When you're prepping a fundraise, /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling builds a 3-5 year model with runway and scenarios. — Claude Skill
A Claude Skill for Claude Code by Seth Hobson — run /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling in Claude·Updated ·v1.0.0
Build 3-5 year financial models with revenue, costs, runway, and scenarios
- 3-5 year revenue projection: customer growth, ARPU, churn, expansion
- Cost structure: COGS, S&M, R&D, G&A with hiring plan tied to milestones
- Cash flow and runway calculation with monthly burn and ending cash position
- Scenario planning: pessimistic, base, optimistic with sensitivity on each driver
- Fundraising integration: when to raise, how much, dilution at each round
Who this is for
What it does
Lead investor wants the financial model attached to the deck. /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling builds the 5-year revenue, cost, and runway projection with the 3-scenario sensitivity.
Cash position dropped 30% last quarter. /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling calculates true runway with current burn, the 6-month forward forecast, and the date you must raise by.
$2M cash, 14 months runway, growth flat. /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling models a $1M bridge vs. a $5M Series A and shows dilution and runway extension under each.
QBR coming up. /startup-business-analyst-startup-financial-modeling reconciles last quarter's plan against actuals and rebuilds the next 4 quarters with updated assumptions.
How it works
Tell the skill your business model, current ARR, and headcount
Get a revenue projection driven by acquisition, retention, and ARPU assumptions
Layer in cost structure with hiring plan tied to product and GTM milestones
Run cash flow and runway under pessimistic, base, and optimistic scenarios
Generate the fundraising plan: when to raise, how much, dilution at each round
Example
ARR: $1.2M, growing 12% MoM Headcount: 14 (8 eng, 4 GTM, 2 ops) Burn: $220K/mo Cash: $4.8M Last round: $3M seed at $15M post
ARR: $1.2M → $4.8M (4.0x) Net new logos: 280 NRR: 112% Headcount: 14 → 28 (Q4) Burn: $220K → $480K/mo by Q4
Current runway at flat burn: 22 months Planned runway with hiring plan: 14 months Must-raise date: month 11 (cushion of 3mo) Target raise: $12M Series A at $50M post
Pessimistic: $3.2M ARR Y1, must raise month 9, smaller round Base: $4.8M ARR Y1, raise month 11, $12M at $50M post Optimistic: $6.5M ARR Y1, raise month 13, $15M at $75M post
Top driver: net retention (every 5pp = +$240K ARR Y1) Second: outbound CAC (every $1K reduction = +20 logos) Third: hire timing (delaying 2 GTM hires = +2mo runway)
Metrics this improves
Works with
Want to use Startup Financial Modeling?
Choose how to get started.
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Open a terminal on your computer and paste this command:
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Start Claude Code, then type the command:
Startup Financial Modeling
Build comprehensive 3-5 year financial models with revenue projections, cost structures, cash flow analysis, and scenario planning for early-stage startups.
Overview
Financial modeling provides the quantitative foundation for startup strategy, fundraising, and operational planning. Create realistic projections using cohort-based revenue modeling, detailed cost structures, and scenario analysis to support decision-making and investor presentations.
Core Components
Revenue Model
Cohort-Based Projections: Build revenue from customer acquisition and retention by cohort.
Formula:
MRR = Σ (Cohort Size × Retention Rate × ARPU)
ARR = MRR × 12
Key Inputs:
- Monthly new customer acquisitions
- Customer retention rates by month
- Average revenue per user (ARPU)
- Pricing and packaging assumptions
- Expansion revenue (upsells, cross-sells)
Cost Structure
Operating Expenses Categories:
-
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
- Hosting and infrastructure
- Payment processing fees
- Customer support (variable portion)
- Third-party services per customer
-
Sales & Marketing (S&M)
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
- Marketing programs and advertising
- Sales team compensation
- Marketing tools and software
-
Research & Development (R&D)
- Engineering team compensation
- Product management
- Design and UX
- Development tools and infrastructure
-
General & Administrative (G&A)
- Executive team
- Finance, legal, HR
- Office and facilities
- Insurance and compliance
Cash Flow Analysis
Components:
- Beginning cash balance
- Cash inflows (revenue, fundraising)
- Cash outflows (operating expenses, CapEx)
- Ending cash balance
- Monthly burn rate
- Runway (months of cash remaining)
Formula:
Runway = Current Cash Balance / Monthly Burn Rate
Monthly Burn = Monthly Revenue - Monthly Expenses
Headcount Planning
Role-Based Hiring Plan: Track headcount by department and role.
