investment in a crowded space where all companies are growing their customer base and employee base and seemingly showing positive growth every year. ARR can help investors understand who the true rocket ships are in a space by understanding the annual revenue growth over time. A dip in ARR year over year can be a red flag but growing ARR even when bringing on new investors that change valuations are a huge positive for investors in evaluating a competitive space. Related Resource: How to Model Total Addressable Market (Template Included) Ease of Business Valuation: At the end of the day, a steady increase in recurring revenue reassures investors that they will most likely see a return on an investment in your business. ARR is critical because just as it allows founders to plan for the predictable growth for their business, it allows investors to more easily and accurately predict what the value of a business will be based on its ARR growth in 5, 10, 20 years post their investment. A multiple of ARR is a clear way for investors to predict an accurate valuation of a startup’s business and make smart investment decisions. Related Resource: The Understandable Guide to Startup Funding Stages How to Calculate ARR Knowing ARR is the annual recurring revenue for your business over a 12 month period, it may seem like a straightforward metric to calculate. That’s not necessarily the case. ARR can look differently depending on the company. There is nuance to how it is calculated for every business. Traditional ARR Calculation Traditionally ARR is calculated for standard annual contracts where a client commits for a 1-year term. The ARR is the total cost of the recurring product or services (what would be billed again after 1 year if the customer chooses to subscribe for another year of product). So if your product is $10,000 dollars annually but you also charge a $3,000 onboarding fee. The ARR on that customer deal would just be $10,000. The 3k is not included as it is not recurring and is only a 1-time fee. Multi-Year Contract ARR Calculation If you have a customer that opts in upfront for a multi-year contract, meaning they won’t be up for renewal or re-subscription until that first multi-year contract is complete, this gets factored into the ARR calculation. Sticking with our example, the recurring fee of your product is 10k a year. If a customer signs up for a 3-year contract, the ARR is found out by multiplying the annual cost by the number of years (10k x 3) and then dividing that total by the number of years (30k / 3) leaving the ARR at $10,000. This only gets tricky when the contract is not a straightforward multi-year contract but rather a contract length with a number of months that doesn’t quite add up to exact years. If your client has signed up for an 18-month term at 10k a year. The total cost of the product will be multiplied by the result of 12 divided by 18. $15,000 x (12/18) =$10,000 ARR. For a 15 month contract it would read: $12,500 x (12/15) = $10,000 ARR and so on. MRR Based ARR Calculation Monthly Recurring Revenue or MRR is income a business can count on receiving every single month. Similar to ARR, it is on a recurring basis however the outcome is a 30 day period vs. an annual period. In some cases, MRR can be used as a basis for ARR calculation. If your company operates a subscription business where the standard term is monthly (maybe with an upfront commitment of 6 months for example) your MRR can be used to estimate ARR for forecasting purposes. Simply take your total MRR (found the same way you would find traditional MRR, just looking at it month over month) and multiply by 12. So if a customer is paying for a product that is $100 a month, the ARR on that contract would be $100 x 12 = $1,200 ARR. Common Mistakes Calculating ARR While overall ARR might seem like a pretty straightforward metric to calculate, many startup leaders make a few common mistakes early on when pulling together ARR calculations. A few of the most common mistakes seen when calculating ARR include: Including Free Trials Time granted to a customer to use a product for free or at a temporary trial-period discount, regardless of how long, should not be included in ARR calculations. These should be treated as one-off payments. When the trial converts to an annual subscription, that cost can be used to calculate ARR but only if it is converted to a recurring subscription. Not Factoring in Discounts Often, discounts are offered for a portion of a contract to incentive partnership, however, discounts can affect your final ARR. If a customer has a discount for their first year or for any duration of their contract, it needs to be reflected in the ARR. So if the discount is 25% off for the first year bringing a cost down to $750 from a 1k list price, that needs to be reflected in the ARR and $750 should be used as the calculating number. If the discount is only for a set year, upon renewal, the full price can be used for ARR but not before then. Treating Late Payments like Churn If a customer is late on a payment, they haven’t churned so their contract should still be included towards ARR. The only difference the company might see here is when the payment hits the bank account but the commitment to a yearly contract is still in place so deals with late payments should be included in ARR calculations. Other common nuances that should be included in ARR calculations include lost payments from churned customers, upsells on current customer subscriptions, downgraded subscriptions. Common nuances that should not be included in ARR calculations include set-up fees, account adjustments, or any other non-recurring charge. Track ARR and other KPIs with Visible ARR is a crucial metric for any successful startup founder and team to master. Calculating ARR can help founders and executives plan for growth, make accurate forecasts, showcase more predictable revenue for investors, standardize their subscription terms, and increase the valuation of their business. An accurate calculation of ARR can be tricky but is a critical skill to learn. Visible can help founders and investors alike keep track of ARR and a handful of other metrics in a clean, painless, and delightful way. Check out how Visible helps with metric tracking for SaaS businesses here.
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