A practical guide to the financial ratios tracked in the KPI Dashboard tab, what they mean, and when to worry.
These answer: "Can we pay our bills?"
Current Ratio = Total Current Assets ÷ Total Current Liabilities
What it measures: Your ability to pay obligations due within 12 months using assets that can be converted to cash within 12 months.
| Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| > 2.0 | Comfortable — plenty of cushion |
| 1.5 - 2.0 | Healthy — standard for most businesses |
| 1.0 - 1.5 | Tight — watch carefully |
| < 1.0 | Danger — liabilities exceed liquid assets |
In the sample data: Current ratio is 3.32 by December, showing strong liquidity growth throughout the year (started at 2.41 in January).
When to worry: A declining current ratio, especially below 1.5, means you might struggle to pay bills on time. Consider slowing spending or accelerating collections.
Quick Ratio = (Current Assets - Inventory) ÷ Current Liabilities
Why exclude inventory? Inventory can't always be sold quickly at full value. The quick ratio shows what you could pay if you needed cash *tomorrow*.
| Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| > 1.5 | Very strong |
| 1.0 - 1.5 | Healthy |
| < 1.0 | May need to sell inventory or borrow to cover short-term obligations |
In the sample data: Quick ratio closely tracks current ratio because inventory is a small portion of assets. If you're a product business with significant inventory, the gap between these two ratios matters more.
These answer: "Are we making money efficiently?"
Gross Margin = Gross Profit ÷ Revenue × 100
Measures pricing effectiveness and cost control on direct costs.
Industry benchmarks:
In the sample data: ~66% — healthy for a service/product hybrid business.
Net Margin = Net Income ÷ Revenue × 100
The true bottom-line profitability after ALL costs.
Healthy ranges for small businesses:
In the sample data: 10-17% range, averaging ~13%.
Operating Margin = Operating Income ÷ Revenue × 100
Profitability from core operations, before interest and taxes. This is the purest measure of business efficiency because it excludes financing decisions and tax situations.
These answer: "How well are we using our resources?"
AR Days = (Accounts Receivable ÷ Monthly Revenue) × 30
What it measures: Average number of days between invoicing and getting paid.
| Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| < 30 days | Excellent collections |
| 30-45 days | Normal for B2B |
| 45-60 days | Slow — tighten payment terms |
| > 60 days | Problem — cash flow risk |
In the sample data: ~34 days on average. Slightly above the 30-day target but manageable.
How to improve:
Burn Rate = Total Operating Expenses (monthly)
What it measures: How much cash you spend per month on operations, regardless of revenue.
Why it matters: If revenue drops to zero tomorrow, burn rate tells you how fast your cash reserves deplete.
Months of Runway = Cash Balance ÷ Monthly Burn Rate
In the sample data: December burn rate = $41,750. Cash balance = $112,173. Runway = 2.7 months with zero revenue. This is a healthy buffer for an established business.
MoM Growth = (This Month Revenue - Last Month Revenue) ÷ Last Month Revenue × 100
Target for small businesses: 3-5% month-over-month (43-80% annualized).
In the sample data: Volatile, ranging from -10.8% to +13.8%. This is common for service businesses where project timing creates lumpy revenue. Look at the trailing 3-month average for a smoother signal.
Recurring % = Recurring Revenue ÷ Total Revenue × 100
Why it matters: Recurring revenue is predictable, reducing cash flow anxiety. Investors value it highly.
Targets:
In the sample data: 17-20%, indicating room to grow recurring revenue streams.
Run this monthly:
| Ratio | Healthy? | Action if Not |
|---|---|---|
| Current Ratio > 1.5 | ✅/❌ | Slow spending or accelerate collections |
| Net Margin > 10% | ✅/❌ | Cut expenses or raise prices |
| AR Days < 45 | ✅/❌ | Tighten payment terms |
| Burn Rate < 60% of Revenue | ✅/❌ | Reduce fixed costs |
| Revenue Growth > 0% (3mo avg) | ✅/❌ | Invest in sales/marketing |
A current ratio of 1.8 that's been improving for 6 months is better than a 2.5 that's been declining. Always look at the direction, not just the snapshot.
