Early hardware businesses often report vanity signals because they feel easier to defend. The stronger story usually sits in fewer numbers: revenue quality, gross margin, acquisition efficiency, payback, and runway.
The core metrics to watch
| Metric | What it reveals | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly revenue | Demand converted into cash generation | Shows the scale of the commercial engine |
| Gross margin | Quality of each sale after unit cost | Weak margin makes scale less useful |
| CAC | Cost of acquiring a customer | Tests whether demand can be repeated efficiently |
| Payback | How quickly gross profit recovers acquisition cost | Shows whether growth is buying strength or just spend |
| Runway | How long the current cash can support the business | Defines how much time exists to improve the model |
A business with rising revenue but weak gross margin and poor payback may look busy while becoming more fragile. Investors usually see that contradiction quickly.
The Investor Metrics and KPIs tool helps turn monthly sales, unit economics, burn, and acquisition assumptions into a clearer board-level or investor-facing view.
