Find us elsewhere

Small Business Finance Advice Colorado Springs CO

Cash is king for a startup business, so you need to conserve it carefully. Managing the “burn rate” at which you consume cash in your new business is the key. Here’s some advice about how to make sure your startup business’ cash doesn’t run out on you in Colorado Springs.

Deborah Hoskins
Pikes Peak Financial Planning LLC

719.578.3309
102 S. Tejon Street Suite 1100
Colorado Springs, CO
Mary Brooks
Brooks Financial Planning

(719) 492-1833
34 South Sierra Madre Street
Colorado Springs, CO
Craig Carnick
Carnick & Company

(719) 579-8000
675 Southpointe Court, Suite 102
Colorado Springs, CO
Jane Young
Pinnacle Financial Concepts, Inc.

(719) 260-9800 Ext: 4
7025 Tall Oak Drive, Suite 210
Colorado Springs, CO
Deborah Hoskins
Pikes Peak Financial Planning LLC

(719) 332-4856
2545 Lake Meadow Drive
Monument, CO
David Forbes
Petra Financial Advisors, Inc.

(719) 636-9000
2 North Cascade, Suite 720
Colorado Springs, CO
Connie Hancock
Petra Financial Advisors, Inc.

(719) 636-9000
2 North Cascade, Suite 720
Colorado Springs, CO
Steven King
King Financial Planning & Management, LLC

(719) 302-1088
2 N. Cascade Avenue, Suite 1100
Colorado Springs, CO
Susan Strasbaugh
Strasbaugh Financial Advisory, Inc.

(719) 265-4600
8580 Scarborough Drive, Suite 145
Colorado Springs, CO
Linda Leitz
Pinnacle Financial Concepts, Inc.

(719) 260-9800 Ext: 4
7025 Tall Oak Drive, Suite 210
Colorado Springs, CO
Data Provided by:
 

Controlling Your Startup Business "Burn Rate"

Cash isn’t like calories. Those, you want to burn up fast. But when it comes to the cash consumed by your startup business, the slower your “burn rate,” the better.

Knowing the burn rate in your new business and managing it well will tell you – and indicate to your investors – when you’ll need more investment or a loan, or when you will break even and begin to make a profit.

If you forget to check this compass within your new business, you could run out of cash before you reach those milestones – and find yourself burnt out of business.

Learn to calculate the burn rate for your startup business

Simply put, your burn rate is how much capital you go through each month. When you start up, you begin with a specific amount of capital – let’s say $100,000 as an easy example. You decide that it takes $10,000 a month to operate your new business, with no revenues projected during the first year. That means your burn rate is $10,000 a month. In this example, you’d be in trouble if you don’t start making money by your 10th month in business.

As a rule, you need to review your burn rate every month, just as you do the components of the burn-rate equation: expenses and income.

“It’s no different for a company than it is for an individual: How much do I make a month, and how long is it until payday?” says David Brophy, a professor of venture capital at the University of Michigan. “It’s as old as dirt and as fundamental.”

Carefully monitor your burn rate

Copyright 2009 StartupNation, LLC

Click here to read more from StartupNation