Check the Financial Dashboard

The Dashboard is broken into 3 sections: 

  • Profit & Loss
  • Insights and
  • Key Metrics

Within each section, you can explore many different views of your data.

Dashboard > Profit & Loss

The sub-menu Dashboard > Profit & Loss shows a combined profit and loss and a cash flow statement. Here you  find all summary data in one place - Revenues, COGS, CAC, operating expenses for headcounts and expenses.

You can drill down into each total and see the data by revenue stream.

At the same time, the P&L report serves as a simple simulation dashboard – you can select which revenues streams, teams and expense groups you want to include in the numbers.

Profit Loss2
NEW Demo 17-7.00_25_30_19.Still213

Answer questions 3 + 4: When are you profitable? What are your funding requirements?

With the Profit & Loss Report, you can also answer business questions 3 and 4 on business profitability and funding requirements. The key metrics show:

  • Number of Paying Customers = 692 at the end of 2024 (the selected time period) 
  • Total Revenues of $4.8 M at the end of 2024 (the selected time period) 
  • Time-to-break-even in 2022 which is the first time when you are becoming profitable answering question 3  (when the EBITDA line gets positive for the first time)
  • EBITDA Margin of 66% at the end of 2024 (the selected time period)   
  • Maximum Cash Requirement of - $1.2 M in 2020 required to fund the project answering question 4 and 
  • Time-to-get-Investment-back in 2021 which is the first time when the accumulated cash flow line becomes positive
Profit Loss

You might wonder why this P&L doesn't show the typical hockey stick for cash-requirements and why the time to get the investment back is even before the break even. Well, remember - we changed the Billing Period of the Enterprise revenue stream from Monthly to Yearly Billing so that we collect all cash yearly in advance.

Impact of Monthly vs Yearly Cash-Flow

Let's check the impact on Cash Flow Requirements if we set the Billing Period of the Enterprise revenue stream back to Monthly Billing. We find very similar results for the number of customers, revenues and EBITDA and the Time-to-Break even, but 

  • the Maximum Cash Requirement more than doubles to -$2.7 M and shifts 2-years to 2022 and
  • the Time-to-get-Investment-back shifts from 2021 to 2024
Profit Loss2

Dashboard > Insights

The submenu Dashboard > Insights has several tabs. You can check results of assumptions which you entered in the revenue, headcount, expense and capital menu.

Example

The tab Number Customers shows results of revenue streams in terms of number of new customers and total customers. 

Insights_NC


The tab Revenue shows results of revenue streams in terms of revenues per revenue stream and revenue growth.

Insights_Rev

The tab Headcount shows results for headcounts teams in terms of cost and headcount numbers.

Insights_HC

The tab Expenses shows results for expense groups in terms of expenses and expense growth by different cost types and categories.

Insights_Expenses

The tab Capital shows results for funding and investments.

Insights_Cap


The profitability tab combines all this data and shows how profitability margins develop over time...

Insights_Profit


The cash flow tabs also adds cash flow from financing and investments to the data and shows how cash-flow develops over time

Insights_CF


You can browse through all charts and even export them. 

Dashboard > Key Metrics

The menu Dashboard > Key Metrics is identical with the menu Revenue > Manage which you have seen before. It shows 

  • Movements for Customers, Units Sold and Revenues
  • Customer Lifetime Metrics and 
  • Key Metrics

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