Evaluates capital efficiency with burn multiple, net new ARR per dollar burned, and path to profitability analysis. Use when analyzing burn efficiency, assessing capital needs, or modeling runway scenarios.
Evaluates capital efficiency with burn multiple, net new ARR per dollar burned, and path to profitability analysis. Use when analyzing burn efficiency, assessing capital needs, or modeling runway scenarios.
Calculate core burn multiple — Divide net cash burned in the period by net new ARR added in the same period. Use quarterly and trailing-12-month windows. A burn multiple below 1.5x is considered efficient; 1.5–2.5x is acceptable for high-growth companies; above 3x signals inefficiency requiring explanation.
Decompose the burn — Break total operating burn into S&M, R&D, and G&A components. Identify which cost center drives the majority of cash consumption. Flag any single line item exceeding 50% of total burn.
Compute CAC payback and magic number — CAC payback = fully-loaded S&M spend ÷ (net new ARR × gross margin). Magic number = net new ARR ÷ prior-period S&M spend. Cross-reference these with burn multiple to distinguish sales-efficiency problems from general overhead bloat.
Model runway scenarios — Build at least three cases:
Base case: current burn rate, current growth trajectory
For each, calculate months of runway remaining and the implied burn multiple.
Benchmark against comparables — Map the company's burn multiple against stage-appropriate peers. Adjust for gross margin differences (a 50% GM business and an 80% GM business are not directly comparable on raw burn multiple). Note where the company sits in the distribution (quartile ranking).
Assess path to profitability — Estimate the break-even revenue run rate assuming current cost structure scales linearly. Identify the "cash-flow crossover" quarter under base-case assumptions. Flag if break-even requires more capital than currently available. [VERIFY] any tax-credit or grant income that management includes in their break-even model.
Synthesize findings — Summarize the efficiency story: Is the company converting capital into durable ARR at an attractive rate? Where are the levers to improve? What conditions must hold for the runway to reach profitability without another raise?
Output
Burn Multiple Summary Table: quarterly and LTM burn multiple, net new ARR, net burn, with trend arrows
Cost Decomposition Chart: percentage of burn by S&M / R&D / G&A with period-over-period change
Runway Scenario Matrix: months remaining and implied next-raise timing for each case
Efficiency Benchmarking: company vs. peer cohort on burn multiple, CAC payback, and magic number
Key Findings Narrative (3–5 paragraphs): capital efficiency assessment, primary burn drivers, actionable recommendations, and flagged risks
[VERIFY] items list: any data points sourced from management projections, unaudited figures, or assumptions requiring independent confirmation
Quality Checks
Confirm ARR figures reconcile between the schedule and the income statement (net new ARR + beginning ARR − churn = ending ARR)