CFO Services
CFO Services
Burn rate and growth rate are the two numbers that define a startup’s financial health more than any others. But most founders think about them in isolation. The real question isn’t how fast you’re burning or how fast you’re growing, it’s the relationship between the two.
One of the cleanest ways to evaluate startup financial health is the burn multiple. The formula is simple:
Burn Multiple = Net Burn / Net New ARR
If you’re burning $500K a month and adding $500K in net new ARR, your burn multiple is 1x. You’re spending a dollar to generate a dollar of new recurring revenue.
Here’s a rough benchmark for what different numbers signal:
A company growing 15% month-over-month looks exciting on a slide. But if that growth is costing $3 of burn for every $1 of new ARR, the business is becoming structurally weaker with each passing month. Cash is depleting faster than value is being created.
This is how startups end up raising emergency rounds or shutting down even after strong topline growth. The growth was real, but it was purchased at too high a price.
On the flip side, a company growing 8% per month with a burn multiple below 1x is compounding efficiently. It’s building toward a business that can grow without perpetual capital infusion.
Healthy startups tend to share a few observable characteristics when it comes to the burn/growth relationship:
Benchmarks for burn multiples shift depending on stage. Pre-product-market-fit companies are expected to burn more per dollar of revenue because they’re still figuring out what works. Post-Series A, investors expect efficiency to improve. Post-Series B, capital efficiency becomes a defining factor in whether the business can reach profitability on its current trajectory.
The mistake many founders make is not adjusting expectations as they scale. What was acceptable burn at $500K ARR is usually unacceptable at $5M ARR, and alarming at $15M ARR.
If your burn multiple is trending in the wrong direction, there are only two levers: reduce burn or improve the quality and pace of revenue growth.
Reducing burn is usually faster. Audit your largest cost centers like headcount, infrastructure, sales and marketing spend, and ask whether each is producing measurable return. Cut what isn’t.
Improving growth quality takes longer but matters more. Focus on retention before acquisition. A point of improvement in net revenue retention is worth more than equivalent improvement in new customer acquisition, because it compounds.
Burn rate and growth rate are not opposing forces. The goal isn’t to minimize burn or maximize growth, it’s to build a business where growth compounds and the cost of that growth decreases over time. That’s what sustainable looks like. That’s what investors are really evaluating when they look past the headline numbers.
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Burn rate and growth rate are the two numbers that define a startup’s financial health more than any others. But most founders think about them in isolation. The real question isn’t how fast you’re burning or how fast you’re growing, it’s the relationship between the two. The Burn Multiple: A Simple Framework One of the […]
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