Most business owners can tell you their revenue. Ask them for their gross profit margin and the room gets quiet. That’s not a character flaw, running a business demands extraordinary breadth. But there’s a real cost to financial blind spots. With 51% of small employer firms citing uneven cash flows as a top challenge, guessing is a risk you can’t afford. Here are the five numbers to know cold.
- Gross Profit Margin
What’s left of each revenue dollar after paying direct delivery costs. Formula:
(Revenue – COGS) / Revenue × 100.
This is the oxygen of your business model, a shrinking margin signals pricing pressure or rising costs months before they hit your income statement. Professional services firms should target 50–70%+; product businesses, 30–50%.
- Operating Cash Flow (OCF)
The actual cash your operations generate, not accounting profit. A business can look profitable on paper while running out of cash.
Accrual accounting records revenue when earned, not when collected. If OCF is consistently negative while your P&L looks fine, you have a structural problem that won’t resolve itself.
- Net Profit Margin
The percentage of revenue that becomes real profit after every expense, interest, taxes, depreciation, all of it. Formula:
Net Income / Revenue × 100.
This is your scorecard. A company growing at 30% annually with a declining net margin is on a treadmill, running faster without getting further ahead.
- Burn Rate
How much cash your business consumes each month. Nearly 4 in 10 small business owners have less than one month of operating expenses in reserve, that’s a crisis in slow motion, not a safety margin. Knowing your burn rate gives you the lead time to act before a liquidity problem becomes a payroll emergency.
A business burning $80,000/month with $640,000 in the bank has 8 months of runway. That’s the number your finance team should be tracking weekly, before it becomes a crisis, not after.
- Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
How long it takes customers to pay you. Formula:
(Accounts Receivable / Total Credit Sales) × Days.
DSO above 45 days creates serious cash pressure even in profitable businesses. Cutting DSO from 60 to 30 days frees significant working capital, without a single new dollar of revenue.
Knowing these five metrics is the starting point, not the finish line. What separates high-performing businesses is a financial system that tracks them consistently, surfaces trends early, and connects them to strategic decisions. Most growing companies don’t build that system until something breaks.
Avoid These Mistakes
- Reviewing financials monthly when weekly cash monitoring is what’s needed
- Confusing your bank balance with financial health
- Treating revenue growth as a proxy for profitability
- Benchmarking against nothing, know where you stand in your industry
Key Takeaways
- Gross Profit Margin, OCF, Net Profit Margin, Burn Rate, and DSO, know all five
- Revenue without margin context is a vanity metric
- DSO reduction is one of the fastest cash flow improvements available
- Real-time financial visibility is now a competitive advantage, not a luxury
At ARA, we help founder-led businesses build the financial visibility and decision-making infrastructure that drives sustainable growth. If you’re not confident in these five numbers today, that’s the conversation to start.