The One Metric That Actually Matters
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Startups drown in metrics. DAU, MAU, CAC, LTV, churn rate, conversion rate, engagement score, NPS...
We build dashboards. Run A/B tests. Obsess over percentage points.
Meanwhile, the business dies.
Here's what I learned the hard way: most metrics are vanity. Only one predicts survival.
The Metric No One Wants to Face
Runway.
How many months until you run out of money?
That's it. Everything else is noise.
You can have amazing engagement, stellar NPS, hockey-stick user growth—but if your runway hits zero, you're done.
No matter how good your metrics look.
Why We Avoid It
Because runway is terrifying. It's a countdown timer. Every day, it shrinks.
Other metrics feel productive. "We improved retention by 3%!" That's progress, right?
Maybe. But if you've got 4 months of runway and that retention bump doesn't translate to revenue or investment, it doesn't matter.
Runway forces honesty. It asks: How long can we keep doing this?
Most founders would rather optimize conversion funnels than face that question.
The Runway Lens
Once you accept runway as your north star, every decision gets clearer:
- That new feature? Only if it extends runway (revenue or fundraising signal)
- That hire? Only if their impact > their cost to runway
- That marketing campaign? Does it bring paying customers before runway ends?
- That partnership? Will it close before we run out of time?
Suddenly, priorities crystallize. Half your roadmap becomes obviously wrong.
The Exception
There's one scenario where runway doesn't matter: you're profitable.
If revenue exceeds expenses, your runway is infinite. You can focus on other metrics because time is on your side.
But until you're profitable, runway is the only clock that matters.
How to Track It
Simple formula:
Runway = Cash in Bank / Monthly Burn Rate
Update it weekly. Put it at the top of every dashboard, every meeting, every decision doc.
Make it impossible to ignore.
What This Changes
When I made runway our primary metric, three things happened:
- We killed half our roadmap — features that didn't impact revenue or fundraising got cut
- We focused on paying customers — user acquisition without monetization stopped mattering
- We moved faster — when you can see the cliff, you stop debating and start sprinting
It wasn't comfortable. But it was clarifying.
The Real Question
Every startup metric tries to answer some version of: Are we building something people want?
Runway asks a harder question: Can we survive long enough to find out?
If the answer is no, nothing else matters.
Steve Ysreal Monas writes about entrepreneurship in The Lean Startup Blueprint and other books. More at stevemonas.com.
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