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The 5 SaaS KPIs Investors Actually Want to See 

If you’re an early-stage SaaS founder getting ready to talk to investors, you’re probably starting to sweat. 

Your pitch deck is killer. The demo is locked in. Now it’s time to make sure the books are ready too. 

Investors don’t expect perfection from early-stage SaaS companies, but they do expect clarity. And that clarity comes from a small set of SaaS KPIs that tell a very specific story about growth, efficiency, and risk. 

Let’s talk about the five SaaS metrics investors care about most, how they’re actually calculated, and where founders (and non-SaaS bookkeepers) tend to get it wrong.

1. Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)

You’re probably saying DUH. Of course it’s Monthly Recurring Revenue. Yes, this is obvious but simple? No.

MRR is the backbone of SaaS metrics. Investors will anchor everything to it: growth, burn, runway, valuation multiples.

What Investors Want to See

How to Calculate it

MRR = Sum of all active subscription revenue for a given month

Common Mistakes

If your MRR comes from a Stripe dashboard export and not your accounting system, investors will notice.

2. Net Revenue Retention (NRR)

Ah yes, the “quiet killer” metric.

NRR tells investors whether your existing customers are becoming more valuable over time or quietly leaking revenue.

This metric matters more than logo growth for many investors, especially post-seed.

How to Calculate it

NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion - Contraction - Churn) ÷ Starting MRR

What Investors are Looking for

Common Mistakes

Not paying attention to NRR is like trying to fill a leaky bucket. You can patch the holes, but only if you know where they are. This is often the moment founders realize they need help.

3. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

CAC is one of the most misunderstood SaaS metrics. Why? Not because it’s complicated, but because the books may not be capturing sales and marketing spend correctly or consistently.

How to calculate your CAC

CAC = Total Sales & Marketing Spend ÷ New Customers Acquired

What Should be Included

What Usually Goes Wrong

If your CAC is suspiciously low, investors will assume it’s wrong. And they’re usually right.

4. LTV (Lifetime Value)

(Only meaningful if churn rates are accurate.)

LTV only works if churn is accurate. Garbage churn data = garbage LTV.

Basic Formula

LTV = ARPA ÷ Gross Churn Rate

What Investors Want

Red (or Yellow) Flags

This is where SaaS bookkeeping and SaaS analytics have to agree or your story falls apart fast.

5. Burn Rate & Runway

Well, growth doesn’t matter if you’re about to run out of cash. Investors care deeply about how fast you’re burning cash, and whether you actually know the answer.

How to Calculate Burn

Net Burn = Cash Outflows - Cash Inflows

Runway = Cash Balance ÷ Net Burn

What Investors are Watching

This is often where founders discover their books are months behind, expense categorization is sloppy, or accruals don’t exist at all. None of that inspires confidence. Investors want to know their money is funding growth, not going down the drain.

Why Funding Falls Apart Without SaaS-Specific Bookkeeping

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Most bookkeeping systems are not built for SaaS metrics. Your average bookkeeper may not be trained to support investor-grade reporting.

That’s why founders run into problems like:

By the time you’re fundraising, your books aren’t just a compliance exercise. They’re part of your pitch.

Confidently Deliver What SaaS Investors Want

You don’t need a perfect data room.

You don’t need GAAP-level complexity on day one.

But You Do Need

If your current bookkeeping setup can’t support these metrics, it’s not “good enough for now.”

Schedule a call with our team today if you are looking to work with SaaS-specific bookkeepers who know how to turn MRR, NRR, CAC, and burn into metrics investors trust.