Don't compare a consulting firm's margins to a retailer's. Use these resources for benchmarks:
| KPI | Cell Formula |
|---|---|
| Gross Margin | ='01-PnL'!K13 |
| Net Margin | ='01-PnL'!X13/'01-PnL'!E13 |
| Current Ratio | ='03-Balance Sheet'!G6/'03-Balance Sheet'!G14 |
| Quick Ratio | =('03-Balance Sheet'!G6-'03-Balance Sheet'!G4)/'03-Balance Sheet'!G14 |
| AR Days | =('03-Balance Sheet'!G3/'01-PnL'!E13)*30 |
| Burn Rate | ='01-PnL'!T13 |
| Revenue Growth | =('01-PnL'!E13-'01-PnL'!E12)/'01-PnL'!E12 |
| Recurring % | ='04-Revenue'!M5/'04-Revenue'!M9 |
A plain-language guide to understanding your Profit & Loss statement and using it to make better business decisions.
A Profit & Loss statement (also called an Income Statement) shows how much money your business earned, how much it spent, and what's left over — for a specific time period.
Think of it as an answer to: "Did we make money this month?"
Revenue (money coming in)
- Cost of Goods Sold (direct costs to deliver your product/service)
= Gross Profit (revenue minus direct costs)
- Operating Expenses (overhead: rent, salaries, marketing, etc.)
= Operating Income (profit from core business operations)
- Interest & Taxes
= Net Income (the true bottom line)
Each level tells you something different:
| Line | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Revenue | Is the business growing? |
| Gross Profit | Are we pricing correctly? |
| Operating Income | Are we running the business efficiently? |
| Net Income | Are we actually profitable after all costs? |
What it means: For every dollar of revenue, how much is left after paying for the thing you sold?
In the sample data, gross margin is ~66%. This means for every $1 earned, $0.34 goes to direct costs and $0.66 is available to cover overhead and profit.
Red flag: If gross margin is declining month over month, your costs are rising faster than your prices. Either raise prices or find cheaper suppliers.
What it means: After paying for everything needed to run the business (rent, people, marketing), what's left?
In the sample data, operating margin ranges from 14% to 23%, averaging around 18%.
What it means: The true percentage of revenue that becomes profit.
After interest payments and tax provisions, the sample business keeps 10-17% of revenue as profit.
Look at the "Total Revenue" row across months:
The sample shows revenue ranging from $71K to $96K, with a general upward trend.
Compare Total Operating Expenses month-over-month:
OpEx Growth Rate vs Revenue Growth RateScan the expense tracker for unusual spikes. In the sample:
1. Look at Operating Income — that's your surplus after current expenses
2. A new hire costs salary + benefits + taxes (typically 1.25-1.4x the base salary)
3. If Operating Income > (Annual salary × 1.3 ÷ 12), you can afford it without going negative
Example from sample: December Operating Income = $15,250/month. A hire at $60K/year = $5,000/month (×1.3 = $6,500/month). Yes, affordable.
1. Calculate your current marketing ROI: New Revenue Attributable to Marketing ÷ Marketing Spend
2. If ROI > 3x, increasing spend is usually worthwhile
3. Model it: add the proposed increase to Marketing & Advertising, see how it affects Operating Income
4. Make sure it doesn't push you cash-negative (check Cash Flow tab)
1. If Gross Margin is declining while Revenue grows, you're likely discounting too much
2. If Gross Margin is stable but Operating Margin is declining, overhead is the problem (not pricing)
3. Target: Gross Margin should cover all operating expenses with 10%+ left over
1. Mixing capital and operating expenses — A new laptop is an asset (Balance Sheet), not an expense (P&L). Depreciation is the P&L impact.
2. Forgetting owner compensation — If you're not paying yourself a market salary, your true profit is lower than it appears.
3. Ignoring seasonality — Don't panic at a bad month if your business is naturally cyclical. Look at trailing 3-month or 12-month averages.
4. Comparing to the wrong benchmark — A 15% net margin is great for a services business but terrible for a SaaS company charging recurring fees. Know your industry.
After reviewing each month's P&L, ask:
If any answer is "no," investigate before the next month closes.