Key Metrics:
- Fully-loaded cost per employee
- Revenue per employee
- Headcount by department (% of total)
Typical Ratios (Early-Stage SaaS):
- Engineering: 40-50%
- Sales & Marketing: 25-35%
- G&A: 10-15%
- Customer Success: 5-10%
Financial Model Structure
Three-Scenario Framework
Conservative Scenario (P10):
- Slower customer acquisition
- Lower pricing or conversion
- Higher churn rates
- Extended sales cycles
- Used for cash management
Base Scenario (P50):
- Most likely outcomes
- Realistic assumptions
- Primary planning scenario
- Used for board reporting
Optimistic Scenario (P90):
- Faster growth
- Better unit economics
- Lower churn
- Used for upside planning
Time Horizon
Detailed Projections: 3 Years
- Monthly detail for Year 1
- Monthly detail for Year 2
- Quarterly detail for Year 3
High-Level Projections: Years 4-5
- Annual projections
- Key metrics only
- Support long-term planning
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Define Business Model
Clarify revenue model and pricing.
SaaS Model:
- Subscription pricing tiers
- Annual vs. monthly contracts
- Free trial or freemium approach
- Expansion revenue strategy
Marketplace Model:
- GMV projections
- Take rate (% of transactions)
- Buyer and seller economics
- Transaction frequency
Transactional Model:
- Transaction volume
- Revenue per transaction
- Frequency and seasonality
Step 2: Build Revenue Projections
Use cohort-based methodology for accuracy.
Monthly Customer Acquisition: Define new customers acquired each month.
Retention Curve: Model customer retention over time.
Typical SaaS Retention:
- Month 1: 100%
- Month 3: 90%
- Month 6: 85%
- Month 12: 75%
- Month 24: 70%
Revenue Calculation: For each cohort, calculate retained customers × ARPU for each month.
Step 3: Model Cost Structure
Break down costs by category and behavior.
Fixed vs. Variable:
- Fixed: Salaries, software, rent
- Variable: Hosting, payment processing, support
Scaling Assumptions:
- COGS as % of revenue
- S&M as % of revenue (CAC payback)
- R&D growth rate
- G&A as % of total expenses
Step 4: Create Hiring Plan
Model headcount growth by role and department.
Inputs:
- Starting headcount
- Hiring velocity by role
- Fully-loaded compensation by role
- Benefits and taxes (typically 1.3-1.4x salary)
Example:
Engineer: $150K salary × 1.35 = $202K fully-loaded
Sales Rep: $100K OTE × 1.30 = $130K fully-loaded
Step 5: Project Cash Flow
Calculate monthly cash position and runway.
Monthly Cash Flow:
Beginning Cash
+ Revenue Collected (consider payment terms)
- Operating Expenses Paid
- CapEx
= Ending Cash
Runway Calculation:
If Ending Cash < 0:
Funding Need = Negative Cash Balance
Runway = 0
Else:
Runway = Ending Cash / Average Monthly Burn
Step 6: Calculate Key Metrics
Track metrics that matter for stage.
Revenue Metrics:
- MRR / ARR
- Growth rate (MoM, YoY)
- Revenue by segment or cohort
Unit Economics:
- CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)
- LTV (Lifetime Value)
- CAC Payback Period
- LTV / CAC Ratio
Efficiency Metrics:
- Burn multiple (Net Burn / Net New ARR)
- Magic number (Net New ARR / S&M Spend)
- Rule of 40 (Growth % + Profit Margin %)
Cash Metrics:
- Monthly burn rate
- Runway (months)
- Cash efficiency
Step 7: Scenario Analysis
Create three scenarios with different assumptions.
