Finance literacy is the #1 skill gap for technical founders. Understanding P&L, cash flow, and balance sheet isn't optional — it's survival. The companies that fail most often aren't the ones with bad products, they're the ones that run out of cash because founders didn't understand the numbers.
82% of startups fail due to cash flow problems. Not product problems. Not market problems. Cash flow.
The 3 Financial Statements:
- Income Statement (P&L): Revenue - Costs = Profit/Loss over a period
- Balance Sheet: Assets = Liabilities + Equity at a point in time
- Cash Flow Statement: Where cash came from and went over a period
Key Takeaways
- 82% of startups fail from cash flow problems.
- Profitability ≠ cash flow. Timing of payments matters.
- The 3 statements are interconnected — learn all three.
- Burn rate and runway are your survival metrics.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is cash flow more important than profitability for startups?▼
Answer: You can be profitable on paper but still run out of cash (timing of payments)
Revenue recognition (P&L) and cash receipt are different. You might invoice €100K but not receive payment for 90 days. Meanwhile, salaries are due monthly.
What does "burn rate" measure?▼
Answer: How fast you're spending cash (net monthly cash outflow)
Burn rate = net cash spent per month. Runway = Cash / Burn Rate = months of survival.
A company with €500K cash and €50K/month burn rate has how many months of runway?▼
Answer: 10 months
€500K / €50K per month = 10 months. You should start fundraising when you have 6+ months of runway.