Most startups dont lose investor confidence because their numbers are bad. They lose confidence because the numbers are:

  • late,
  • inconsistent,
  • not reconciled to statutory compliance,
  • missing cash visibility, or
  • impossible to compare month-on-month.

In 2026, investors expect founders to move beyond were growing and into heres the operating truth. That truth is delivered through one document: a monthly MIS pack.

A good MIS pack does three jobs at once:

  1. Operational clarity (whats working, whats broken)
  2. Cash control (runway, burn, collections)
  3. Compliance confidence (GST/TDS/payroll/ROC hygiene)

This playbook gives you a practical, repeatable MIS structure you can run every monthand scale as you grow.

What investors actually want from your MIS (the real checklist)

Investors dont want 40 pages of accounting schedules. They want:

  • a clear story of performance,
  • proof the story matches the bank and the books,
  • early warning signals,
  • and a predictable cadence.

Your MIS should answer these questions in under 10 minutes:

  • Are revenues real and collectible?
  • Are margins improving or deteriorating?
  • What is burn, and what is runway?
  • What are the 3 biggest risks this month?
  • Are statutory liabilities under control?
  • Which KPI moved, and why?

If your MIS is built on clean books and disciplined closes, your fundraising and diligence become easier. This is where strong Accounting and Compliance support pays off: https://perfectaccounting.in/our-services/europes-top-firms-trust-our-tax-management-services-for-accurate-tax-returns-and-bank-reconciliations/

The best monthly MIS pack structure (India 2026)

Below is a battle-tested structure. You can start lean and expand.

Section 1: Executive summary (1 page)

Include:

  • MTD and YTD highlights
  • 3 wins, 3 issues
  • key KPI movements (with reasons)
  • cash runway (months)
  • compliance red flags (if any)

Template (copy/paste):

  • Revenue: INR X (MoM +/-, YoY +/-)
  • Gross margin: Y% (drivers)
  • EBITDA / contribution: INR Z
  • Net burn: INR B
  • Runway: R months (as of dd/mm)
  • Collections: INR C; DSO: __ days
  • Top risks: GST notice risk / TDS mismatch / Receivable concentration etc.

Section 2: P&L (with variance commentary)

Investors dont just want the P&L. They want variance explanations.

Include:

  • current month actual vs budget vs last month
  • YTD actual vs budget
  • gross margin bridge
  • top 10 expense lines with commentary

Minimum commentary rules:

  • Explain any variance > 10% or > INR threshold (set your own)
  • Separate one-time costs from recurring costs
  • Flag capitalization vs expense decisions

Section 3: Cash flow + runway (non-negotiable)

Many startups show profits but die on cash.

Include:

  • opening cash, closing cash
  • operating cash flow estimate
  • burn rate (gross and net)
  • runway calculation
  • next 812 weeks cash outlook (high-level)

Runway formula (simple):

equation.pdf

Also show a sensitivity:

  • runway if collections slip by 30 days
  • runway if hiring plan accelerates

Section 4: Revenue quality and collections

Include:

  • revenue by product/service line
  • revenue by customer segment
  • top 10 customers (with concentration %)
  • receivables ageing (030, 3160, 6190, 90+)
  • DSO trend

Investor lens: revenue is only valuable if it is collectible.

Section 5: Unit economics / cohort metrics (as applicable)

Pick the right set for your business model.

For SaaS / subscription:

  • MRR/ARR
  • churn (logo + revenue)
  • net revenue retention
  • CAC, payback period
  • LTV (with assumptions)

For services / project businesses:

  • utilization
  • realization rate
  • gross margin by project
  • backlog and pipeline conversion

For marketplaces / D2C:

  • contribution margin
  • repeat rate
  • return rate
  • channel-wise CAC

Section 6: Working capital and vendor discipline

Include:

  • payable ageing
  • top vendors
  • accruals and reversals
  • inventory (if applicable)

This section helps you avoid hidden liabilities.

Section 7: Statutory compliance dashboard (India-specific)

This is the section most startups skipand investors notice.

Include a simple dashboard:

  • GST: filing status, cash vs ITC position, mismatches flagged
  • TDS: deductions, deposit status, any late fees/interest risk
  • PF/ESIC/PT: deposit status, inspection notices (if any)
  • ROC: upcoming filings/events

If you run payroll, align this dashboard with your Payroll Processing and Employment Laws workflow so PF/ESIC/PT risks are caught early: https://perfectaccounting.in/our-services/france-offers-extensive-support-for-payroll-processing-and-salary-structure-optimization/

Section 8: Headcount and payroll metrics

Include:

  • headcount by function
  • hiring plan vs actual
  • payroll cost trend
  • contractor vs employee split

This is crucial for burn and compliance.

Section 9: Balance sheet (with key reconciliations)

You dont need to show every schedule, but you must show hygiene:

  • bank reconciliation status
  • major receivable/payable movements
  • statutory liabilities movement
  • related party balances (if any)

Section 10: Board/investor asks + decisions needed

End with:

  • decisions required
  • approvals needed
  • upcoming milestones
  • risks needing investor support

KPI templates you can standardize (copy/paste list)

Heres a clean KPI set you can reuse every month.

Core finance KPIs

  • Revenue (MTD, YTD)
  • Gross margin %
  • EBITDA / contribution
  • Net burn
  • Cash on hand
  • Runway (months)
  • DSO
  • Payable days

Growth KPIs (choose based on model)

  • New customers / new logos
  • Activation rate
  • Retention / churn
  • ARPA / ARPU
  • Pipeline coverage (next 90 days)

Risk KPIs (India compliance)

  • GST mismatch flags (Yes/No + value)
  • TDS reconciliation status
  • PF/ESIC deposit status
  • Outstanding notices (count + status)

The monthly MIS process (so its not chaos)

A great MIS pack is 50% content, 50% process.

Recommended monthly cadence

  • Day 13: close books, reconcile bank, lock revenue
  • Day 45: prepare MIS schedules and compliance dashboard
  • Day 6: leadership review and narrative
  • Day 7: share with investors/board

If your close takes 1520 days, fix the close first. Thats an accounting system issue, not an MIS issue.

Common mistakes that make MIS packs useless

  • Mixing cash and accrual metrics without explaining
  • Showing revenue without collections context
  • No variance commentary (numbers with no meaning)
  • Changing KPI definitions every month
  • Ignoring statutory liabilities until year-end
  • Hiding bad news instead of flagging early

Key tip

Your MIS pack is a monthly promise: You can trust our numbers. If you keep the format consistent, reconcile cash and compliance, and add crisp variance commentary, youll reduce investor questions, speed up diligence, and make your own decisions faster.

If you want, Perfect Accounting can help you set up a repeatable monthly close + MIS systemincluding accounting hygiene, compliance dashboards, and investor-ready reportingso your finance function scales with your growth.