Every founder knows the pitch deck drill – TAM slides, traction graphs, a founder story that lands just right. But seasoned investors will tell you the real due diligence starts the moment they open your data room. That’s where the narrative meets reality. And for most early-stage startups, that reality is messier than their deck suggests.
At Chhota CFO, we work with founders at the seed and Series A stage every day. Here’s what investors are actually scrutinising and what financial clarity can mean for your raise.
- Unit Economics – The Non-Negotiable
Before anything else, investors want to know if your business actually makes money at the unit level. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC), Lifetime Value (LTV), and the LTV:CAC ratio are table stakes. A ratio below 3:1 raises immediate flags. Payback period matters too, if you’re recovering CAC in 18+ months, that’s a cash flow risk investors will price in.
Gross margin is equally critical. SaaS businesses are expected to operate north of 60-70%. D2C brands have different benchmarks, but the point is the same – investors compare your margins to category norms immediately. If you don’t know yours, that’s the first problem to fix. - Revenue Quality and Predictability
Not all revenue is equal. Investors break down your MRR or ARR to assess churn rate, net revenue retention (NRR), and the mix between recurring and one-time income. An NRR above 100% is a signal that your existing customers are expanding and that’s worth more than headline growth numbers.
Revenue concentration is another red flag investors hunt for. If two customers account for 60% of your revenue, that’s a risk and they will find it. Clean, segmented revenue reporting shows investors you understand your own business. - A Clean, Undisputed Cap Table
Cap table chaos is one of the fastest ways to kill a deal. Investors need to see exactly who owns what – founders, early angels, ESOP pools, convertible notes, and SAFEs. Any ambiguity around vesting schedules, co-founder equity splits, or uncancelled shares from departed employees creates legal complexity that slows or terminates rounds.
A well-maintained cap table also signals founder sophistication. If you can’t clearly explain your dilution history, investors start asking harder questions about governance. - Cash Flow Visibility and Burn Rate
Investors want to understand your runway – not just how much cash is in the bank today, but how long it lasts at current burn, and what assumptions your projections are built on. Gross burn vs. net burn should be clearly distinguishable. A startup burning ₹30L/month with ₹20L in revenue has a very different story to tell than one burning the same amount with no incoming cash.
The 18-month rule is a useful benchmark where investors typically want to see that the round you’re raising gives you at least 18 months of runway post-close. - Financial Hygiene in the Data Room
Audited or reviewed financials carry significant weight, especially at Series A. At minimum, investors expect reconciled books, up-to-date MIS reports, and clean P&L statements. Unreconciled accounts, missing invoices, or accruals that don’t match bank statements are due-diligence killers. If your books aren’t investor-ready, the deal timeline stretches and deals that stretch often die.
Financial Clarity Is a Competitive Advantage
The best founders we work with don’t just know their pitch – they know their numbers cold. They can answer “What’s your net margin?” and “What does it cost to acquire a customer in Tier 2 cities?” without opening a spreadsheet.
At Chhota CFO, we help growth-stage startups and MSMEs build that kind of financial backbone from clean MIS reporting and unit economics tracking to cap table management and data room preparation. Investor-readiness isn’t a one-time event. It’s a state of financial health you build and maintain.
Because when the right investor asks the right question, the worst answer isn’t the wrong number. It’s “I’ll have to get back to you.”
