There is a common pattern in early fundraising conversations: a founder prepares a thorough business plan, gets into a meeting with an investor, and discovers that the investor wants to talk about the financial model instead. Or they share the model, and the investor responds with questions the model was not built to answer. Understanding what each document does and when each is appropriate saves you from the wrong preparation for the wrong conversation.
The Difference Between a Business Plan and a Financial Model
A business plan is a narrative document. It describes the problem you are solving, the market you are addressing, your product, your team, your go-to-market strategy, and why your company is positioned to win. It is strategic and qualitative. It answers the question: what are you building and why should it succeed?
A financial model is a quantitative document built on assumptions. It translates your strategic claims into numbers: how many customers will you acquire and at what cost, what will each customer pay and for how long, how many people will you need to hire and when, and what does cash flow look like at each stage. A financial model does not describe what you intend to do -- it tests whether the math works if your assumptions are roughly correct.
Both documents have value. They answer different questions and serve different audiences at different stages of the fundraising process.
What Investors Want at Each Stage
At the pre-seed stage, investors are evaluating the founding team, the size of the problem, and early evidence of market demand. The financial model required at this stage is relatively simple: clear unit economics assumptions (what does it cost to acquire a customer, what does each customer pay, what is your gross margin), and a basic projection showing how the business scales if your assumptions hold. A 20-tab Excel model is not appropriate here and may actually signal that a founder is modeling instead of building.
At the seed stage, investors expect a 3-year financial model with documented assumptions. Revenue projections should be tied to specific growth drivers (marketing spend, sales headcount, conversion rates) rather than a growth rate applied to prior-year revenue. The model should show monthly granularity for at least the first 12 to 18 months. Assumptions should be explicit, defensible, and based on actual early data where available.
At Series A and beyond, investors want a fully integrated bottoms-up financial model with monthly detail, a coherent headcount plan tied to revenue milestones, and integrated financial statements: profit and loss, balance sheet, and cash flow statement. The model should be stress-tested with scenario analysis. At this stage, a model that breaks when you change one assumption is a model that cannot survive an investor's due diligence process.
What Goes Into a Fundable Financial Model
The components that investors look for in a well-built model are consistent across most stages, though the level of detail varies.
Revenue model: How do you charge (subscription, transaction fee, usage-based, project-based), who pays (B2B or B2C, enterprise or SMB), and what are the assumptions about customer acquisition growth. The revenue model should be built bottoms-up from the number of customers times revenue per customer, not top-down from a percentage of the market.
Unit economics: Customer acquisition cost (CAC), lifetime value (LTV), LTV/CAC ratio, and payback period. These numbers are the foundation of the fundraising conversation because they tell investors whether your business model is economically viable at scale. Gross margin matters here too -- a business with 20% gross margin faces a fundamentally different path to profitability than one with 70% gross margin.
Headcount plan: A list of every role you intend to hire, when you intend to hire them, and what they will cost in total compensation. The headcount plan should be tied to specific revenue milestones or operational triggers: "we hire a second salesperson when we hit $X in ARR" or "we hire a third engineer when product development reaches phase two." Disconnected headcount plans that do not explain the business logic behind each hire are a common model weakness.
Cash runway: How many months of runway do you have at your current burn rate, and how does that change at different growth scenarios? Investors want to know when you will need to raise again, and they want the model to show that you have thought carefully about the answer.
Scenario analysis: Base case (your realistic operating plan), upside case (what happens if growth is 50% faster than expected), and downside case (what happens if growth is 50% slower). Downside scenarios are the ones investors care most about: they reveal whether the business survives a miss, and what the worst-case outcome looks like for their capital.
The Most Common Mistakes in Startup Financial Models
Understanding what investors scrutinize helps you build a model that survives the conversation.
Top-down market sizing applied to revenue projections. "The market is $10 billion and we plan to capture 1% of it within three years" is not a revenue model. It is an aspiration. Investors have seen this thousands of times. Build your revenue projections from the ground up: specific acquisition channels, specific conversion rates, specific customer counts.
Hockey-stick growth with no explanation. If your model shows flat revenue for 18 months and then 40% month-over-month growth for two years, investors will want to know exactly what changes at month 19. "We expect the product to catch on" is not an answer. If you genuinely believe inflection is coming, explain the mechanism: a product launch, a sales hire, a channel that is ramping.
No scenario analysis. A single projection tells an investor your best guess. It does not tell them what happens if your best guess is wrong by 30%, which it almost certainly will be. Models without scenarios feel like the founder has not seriously considered risk, and that makes investors uncomfortable.
Ignoring burn rate during scaling. Many models show revenue growth with insufficient attention to the cash required to fund that growth. Hiring ahead of revenue, investing in infrastructure, and paying for customer acquisition all require cash that has to come from somewhere. The cash flow statement is the part of the model that makes these timing issues visible.
Not tying headcount to outcomes. A headcount plan that says "we will hire 10 people in year two" without explaining what those people will do, or what the company achieves by having them, is not useful to an investor. Every hire should have a clear purpose and should connect to a specific revenue or operational outcome.
What Investors Actually Do With Your Model
When a sophisticated investor receives a financial model, they do not read it top to bottom and evaluate whether they agree with your projections. They change your assumptions. They cut your growth rate in half, double your CAC, shrink your gross margin by 10 points, and see what the business looks like in those scenarios. If the model produces zero or negative equity value under modest stress, that is a problem.
This is why the defensibility of your assumptions matters more than the impressiveness of your projections. An investor who can poke three holes in your model in five minutes has learned something important about how you think about your business. An investor who changes assumptions and finds that the business still makes sense has learned something different.
How a Finance Expert Improves Your Model
A fractional CFO or finance expert who has worked with companies at your stage knows the questions that are coming before you are in the room. They know which assumption categories investors push back on most, how to structure the headcount plan so that it tells a coherent story, and how to build scenario analysis that actually stress-tests the model rather than just showing three slightly different versions of optimism.
They also know what a fundable model looks like because they have seen what gets funded and what does not. That pattern recognition is worth more than any template.
For more context on working with finance professionals, see the founder's complete guide to financial expertise. If you are considering engaging a fractional CFO to help build your model, the questions to ask before hiring a fractional CFO will help you evaluate candidates. You can also browse finance experts directly through our finance category.
