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The 10 Startup Terms Every SaaS Founder Actually Needs to Know

Most startup jargon is noise. These 10 terms describe things that will actually kill or grow your SaaS — PMF, churn, LTV:CAC, runway, and more, explained without the fluff.

The 10 Startup Terms Every SaaS Founder Actually Needs to Know

Most startup jargon exists to make founders sound smart at conferences. A handful of terms, though, actually describe things that will kill or grow your business. Here are the ones worth knowing — with no filler.

The terms

Product-Market Fit (PMF)

The state where your product solves a real problem for a specific market, evidenced by users who stay, pay, and bring others without you pushing them. The Sean Ellis test is blunt: ask users "how would you feel if you could no longer use this product?" If more than 40% say "very disappointed," that's a real signal. Everything else is a guess.

MRR and ARR

Monthly Recurring Revenue is the monthly heartbeat of your SaaS. Annual Recurring Revenue is MRR x 12 — the number investors use to value your company. Both exclude one-time fees. If your MRR grows consistently month over month, you are building something real. If it stays flat despite new signups, churn is eating your progress.

Churn Rate

The percentage of customers or revenue you lose each period. A 5% monthly churn means your average customer stays 20 months. A 10% monthly churn means 10 months. This is the leak in the bucket — no acquisition strategy fixes a high churn rate. You have to stop the leak first.

LTV and CAC

Lifetime Value is the total revenue you expect from one customer. Customer Acquisition Cost is what you spend to get them. The rule of thumb: LTV should be at least 3x your CAC. If you spend $300 to acquire a customer who pays $20/month with 10% monthly churn, your LTV is $200. That is a losing business, regardless of how fast you grow.

MVP (Minimum Viable Product)

The simplest version of your product that lets you test your core hypothesis with real users. An MVP is not a bad product — it is a deliberate experiment. The goal is to learn fast, not ship fast. Build the skateboard before the car. The signal that matters: does someone hand you a credit card?

Runway and Burn Rate

Burn rate is how much cash you spend each month net of revenue. Runway is how many months you can operate before hitting zero (cash divided by monthly burn). YC's standing advice: always keep 18 to 24 months of runway. If you have less than 12 months, treat it as an emergency — not a planning note.

North Star Metric

The single number that best captures the core value your product delivers and predicts long-term growth. Airbnb uses nights booked. Slack uses messages sent between teams. Spotify uses time spent listening. Every team should be able to name it and move it. If you have five north star metrics, you effectively have zero.

ICP (Ideal Customer Profile)

A specific description of the type of company or person who gets the most value from your product, pays reliably, and churns the least. Without a clear ICP, you talk to everyone and sell to nobody. Lenny Rachitsky found that most successful SaaS companies define their ICP with exactly three attributes: industry, company size, and specific pain. Define those three. Then talk only to those people.

Pivot

A deliberate, structured change in strategy based on what you have learned — not panic, not giving up. Slack started as a gaming company. YouTube started as a dating site. Instagram started as a check-in app. A pivot is different from thrashing. If your key metrics keep falling despite real improvements, consider pivoting. If they are rising, keep going.

Bootstrapping

Building and growing a company using only your own resources — personal savings or business revenue — without outside investment. Bootstrapping forces discipline: every dollar spent must eventually come back. You keep full control and equity. The tradeoff is slower growth in fast-moving markets where a well-funded competitor can outrun you.

A simple check

Before trying to add new users, answer three questions:

  1. What is your monthly churn rate? If it is above 5%, fix that first.
  2. Is your LTV:CAC ratio above 3:1? If not, your acquisition is burning money.
  3. Can your whole team name your North Star Metric in one sentence? If not, everyone is rowing in different directions.

These three questions reveal more about the health of a SaaS than any pitch deck.

Final thought

These terms are not vocabulary for investor meetings. They are the diagnostic tools founders use to see what is working, what is broken, and where to focus next. Most failed startups did not run out of ideas. They ran out of time because they did not see the warning signs early enough.

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