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.

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