Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
Smithery Logo

Accelerating the Agent Economy

Resources

DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

Company

PricingAboutBlog

Connect

© 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    wshobson

    startup-financial-modeling

    wshobson/startup-financial-modeling
    Business
    28,185
    16 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    This skill should be used when the user asks to "create financial projections", "build a financial model", "forecast revenue", "calculate burn rate", "estimate runway", "model cash flow", or requests...

    SKILL.md

    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:

    1. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)

      • Hosting and infrastructure
      • Payment processing fees
      • Customer support (variable portion)
      • Third-party services per customer
    2. Sales & Marketing (S&M)

      • Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
      • Marketing programs and advertising
      • Sales team compensation
      • Marketing tools and software
    3. Research & Development (R&D)

      • Engineering team compensation
      • Product management
      • Design and UX
      • Development tools and infrastructure
    4. 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:

    1. Define business model - Revenue drivers and pricing
    2. Project revenue - Cohort-based with retention
    3. Model costs - COGS, S&M, R&D, G&A by month
    4. Plan headcount - Hiring by role and department
    5. Calculate cash flow - Revenue - expenses = burn/runway
    6. Compute metrics - CAC, LTV, burn multiple, runway
    7. Create scenarios - Conservative, base, optimistic
    8. Validate assumptions - Sanity check and benchmark
    9. Integrate fundraising - Model funding rounds and milestones
    Recommended Servers
    Harvest
    Harvest
    Mixpanel
    Mixpanel
    Svelte
    Svelte
    Repository
    wshobson/agents
    Files