Founder Files

Cypher

Founder Files is a podcast about the real decisions behind scaling a business. Hosted by Salma Hatim, Founder and CEO of Cypher, the show features candid conversations with founders, operators, and industry leaders building and supporting high-growth companies. We unpack what actually happens behind the scenes as companies scale, from financial systems and forecasting to revenue, funding decisions, and the tradeoffs leaders make along the way.

  1. 17 MARS

    32. When Audits Hit Growth Companies: VC, PE, & Lender Expectations

    Stakeholders may request audits when companies are raising capital, bringing on private equity, expanding credit facilities, or entering serious M&A discussions. That is when expectations change. In this conversation with Rawan Sakatan, CPA, Director at Weaver, we discuss why audits appear as companies scale and how investors, lenders, and buyers think about financial reporting. (00:00) Introduction(00:49) Topics covered: audits, diligence, and investor expectations(02:26) Why growth-stage companies begin needing audits(06:00) Are M&A-ready founders also audit-ready?(08:09) What companies actually need in place to pass an audit(09:13) The top three mistakes founders make before their first audit(12:33) What expertise a finance team needs to support audit readiness An audit is not the same as due diligence. → An audit looks backward and tests whether financial statements are fairly presented under GAAP. → Due diligence is broader. It evaluates risk, quality of earnings, working capital, and whether the business supports the valuation and deal assumptions. → A company can complete due diligence successfully and still not be ready for an audit, and the reverse can also happen. Growth-stage companies often encounter challenges in areas such as accruals, revenue recognition, equity tracking, documentation, and internal controls. Audit readiness is less about “perfection” and more about financial maturity. If you’re scaling past the early stages or planning for capital or an exit, understanding this difference protects credibility and valuation.

    16 min
  2. 10 FÉVR.

    29. SaaS Revenue Recognition Explained: Bookings, Billing, Metrics

    It’s essential to understand how bookings, billing, and revenue recognition translate into real financial performance in a subscription-based business, particularly SaaS and AI models.  I spoke with Suezann Holmes, Founder & CEO of ScaleXP, to break down how SaaS revenue is actually earned over time, why invoicing is one of the most critical data sources in a subscription model, and how core SaaS metrics are built from that data.  The conversation focuses on the realities founders face as they scale, including revenue timing, common invoicing and reporting mistakes, and what it takes to maintain financial credibility with investors and boards. If you’re leading a SaaS or subscription-based company and preparing for fundraising or board-level reporting, this episode is especially relevant. You’ll learn how revenue recognition under ASC 606 or IFRS 15 impacts ARR, MRR, retention, and growth metrics, and why getting this wrong early creates compounding risk as the business grows. (00:00) Introduction (01:55) A founder’s $5M “revenue” mistake: bookings vs real revenue (02:22) Why revenue matters: profitability, cash burn, and usage (03:27) Revenue vs contract value: what you’ve earned vs what’s promised (05:06) Bookings and contract value as leading indicators (06:19) Why invoicing is not just a back-office task (07:17) How to avoid invoicing and revenue recognition mistakes (09:23) CRM data requirements for clean billing and integrations (10:00) Internal controls for invoicing, revenue, and AR (11:32) Investor expectations: metrics founders must know by Series A and B (13:19) How ScaleXP pulls data from Xero and QuickBooks (13:42) Automating SaaS metrics with a calculation engine (15:12) ASC 606 and IFRS 15 explained for SaaS founders (17:41) Credibility as the most important KPI for founders If you’re a SaaS or subscription business looking to get revenue recognition right, learn more at cypherfin.com.

    19 min
  3. 5 FÉVR.

    28. Investor-Ready Financial Model for Startups: Forecasting, Revenue, and Assumptions

    An investor-ready financial model shows how a startup turns strategy into numbers. It connects the business model, revenue drivers, costs, assumptions, and cash implications into a clear picture founders and investors can rely on.The CEO owns the story. This includes the vision for growth, strategic priorities, pricing approach, and hiring plan. The financial model exists to test and support that strategy, not to create it.The finance team’s role is to bring the strategy to life through numbers. This means turning the vision into assumptions, building forecasts, running scenarios, and showing whether the strategy is financially viable.There are two primary forecasting approaches. Top-down forecasting starts from market size and market share to define long-term potential. Bottom-up forecasting starts from internal drivers like pricing, conversion rates, sales capacity, and hiring to model near-term execution. Strong models use both.Assumptions are the foundation of the model. They define how revenue grows, how costs scale, how hiring progresses, and how cash moves. Credible assumptions are grounded in historical data, benchmarks, market research, and operating realities.For SaaS and AI companies, revenue modeling requires separating bookings, billings, recognized revenue, and cash. These do not occur at the same time. Subscription revenue builds over time through an ARR snowball as new bookings stack on top of existing recurring revenue.Costs and hiring plans are major drivers of margins and cash usage. Modeling COGS, operating expenses, and headcount timing shows how growth decisions impact profitability and runway.Once revenue and costs are built, the model produces outputs investors care about. These include financial statements, operational cash flow forecasts, and KPIs that show performance, liquidity, and efficiency.Scenario planning pressure-tests the model. Base, downside, and upside cases help founders understand risk, identify pressure points, and make informed growth decisions before committing capital.At Cypher, we help SaaS, AI, and e-commerce companies build investor-ready financial models that turn strategy into clear, defensible numbers.

    13 min
  4. 27 JANV.

    #27 - Fundraising in 2026: 5 Things Founders Must Get Right

    Fundraising in 2026 is more selective. Here are the 5 things founders need to get right in 2026: (00:00) - Introduction (01:09) - 1️⃣ Be clear about your fundraising strategy and your capital choices How much do you actually need, and why? Raising too much implies a high valuation. A higher valuation puts you in a tougher competitive set. The real question is whether you can back it up with traction, data, or momentum. Agile fundraising is often the smarter move. You don’t need the full amount on day one.  (05:07) - 2️⃣ Get investor-ready before you fundraise Your story and your financial model must align. Assumptions should be defensible and grounded in data. Serious conversations should never start without a clean data room, including your deck, financials, forecasts, cap table, legal docs, team, and operating plans. (07:07) - 3️⃣ Governance matters more than founders think Before you raise, model dilution and understand how ownership evolves. Use proper cap table tools like Carta, Pulley, Capbase, or Cake. Review ASC 718 or IFRS 2 early. Equity compensation issues surface fast during diligence. Plan for QSBS eligibility from day one. Governance mistakes destroy leverage. (08:29) - 4️⃣ AI changed the game Building software is cheaper and faster than ever. The product alone is no longer the differentiator. Simply “using AI” is not a strategy. Investors care about real usage, real demand, distribution, and the strength of the team executing. (09:18) - 5️⃣ Don’t stop networking Fundraising doesn’t start when you need money. Strong networks are built ahead of time. Access still flows through trust, timing, and warm introductions.

    11 min

À propos

Founder Files is a podcast about the real decisions behind scaling a business. Hosted by Salma Hatim, Founder and CEO of Cypher, the show features candid conversations with founders, operators, and industry leaders building and supporting high-growth companies. We unpack what actually happens behind the scenes as companies scale, from financial systems and forecasting to revenue, funding decisions, and the tradeoffs leaders make along the way.