Cash Conversion Cycle

May 27th, 2026   |    By: Ryan RutanCMO    |    Tags: Business Planning, Days Sales Outstanding, Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable, Working Capital, Cash Flow

Cash Conversion Cycle

Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC) measures the days between paying for operating inputs and collecting cash from customers, calculated as DSO + DIO - DPO. It measures how long capital is tied up in operations. Lower (or negative) CCC is better; SaaS companies with annual upfront billing often have negative CCC, meaning cash arrives before the company even delivers the service.

The math:

CCC = DSO + DIO - DPO

Where:

  • DSO ([Days Sales Outstanding]): days from invoice to collection.
  • DIO (Days Inventory Outstanding): days from acquiring inventory to selling it. For SaaS, this is typically 0.
  • DPO (Days Payable Outstanding): days from receiving vendor invoice to paying.

Example - traditional business (e.g., retail):

  • DSO: 45 days (customers pay 45 days after invoice).
  • DIO: 60 days (inventory sits 60 days before sale).
  • DPO: 30 days (pay vendors 30 days after invoice).

CCC = 45 + 60 - 30 = 75 days

The business has 75 days of operations tied up in working capital.

Example - SaaS with annual upfront billing:

  • DSO: 10 days (annual upfront via auto-pay; customer pays before service period starts).
  • DIO: 0 (no inventory).
  • DPO: 35 days (pays vendors on Net-30 terms with ~5 days of admin).

CCC = 10 + 0 - 35 = -25 days

Negative CCC. The business collects from customers 25 days before it has to pay vendors. Cash is generated by operations.

Why negative CCC is valuable:

Self-funding growth: companies with negative CCC can grow without needing capital because each new customer generates cash before triggering vendor payments.

Amazon's famous CCC: in early years, Amazon had negative CCC because customers paid immediately but Amazon paid suppliers on 60+ day terms. This funded growth from operations.

Subscription advantage: SaaS with annual upfront billing routinely has negative CCC, which is structural advantage vs. monthly-billed competitors.

Industry CCC benchmarks (2025):

Business modelTypical CCC
SaaS with annual upfront billing-30 to +15 days
SaaS with monthly billing+20 to +45 days
B2B services+30 to +60 days
Software with perpetual licenses+30 to +60 days
Marketplace platforms-10 to +20 days
Manufacturing+60 to +120 days
Retail (with credit terms)+30 to +90 days

How to improve CCC:

Reduce DSO (collect faster):

  • Shorter payment terms (Net-15 instead of Net-30 where possible).
  • Auto-pay adoption.
  • Annual upfront billing (large CCC improvement).
  • Aggressive dunning.

Reduce DIO (where applicable):

  • Tighter inventory management.
  • Just-in-time ordering.
  • For SaaS: this is already 0 typically.

Increase DPO (pay slower, within reason):

  • Negotiate Net-45 or Net-60 terms with major vendors.
  • Pay on due date, not before.
  • Capture early-pay discounts only when math favors.

The CCC and growth math:

For companies with positive CCC, growth requires capital because each new dollar of revenue ties up additional working capital. A company growing from $10M to $20M revenue with CCC of 60 days needs roughly $1.6M of additional working capital ($10M × 60/365).

For companies with negative CCC, growth generates capital. Same growth from $10M to $20M with CCC of -25 days frees up ~$685K. Compound this advantage and it's why subscription businesses with annual billing scale capital-efficiently.

Ryan's Take

Cash Conversion Cycle is the underrated structural advantage of subscription businesses with annual upfront billing. The discipline that works: push for annual upfront billing wherever possible (offer 15-20% discount in exchange); shorter terms on SMB; longer DPO with vendors; track CCC quarterly to catch deterioration. The pattern that fails: SaaS company doing monthly billing because "customers prefer it"; CCC stays positive; growth requires capital that competitors with annual billing don't need. Negative CCC is a structural moat; build for it.

What founders get wrong: Defaulting to monthly billing for "customer convenience" without realizing the working capital cost. Annual upfront billing is operationally messier but structurally massively better for cash. The right discipline: design billing for negative CCC; offer monthly only when necessary; structure incentives (annual discounts) to push customers to annual.

Related: [Days Sales Outstanding] · [Accounts Receivable] · [Accounts Payable] · [Working Capital] · [Cash Flow]

FAQ

What is the Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC)? The number of days from when a company pays for operating inputs to when it collects cash from customers. Calculated as DSO + DIO - DPO. Lower (or negative) CCC is better.

Why is negative CCC valuable? Negative CCC means the company collects from customers before paying vendors. This self-funds growth without requiring capital. Famous example: early Amazon had negative CCC because customers paid immediately while Amazon paid suppliers on 60+ day terms.

Do SaaS companies have negative CCC? SaaS with annual upfront billing routinely has negative CCC. SaaS with monthly billing typically has +20 to +45 days CCC. The difference is structurally meaningful for capital-efficient growth.

How do I improve CCC? Reduce DSO (annual upfront billing, auto-pay, shorter terms, aggressive dunning). Reduce DIO (where applicable). Increase DPO (negotiate Net-45/60 with vendors, pay on due date). Annual upfront billing is the biggest single improvement available to SaaS.


About the Author

Ryan Rutan

Founding Partner @ Startups.com platform | Clarity.fm, Launchrock, Fundable, Zirtual, and Co-Host of The Startup Therapy Podcast. Ryan has 15 years of experience as a Founder, Advisor, Mentor, and Investor — the quintessential startup guerrilla. He works with 100's of the best startups every year on everything from ideation, idea validation, early marketing traction, customer acquisition to fundraising, scaling, and operations.

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