---
name: evaluating-startup-business-models
language: en
description: Assesses startup viability through business model canvas analysis, unit economics validation, and market timing evaluation. Use when evaluating startup pitches, analyzing business model sustainability, or assessing product-market fit.
tags:
  - analysis
  - venture-capital
  - valuation
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Venture Capital
    - Seed/Series Investing
    - Startup Ecosystems
  document_types:
    - Evaluation Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
    - Assessment
---
# Evaluating Startup Business Models

## When To Use

- Screening a startup pitch deck or investment memo for fund consideration
- Performing diligence on business model sustainability before term sheet
- Comparing multiple deal opportunities within a sector thesis
- Reassessing portfolio company model evolution at follow-on decision points
- Advising founders on model weaknesses prior to fundraise

## Inputs To Gather

- **Pitch deck or investment memo** — value proposition, go-to-market, competitive landscape
- **Financial model or projections** — revenue build, cost structure, cash burn, runway
- **Unit economics data** — CAC, LTV, payback period, gross margin per cohort if available
- **Market sizing materials** — TAM/SAM/SOM methodology, bottom-up vs. top-down estimates
- **Product usage metrics** — retention curves, engagement data, NPS or activation rates
- **Cap table and prior funding history** — dilution context, investor quality, round terms
- **Competitive/comparable set** — direct competitors, adjacent incumbents, public comps if relevant

## Workflow

### 1. Business Model Canvas Decomposition

Break the model into its nine canvas elements and evaluate each:

- **Value Proposition**: Is the problem acute and frequent? Is the solution 10x better or merely incremental? Identify whether this is a vitamin vs. painkiller.
- **Customer Segments**: How narrowly defined is the beachhead? Is there evidence of segment-specific traction (not just broad aspiration)?
- **Channels**: Organic vs. paid mix. Evaluate channel concentration risk — dependence on a single platform (e.g., Meta ads, App Store) is a red flag.
- **Revenue Streams**: Recurring vs. transactional. Marketplace take rate vs. SaaS subscription vs. usage-based. Assess pricing power and expansion revenue potential.
- **Key Resources / Activities**: What is defensible — proprietary data, network effects, regulatory moats, switching costs? Rate moat strength as weak/moderate/strong.
- **Cost Structure**: Fixed vs. variable ratio. Identify whether the model has operating leverage (costs grow slower than revenue at scale).
- **Key Partnerships**: Dependency risk on any single partner for distribution, supply, or technology.

### 2. Unit Economics Validation

- **CAC Calculation**: Confirm whether CAC is fully loaded (includes sales salaries, tooling, content) or only paid media spend. Flag if blended across organic and paid. [VERIFY]
- **LTV Calculation**: Check discount rate assumptions, churn methodology (logo vs. revenue churn), and cohort vintage. LTV/CAC > 3x is baseline; confirm payback period < 18 months for capital-efficient models.
- **Gross Margin**: SaaS targets > 70%; marketplace > 50% of net revenue; hardware/physical goods models require clear path to 40%+. [VERIFY] against sector benchmarks.
- **Contribution Margin**: Calculate per-unit contribution after variable costs. If negative at current scale, assess the volume threshold to breakeven and whether the funding runway covers it.
- **Cohort Behavior**: Look for improving retention in recent cohorts (sign of product-market fit tightening) vs. degrading cohorts (sign of market saturation or quality decline).

### 3. Market Timing & Sizing Assessment

- **Why Now**: Identify the enabling catalyst — regulatory change, technology inflection, behavioral shift, cost curve crossing. Weak "why now" answers (e.g., "the market is big") are a negative signal.
- **TAM Validation**: Reject top-down-only sizing. Require a bottom-up build: number of target customers x realistic ACV = addressable market. Cross-check with comparable company revenue run rates.
- **Market Structure**: Winner-take-all vs. fragmented? Network-effect businesses justify higher entry valuations; fragmented markets demand clearer differentiation.
- **Timing Risk**: Too early (market not ready, requires heavy education) vs. too late (incumbents entrenched, customer acquisition costs rising). Assess based on adoption curve position.

### 4. Competitive & Defensibility Analysis

- Map the competitive landscape on two axes relevant to the sector (e.g., price vs. breadth, self-serve vs. enterprise, horizontal vs. vertical).
- Identify the startup's claimed differentiation and test whether it is durable or easily replicable.
- Assess founder-market fit: domain expertise, proprietary insight, relevant operator experience.

### 5. Risk Flagging & Investment Thesis Synthesis

- Categorize risks as: **model risk** (unit economics don't work), **market risk** (timing/sizing wrong), **execution risk** (team gaps), **funding risk** (capital needs exceed likely raises).
- State the core investment thesis in 2-3 sentences: what must be true for this to return the fund.
- Assign an overall conviction rating: **Strong Pass / Pass / Further Diligence / Soft Conviction / High Conviction**.

## Output

Produce an **Evaluation Report** structured as:

1. **Executive Summary** — one-paragraph thesis with conviction rating
2. **Business Model Canvas Assessment** — element-by-element findings with strength ratings
3. **Unit Economics Scorecard** — table with CAC, LTV, LTV/CAC, payback, gross margin, contribution margin
4. **Market Assessment** — TAM validation, timing evaluation, competitive positioning map
5. **Key Risks** — ranked list with severity (high/medium/low) and mitigation paths
6. **Recommendation** — pass/pursue with conditions, suggested next diligence steps if pursuing

## Quality Checks

- All financial figures are sourced or explicitly marked as management estimates vs. independently derived
- Unit economics use fully loaded costs, not cherry-picked metrics
- TAM is validated bottom-up, not reliant solely on analyst reports
- Competitive analysis includes at least 3-5 named competitors with differentiation assessed
- Every assumption that depends on market conditions or stage-specific benchmarks is tagged [VERIFY]
- Conviction rating is consistent with the risk and unit economics findings — no mismatch between narrative and score
- Report avoids promotional language; tone is analytical and balanced
