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Revenue Model Builder

Project your monthly revenue over 18 months using starting MRR, growth rate, and churn. See how compounding works for and against you.

From Raise Ready by Yanni Papoutsi

Investors don't ask "how much revenue do you have today?" They ask "what will your revenue be in 18 months?" A revenue model answers that question. It shows how growth, churn, and expansion compound into sustainable revenue trajectory.

The Revenue Model Builder projects your MRR forward 18 months by applying your growth rate (new customer revenue), churn rate (lost revenue), and expansion rate (upsells from existing customers) each month. See exactly when you hit key milestones—$100K MRR, $1M ARR, and beyond. This is the model every investor will ask to see.

Project Your Revenue

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MRR at Month 6
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MRR at Month 12
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MRR at Month 18
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ARR at Month 18

How to Read Your Revenue Projection

Your 18-month revenue model shows three components each month: (1) New revenue—revenue from newly acquired customers, (2) Churn—revenue lost from customer cancellations, and (3) Expansion—revenue from upsells and add-ons to existing customers. The net result is your month-to-month MRR. Your ARR at month 18 is your projected annual revenue.

MRR Growth Rate Benchmarks by Stage

Growth expectations change as you scale. Earlier-stage startups with smaller bases can sustain higher growth rates. Here are investor expectations:

Pre-Seed
15-20% MoM
Prove rapid growth
Seed
10-15% MoM
Sustain momentum
Series A
7-10% MoM
Scale efficiently
Series B
5-7% MoM
Maintain at scale

Understanding Churn's Impact

Churn compounds in your model and becomes the silent killer of revenue growth. A 5% monthly churn rate means you lose 5% of your customer base every single month. Even with 10% new revenue growth, if churn is 7%, your net growth is only 3% monthly—which means your business is barely growing despite acquiring new customers.

The Math of Churn

Expansion Revenue and Upsells

Expansion revenue is the highest-margin growth because you don't need to pay CAC again. An expansion rate of 2% monthly means you're generating 2% of your current MRR as additional revenue from existing customers. This compiles to roughly 26% annual expansion—a huge growth driver.

Why Expansion Matters to Investors

Common Revenue Modeling Mistakes

Forgetting About Churn

Many founders build models assuming every customer you acquire stays forever. In reality, even a 3% churn rate compounds into significant revenue loss. Always model churn. If you don't know your churn rate yet, use industry benchmarks and adjust as you collect data.

Overestimating Growth Rate

Founders often assume they'll maintain their current growth rate forever. In reality, growth rates decline as your base grows. A startup with $10K MRR growing 15% monthly will hit $40K MRR in 9 months. But maintaining 15% growth at $100K MRR is much harder. Build multiple scenarios with declining growth rates.

Ignoring Seasonality

Many businesses have seasonal patterns—higher growth in Q1, dips in August, spikes before holidays. A linear month-to-month model misses these patterns. If you have seasonal data, model it. If not, flag it as a risk in your narrative to investors.

Undervaluing Expansion

Many B2B SaaS companies focus only on new customer acquisition and ignore expansion. But expansion revenue has higher margins and lower risk. If you're not measuring and modeling expansion, you're leaving money on the table and missing a key growth lever.

Frequently Asked Questions

A revenue model projects your MRR (monthly recurring revenue) forward by applying growth, churn, and expansion rates each month. Start with your current MRR, define your monthly growth rate (new customer revenue), monthly churn rate (lost revenue), and expansion rate (upsells from existing customers). Apply these rates month-to-month to forecast 12-18 months of revenue. This model becomes the foundation of your financial projections shown to investors.
Growth rates vary by stage: Pre-Seed founders should demonstrate 15-20% MoM growth to prove traction, Seed-stage startups 10-15% MoM to sustain momentum, Series A companies 7-10% MoM to show efficient scaling, and Series B companies 5-7% MoM to maintain growth at larger scale. Higher growth at early stages proves product-market fit. At scale, consistent single-digit growth still impresses investors.
Churn compounds monthly and is your primary headwind to growth. A 5% monthly churn rate means you lose 5% of your customer base every month. Even with 10% new revenue growth, if churn is 7%, your net growth is only 3% monthly—your business barely grows. Keep churn low and model it accurately. Enterprise SaaS targets 1-2% churn. SaaS generally targets 3-5%. Above 5% is a serious problem.
Expansion revenue comes from upsells, add-ons, and cross-sells to existing customers. For example, a $1,000/month customer buying $100 of add-ons generates $100 monthly expansion revenue. Expansion rates of 2-5% monthly indicate a strong product with good customer satisfaction. Expansion revenue is the highest-margin growth because you don't pay CAC again and don't depend on new customer acquisition.
Investors focus on four things: (1) Growth rate—are you accelerating or decelerating? (2) Churn—is it low and stable? (3) Expansion—is your existing customer base growing in value? (4) Realistic assumptions—do your numbers align with industry benchmarks? A model showing stable, healthy growth with low churn and positive expansion signals a business with durable, scalable unit economics.

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