Case Study: FP&A Consulting Helped a B2B SaaS Company Cut Burn Rate by 40%

For most B2B SaaS companies, uncontrolled burn rate is the real culprit and growth bottleneck.

What we often see with our clients is spending that has quietly drifted out of alignment with the growth reality. Hiring decisions are made for a different revenue curve. Marketing spend is optimized for scale that hasn’t arrived yet. Forecasts are built on static assumptions in a dynamic market.

This case study shows how FP&A consulting helped a mid-stage B2B SaaS company regain control by cutting burn by nearly 40% in under six months, without stalling growth or damaging morale.

More importantly, it shows how burn reduction should actually be done: through financial clarity, not blunt cost-cutting.

 

Our Client Background:

  • Industry: B2B SaaS (subscription-based, mid-market customers)
  • ARR: ~$14M
  • Team Size: ~110 employees
  • Funding Stage: Series B
  • Primary Challenge: Rising burn, shrinking runway, declining forecast confidence

 

The leadership team wasn’t panicking at first, but investors were asking sharper questions:

  • Why is burn growing faster than ARR?
  • When does the business reach cash efficiency?
  • Which levers actually move the runway?

We instantly understood they needed more than bookkeeping support.

They needed decision-grade FP&A.

 

Decoding The Real Problem: Burn Without Visibility

On the surface, financials looked “fine.”

Revenue was growing. Headcount expansion had slowed. Marketing spend was monitored.

But when we began the thorough FP&A diagnostic, several issues surfaced:

1. Burn Was Being Tracked, But Not Truly Understood

When we first decomposed the burn, the total number itself wasn’t alarming. What surprised leadership was where it was actually coming from. Several costs had quietly become “fixed” simply because no one had revisited the assumptions behind them. Spend decisions made during a more aggressive growth phase were still embedded in the cost base even though market conditions had shifted.

The business wasn’t just overspending. It was operating under a financial structure designed for a different time.

 

2. The Hard Part: Deciding What Not to Protect

Identifying what to change was easier. The most difficult part of the engagement was deciding what felt strategically important but no longer made financial sense.

Some spend had strong internal champions. Some roles were tied to future ambitions rather than near-term outcomes. FP&A created a neutral framework that separated emotional attachment from economic reality without defaulting to layoffs or blanket cuts. Instead of reacting out of fear, leadership could make deliberate trade-offs with clarity and confidence.

 

3. Cost Optimization Without Growth Damage

What ultimately reduced burn wasn’t a single dramatic decision. We made a series of small, aligned adjustments with intent.

Sales hiring slowed just enough to allow the pipeline to mature. Marketing spend shifted from experimentation toward channels with proven payback. The SaaS stack was reviewed not purely by cost but also by usage and actual impact. This change led to consolidation and renegotiation rather than disruption.

Individually, these moves initially looked incremental. Together, they materially changed the company’s cash trajectory.

 

Explaining Our FP&A Consulting Approach

For our FP&A consultants team, this engagement was not a standard spreadsheet or cost-cutting activity. It was about rebuilding financial decision infrastructure. We executed a phase-by-phase approach:

Phase 1: Burn Decomposition & Cost Clarity

We started by breaking burn into four controllable buckets:

  • Growth-Linked Spend – Directly tied to revenue acceleration

  • Foundational Spend – Required to operate at current scale

  • Transitional Spend – Temporary costs that overstayed

  • Low-ROI Spend – Costs without a clear performance thesis

This alone changed the conversation.

Instead of “cut 20% across the board,” leadership could now ask:

  • What happens if we slow this lever by 10%?
  • What does delaying this hire do to cash vs. growth?
  • Which spend actually improves unit economics?

 

Phase 2: Rebuilding the Forecast From the Ground Up

We implemented a driver-based FP&A model, linking:

  • ARR growth → hiring needs
  • Hiring → cash impact by month
  • Sales capacity → pipeline → revenue timing
  • Marketing spend → CAC → payback → runway

This allowed:

  • Weekly rolling forecasts
  • Clean base/downside/upside scenarios
  • Real-time runway visibility

Suddenly, leadership could see two quarters ahead rather than one month behind.

