Overview
You don't need an MBA to understand business finance. You need to understand five things: how money comes in (revenue), how money goes out (costs), what's left (profit), how long customers stay and pay (LTV), and how much it costs to get them (CAC). Everything else is a variation of these five.
This skill covers the essential financial frameworks from the Personal MBA — the 4 methods to increase revenue, unit economics, LTV/CAC analysis, and the critical distinction between profit and cash flow.
Instructions
When a user asks about business profitability, unit economics, pricing impact, or financial health, apply these frameworks.
The 4 Methods to Increase Revenue
Every business in the world can only increase revenue in exactly four ways. There are no exceptions:
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Increase the number of customers — More marketing, better conversion, new channels. Linear impact: 2x customers = 2x revenue (usually hardest and most expensive).
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Increase the average transaction size — Upsells, bundles, premium tiers, add-ons. Example: "Would you like fries with that?" generates billions for McDonald's.
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Increase the frequency of transactions — Subscriptions, consumables, habit-building. Example: Moving from one-time purchase to subscription model = recurring revenue.
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Increase prices — Value-based pricing, premium positioning. Highest leverage: a 10% price increase with no cost change goes straight to profit. Often causes < 5% customer loss.
The Revenue Impact Formula:
Revenue = Customers × Average Transaction × Frequency × Price
A 10% improvement in ALL four factors:
1.1 × 1.1 × 1.1 × 1.1 = 1.46 → 46% revenue increase from four 10% improvements
Profit Margin Analysis
Gross Margin = (Revenue - Cost of Goods Sold) / Revenue
- SaaS benchmark: 70-85%
- Services benchmark: 40-60%
- Physical products: 30-50%
Net Margin = (Revenue - ALL Costs) / Revenue
- Healthy SaaS: 15-25% net margin at scale
- Healthy services: 10-20% net margin
Why margins matter more than revenue:
- $1M revenue at 10% margin = $100k profit
- $500k revenue at 40% margin = $200k profit
- The smaller business is more profitable. Revenue is vanity, profit is sanity.
Unit Economics: LTV and CAC
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV):
LTV = ARPU / Monthly Churn Rate
Example:
ARPU = $90/month
Monthly churn = 5%
LTV = $90 / 0.05 = $1,800
More precise with gross margin:
LTV = (ARPU × Gross Margin) / Monthly Churn Rate
Example:
ARPU = $90, Gross Margin = 80%, Churn = 5%
LTV = ($90 × 0.80) / 0.05 = $1,440
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC):
CAC = Total Sales & Marketing Spend / New Customers Acquired
Example:
Spent $17,000 on marketing last month
Acquired 50 new customers
CAC = $17,000 / 50 = $340
The LTV/CAC Ratio — The Single Most Important SaaS Metric:
| LTV/CAC | Verdict | Action |
|---|---|---|
| < 1:1 | Losing money on every customer | Stop acquiring. Fix product or pricing immediately. |
| 1-2:1 | Barely surviving | Reduce CAC or increase LTV urgently. |
| 2-3:1 | Borderline healthy | Optimize — you have a business but it's fragile. |
| 3-5:1 | Healthy | Good unit economics. Scale carefully. |
| > 5:1 | Excellent or under-investing | Either very efficient or not spending enough on growth. |
CAC Payback Period:
Payback = CAC / (ARPU × Gross Margin)
Example:
CAC = $340, ARPU = $90, Gross Margin = 80%
Payback = $340 / ($90 × 0.80) = 4.7 months
Benchmark: Payback should be < 12 months. Under 6 months is excellent.
Breakeven Analysis
Breakeven Point = Fixed Costs / (Price per Unit - Variable Cost per Unit)
Example:
Fixed costs: $8,000/month (salaries, hosting, tools)
Price per customer: $90/month
Variable cost per customer: $12/month (API calls, support)
Breakeven = $8,000 / ($90 - $12) = 103 customers
Below 103 customers: losing money. Above 103: every new customer adds $78/month profit.
Cash Flow vs Profit
Profit is an accounting concept. Cash flow is reality. You can be profitable on paper and still go bankrupt (customer pays Net 60, you pay salaries now — profit positive, cash negative, business dead).