Variable Assumptions:
- Customer acquisition rate (±30%)
- Churn rate (±20%)
- Average contract value (±15%)
- CAC (±25%)
Fixed Assumptions:
- Pricing structure
- Core operating expenses
- Hiring plan (adjust timing, not roles)
Business Model Templates
SaaS Financial Model
Revenue Drivers:
- New MRR (customers × ARPU)
- Expansion MRR (upsells)
- Contraction MRR (downgrades)
- Churned MRR (lost customers)
Key Ratios:
- Gross margin: 75-85%
- S&M as % revenue: 40-60% (early stage)
- CAC payback: < 12 months
- Net retention: 100-120%
Example Projection:
Year 1: $500K ARR, 50 customers, $100K MRR by Dec
Year 2: $2.5M ARR, 200 customers, $208K MRR by Dec
Year 3: $8M ARR, 600 customers, $667K MRR by Dec
Marketplace Financial Model
Revenue Drivers:
- GMV (Gross Merchandise Value)
- Take rate (% of GMV)
- Net revenue = GMV × Take rate
Key Ratios:
- Take rate: 10-30% depending on category
- CAC for buyers vs. sellers
- Contribution margin: 60-70%
Example Projection:
Year 1: $5M GMV, 15% take rate = $750K revenue
Year 2: $20M GMV, 15% take rate = $3M revenue
Year 3: $60M GMV, 15% take rate = $9M revenue
E-Commerce Financial Model
Revenue Drivers:
- Traffic (visitors)
- Conversion rate
- Average order value (AOV)
- Purchase frequency
Key Ratios:
- Gross margin: 40-60%
- Contribution margin: 20-35%
- CAC payback: 3-6 months
Services / Agency Financial Model
Revenue Drivers:
- Billable hours or projects
- Hourly rate or project fee
- Utilization rate
- Team capacity
Key Ratios:
- Gross margin: 50-70%
- Utilization: 70-85%
- Revenue per employee
Fundraising Integration
Funding Scenario Modeling
Pre-Money Valuation: Based on metrics and comparables.
Dilution:
Post-Money = Pre-Money + Investment
Dilution % = Investment / Post-Money
Use of Funds: Allocate funding to extend runway and achieve milestones.
Example:
Raise: $5M at $20M pre-money
Post-Money: $25M
Dilution: 20%
Use of Funds:
- Product Development: $2M (40%)
- Sales & Marketing: $2M (40%)
- G&A and Operations: $0.5M (10%)
- Working Capital: $0.5M (10%)
Milestone-Based Planning
Identify Key Milestones:
- Product launch
- First $1M ARR
- Break-even on CAC
- Series A fundraise
Funding Amount: Ensure runway to achieve next milestone + 6 months buffer.
Common Pitfalls
Pitfall 1: Overly Optimistic Revenue
- New startups rarely hit aggressive projections
- Use conservative customer acquisition assumptions
- Model realistic churn rates
Pitfall 2: Underestimating Costs
- Add 20% buffer to expense estimates
- Include fully-loaded compensation
- Account for software and tools
Pitfall 3: Ignoring Cash Flow Timing
- Revenue ≠ cash (payment terms)
- Expenses paid before revenue collected
- Model cash conversion carefully
Pitfall 4: Static Headcount
- Hiring takes time (3-6 months to fill roles)
- Ramp time for productivity (3-6 months)
- Account for attrition (10-15% annually)
Pitfall 5: Not Scenario Planning
- Single scenario is never accurate
- Always model conservative case
- Plan for what you'll do if base case fails
Model Validation
Sanity Checks:
- Revenue growth rate is achievable (3x in Year 2, 2x in Year 3)
- Unit economics are realistic (LTV/CAC > 3, payback < 18 months)
- Burn multiple is reasonable (< 2.0 in Year 2-3)
- Headcount scales with revenue (revenue per employee growing)
- Gross margin is appropriate for business model
- S&M spending aligns with CAC and growth targets
Benchmark Against Peers: Compare key metrics to similar companies at similar stage.
Investor Feedback: Share model with advisors or investors for feedback on assumptions.
Quick Start
To create a startup financial model:
- Define business model - Revenue drivers and pricing
- Project revenue - Cohort-based with retention
- Model costs - COGS, S&M, R&D, G&A by month
- Plan headcount - Hiring by role and department
- Calculate cash flow - Revenue - expenses = burn/runway
- Compute metrics - CAC, LTV, burn multiple, runway
- Create scenarios - Conservative, base, optimistic
- Validate assumptions - Sanity check and benchmark
- Integrate fundraising - Model funding rounds and milestones