 

Phase 3: Surgical Cost Optimization (Minus Blanket Cuts)

With clarity in place, we addressed burn—intelligently.

Key actions included:

▸ Sales & Marketing Realignment

  • Shifted spend from volume-based acquisition to high-conversion channels
  • Paused underperforming outbound experiments
  • Adjusted sales hiring pace to pipeline reality

Result: Lower CAC, same pipeline quality.

 

▸ Headcount Phasing, Not Layoffs

  • Deferred select hires without eliminating roles
  • Rebalanced team structure to reduce managerial overhead
  • Adjusted contractor vs. full-time mix

Result: Reduced payroll burn without morale damage.

 

▸ SaaS Stack Rationalization

  • Audited every recurring tool against usage and ROI
  • Consolidated overlapping platforms
  • Renegotiated contracts before renewals

Result: Immediate cash savings with zero operational disruption.

 

Phase 4: Embedding FP&A Into Leadership Cadence

We didn’t “deliver a model and walk away.”

We embedded FP&A into:

  • Monthly leadership reviews
  • Board decks
  • Go-to-market planning
  • Hiring approvals

This ensured that burn discipline became an ongoing behavior, not a one-time fix.

 

The Tangible Outcomes: Nearly 40% Burn Reduction

Within ~6 months, the company achieved:

  • ~38–40% reduction in net burn
  • Extended runway by 9+ months
  • Improved forecast accuracy (variance tightened materially)
  • Stronger board confidence
  • Clear path to cash efficiency without growth freeze

Most importantly, leadership could now answer the hard questions with data:

  • When can we safely accelerate again?
  • What does efficiency actually cost?
  • Which bets are worth funding?

 

Why FP&A Consulting Worked And Why Most Burn Cuts Fail?

This engagement succeeded because FP&A was treated as:

  • A strategic operating function
  • Not a reporting or finance clean-up exercise

Common mistakes we avoided:

  • Across-the-board cuts
  • Reactive decisions driven by fear
  • Lagging indicators only
  • Finance disconnected from GTM reality

Instead, FP&A consulting provided:

  • Financial transparency
  • Trade-off visibility
  • Decision confidence

 

6 Key FP&A Metrics We Focused On

Throughout the engagement, leadership tracked:

  • Net burn vs. gross burn
  • Burn multiple (burn ÷ net new ARR)
  • CAC payback period
  • Sales capacity efficiency
  • Forecast variance (planned vs. actual)
  • Runway under multiple scenarios

These metrics turned conversations from emotional to analytical.

 

Who is FP&A Consulting Is Most Impactful For?

This type of engagement ideally (but not restricted to) delivers the most value for:

  • B2B SaaS companies post-Series A / B
  • Founders preparing for fundraising or board scrutiny
  • CFOs who need better forecasting leverage
  • Companies balancing growth with efficiency
  • Businesses operating in tighter capital environments

If your burn feels “manageable” but hard to explain, FP&A is likely missing.

 

Interactive Self-Check for Your Business

Ask yourself:

  • Do we know exactly what drives burn or just the total number?

  • Can we model runway changes in minutes, not weeks?

  • Are hiring and spend decisions tied to forecasted outcomes?

  • Do board conversations feel reactive or controlled?

If any of these feel uncomfortable, FP&A consulting can quickly change that.

 

Final Takeaway for Our Readers – FP&A Consulting as a Strategic Support

Cutting burn isn’t always about spending less. It’s about spending smartly with intention.

This case study proves that with the right FP&A consulting, SaaS companies can:

  • Reduce burn materially
  • Extend runway
  • Preserve growth
  • And regain control of the narrative

At DNA Growth, FP&A isn’t a reporting layer. It’s how leadership makes smarter decisions before cash forces their hand.

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