Pillar
Money decisions
Forecasting that doesn’t lie. Pricing that doesn’t apologize. Cash, capital, and the line items most owners avoid until they can’t.
Every money decision a founder makes lives somewhere between a forecast and a regret. The forecast is the version on the slide. The regret is the version the company actually paid for.
The pattern that produces the regret is consistent across companies, stages, and industries. Inputs that should be honest get bent toward the answer the room wants. A renewal that should have been derisked becomes the bridge that didn't hold. A line item that should have been cut at 12 months of runway becomes the layoff at six.
The essays below cover the mechanics — forecasting that doesn't lie, the four signals that fire before the bank balance does, the customer concentration nobody named, the deferred revenue you already spent. They are the money decisions the operator can still make. The ones you cannot is what makes them worth writing about.
Start here
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The cash collection cycle nobody owned
Invoices went out on the first. Money landed somewhere between day forty and day ninety. Nobody could explain the difference because nobody was watching it.
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The vendor contract that auto-renewed at forty percent more
Nobody opened the renewal email. The auto-renewal clause was on page eleven. The new rate hit the credit card on a Tuesday.
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The pipeline that was seventy percent won at twenty percent probability
Every deal on the board was marked 'commit.' Two-thirds of them slipped. The CRM was a wish list with a forecast column.
More on money decisions
- The unit economics spreadsheet nobody opened
- The discount that compounded into a business model
- The runway calculation that lied by six months
- The forecast got worse when it got bigger
- The raise that solved the wrong problem
- The Proposal Didn't Lose the Deal
- Four Green Metrics, One Red Quarter
- The Forecast Meeting
- Your Best Margin Is Your Worst Customer
- When You Can’t Compete on Price, Compete on Belief
- Smart Money Tips for Business Owners
- Why Wealthy People Spend Less Than You Think
- Real Company Valuation: Sales Over Funds Raised
- Best Time to Raise Capital for Your Business
- Embrace Success and Failure in Business