Cayenne Consulting

Managing Your Startup’s Burn Rate

Cash is the fuel of every startup. Your burn rate is the rate at which that money is being spent, and allows an estimate of how long you can go before refueling (runway). That refueling is when you will need more investment, or when you will break even and begin that steep profitable growth curve.

Investors also look at your burn rate to see how efficient and effective you are at running the business. It continually amazes me how two startups, seemingly comparable in stage and objective, can be so far apart in their burn rate. One can build a new website application for $10,000 per month, while another is burning $50,000 per month. Which would you bet on?

For obvious reasons, you need to keep your burn rate low. As a rule of thumb, investors expect each investment round you get to last at least a year to 18 months. Here are some recommendations on how to keep the rate low, and help your startup to prosper at the same time:

A good rule of thumb for most startups is a burn rate of less than $50,000 per month. For example, a web-based startup should be able to operate for a year if they raise $500,000 from the founders or angels. This will equate to 2 working founders (taking no salary), hiring a 5-person development team for a year.

The cash will be burned on the team salaries and operating expenses of the startup and should provide enough runway to build an initial product, get a few customers, and an initial revenue stream. That will position the startup to raise a venture round at a favorable valuation.

Always make sure you’re putting the money in the right place. That may mean waiting till you have a product before you add salespeople. Or manufacturing some product inventory to sell, before acquiring office furniture that makes you feel good. Focus precious cash only on producing revenue for your startup business.

Of course, a projected burn rate can’t account for expensive mistakes and unusual challenges along the way. For these, you need a little reserve and a lot of luck. Be forewarned that taking out loans and accumulating debt is not a long-term solution to the cash flow challenge. It’s too easy, and it bites you in the end.

Controlling your burn rate is the only way to get the confidence and resources to ramp up your startup business the way you want. If you forget to check and manage this compass within your new business, you could run out of cash before you reach breakeven – and find yourself managing the ashes.

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