Cash flow rules:
- Collect money as fast as possible (annual plans > monthly, prepayment > Net 30)
- Pay expenses as late as reasonably possible (negotiate terms)
- Always have 3-6 months of operating expenses in reserve
- Annual plan with discount is almost always worth it: offer $890/year vs $90/month ($1,080). You get $890 cash NOW.
Allowable Acquisition Cost
How much CAN you spend to acquire a customer? Max Allowable CAC = LTV x Target Margin. Example: LTV = $1,800, target margin 60%, Max CAC = $1,800 x 0.40 = $720. If actual CAC is $340, you have $380 of headroom to invest more in growth.
Key Formulas
ARPU = MRR / Customer Count
LTV = (ARPU × Gross Margin) / Monthly Churn Rate
CAC = Total Sales & Marketing Spend / New Customers Acquired
LTV/CAC Ratio = LTV / CAC
CAC Payback = CAC / (ARPU × Gross Margin)
Breakeven Customers = (Fixed Costs + Marketing Spend) / (ARPU × Gross Margin)
Max Allowable CAC = LTV × 0.40 (keep 60%, spend up to 40% on acquisition)
Examples
Example 1: SaaS health check
User request: "My SaaS has $45k MRR, 500 customers, 8% monthly churn, $17k/month marketing spend, 50 new customers/month, 75% gross margin, $22k fixed costs. Am I healthy?"
Output:
SaaS Unit Economics Report:
ARPU: $90/month
LTV: $844 (low — churn is killing you)
CAC: $340
LTV/CAC: 2.5x — WARNING: Borderline healthy
CAC Payback: 5.0 months (acceptable)
Median Customer Life: 12.5 months
Monthly P&L:
Revenue: $45,000
Gross Profit: $33,750 (75%)
- Fixed Costs: -$22,000
- Marketing: -$17,000
Net Margin: -$5,250 (-11.7%) ← LOSING MONEY
Breakeven: 578 customers (you have 500 — 78 short)
Revenue Lever Impact (10% improvement each):
#1 Reduce churn 8%→7.2%: +$5,625/month (HIGHEST IMPACT)
#2 Increase ARPU $90→$99: +$4,500/month
#3 Increase prices 10%: +$4,500/month
#4 More customers 50→55/mo: +$450/month
Diagnosis: Your #1 problem is churn. At 8%/month, customers live only
12.5 months on average. Fix churn first — it has the highest ROI.
If you halve churn to 4%, LTV doubles to $1,688 and you become profitable.
Example 2: Price increase impact modeling
User request: "What happens if I raise prices 20% from $49 to $59/month? I have 300 customers."
Output:
Price Increase Impact Model: $49 → $59/month (+20%)
Scenario A: No customer loss (best case)
Revenue: $14,700 → $17,700 (+$3,000/month, +$36k/year)
If costs unchanged: $3,000/month goes straight to profit
Scenario B: 5% customer loss (typical)
Customers: 300 → 285
Revenue: $14,700 → $16,815 (+$2,115/month, +$25k/year)
Still a clear win.
Scenario C: 15% customer loss (aggressive)
Customers: 300 → 255
Revenue: $14,700 → $15,045 (+$345/month)
Marginal win, but fewer customers = lower support cost.
Break-even churn from price increase:
You'd need to lose 51+ customers (17%) for this to be net negative.
Research shows < 5% typically leave after a 20% price increase
when communicated well with adequate notice.
Recommendation: DO IT. Grandfather existing customers for 3 months,
apply new price to all new signups immediately.
Guidelines
- Always calculate LTV with gross margin, not raw ARPU. LTV = (ARPU × Gross Margin) / Churn.
- When churn is above 5% monthly, flag it as the #1 priority. Nothing else matters until churn is fixed.
- Present the 4 revenue levers ranked by impact for the specific business, not in generic order.
- Cash flow warnings should be prominent when a business is profitable on paper but cash-negative.
- Price increase modeling should always include 3 scenarios: no loss, typical loss (5%), and aggressive loss (15%).
- Remind users: "Revenue is vanity, profit is sanity, cash is king."