name: unit-economics
description: Analyze unit economics for PE targets — ARR cohorts, LTV/CAC, net retention, payback periods, revenue quality, and margin waterfall. Essential for software/SaaS, recurring revenue, and subscription businesses. Use when evaluating revenue quality, building a cohort analysis, or assessing customer economics. Triggers on "unit economics", "cohort analysis", "ARR analysis", "LTV CAC", "net retention", "revenue quality", or "customer economics".
Unit Economics Analysis
Workflow
Step 1: Identify Business Model
Determine the revenue model to tailor the analysis:
- SaaS / Subscription: ARR, net retention, cohorts
- Recurring services: Contract value, renewal rates, upsell
- Transaction / usage-based: Revenue per transaction, volume trends, take rate
- Hybrid: Break down by revenue stream
Step 2: Core Metrics
ARR / Revenue Quality
- ARR bridge: Beginning ARR → New → Expansion → Contraction → Churn → Ending ARR
- ARR by cohort: Vintage analysis — how does each annual cohort retain and grow?
- Revenue concentration: Top 10/20/50 customers as % of total
- Revenue by type: Recurring vs. non-recurring vs. professional services
- Contract structure: ACV distribution, multi-year %, auto-renewal %
Customer Economics
- CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost): Total S&M spend / new customers acquired
- LTV (Lifetime Value): (ARPU × Gross Margin) / Churn Rate
- LTV:CAC ratio: Target >3x for healthy businesses
- CAC payback period: Months to recover acquisition cost
- Blended vs. segmented: Break down by customer segment (enterprise vs. SMB vs. mid-market)
Retention & Expansion
- Gross retention: % of beginning ARR retained (excludes expansion)
- Net retention (NDR): % of beginning ARR retained including expansion
- Logo churn: % of customers lost
- Dollar churn: % of revenue lost (often different from logo churn)
- Expansion rate: Upsell + cross-sell as % of beginning ARR
Cohort Analysis
Build a cohort matrix showing:
Cohort
Year 0
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
2020
$1.0M
$1.1M
$1.2M
$1.1M
2021
$1.5M
$1.7M
$1.8M
2022
$2.0M
$2.3M
2023
$3.0M
Show both absolute $ and indexed (Year 0 = 100%) views.
Margin Waterfall
- Revenue → Gross Profit → Contribution Margin → EBITDA
- Fully loaded unit economics: what does it cost to acquire, serve, and retain a customer?
- Gross margin by revenue stream (subscription vs. services vs. other)
Step 3: Benchmarking
Compare unit economics to relevant benchmarks:
- SaaS Rule of 40: Growth rate + EBITDA margin > 40%
- SaaS Magic Number: Net new ARR / prior period S&M spend > 0.75x
- NDR benchmarks: Best-in-class >120%, good >110%, concerning <100%
- LTV:CAC: Best-in-class >5x, good >3x, concerning <2x
- Gross retention: Best-in-class >95%, good >90%, concerning <85%
- CAC payback: Best-in-class <12mo, good <18mo, concerning >24mo
Step 4: Revenue Quality Score
Synthesize into a revenue quality assessment:
Factor
Score (1-5)
Notes
Recurring %
Net retention
Customer concentration
Cohort stability
Growth durability
Margin profile
Overall
Step 5: Output
- Excel workbook with ARR bridge, cohort matrix, unit economics dashboard
- Summary slide with key metrics and benchmarks
- Red flags and areas for further diligence
Important Notes
- Always ask for raw customer-level data if available — aggregate metrics can hide problems
- NDR above 100% can mask high gross churn if expansion is strong enough — always show both
- Cohort analysis is the single most important view for revenue quality — push for this data
- Differentiate between contracted ARR and actual recognized revenue
- For usage-based models, focus on consumption trends and expansion patterns rather than traditional ARR metrics
- Professional services revenue should be evaluated separately — it's not recurring and margins are typically lower