Understanding Your Cash Conversion Cycle

What we’ve seen across 150+ growing brands, and why it matters earlier than you think

After working with more than 150 consumer and inventory-based companies, a pattern shows up again and again.

Founders don’t usually come to us because demand is weak. They come because growth feels heavier than expected. Revenue is climbing, customers are buying, and yet cash feels increasingly constrained. Decisions that once felt simple start to carry more risk. Almost every time, the underlying issue is the same. Cash is tied up longer than the founder realizes.

That’s what the cash conversion cycle explains. And once founders see it clearly, many of the daily financial frustrations start to connect.

What the Cash Conversion Cycle Actually Measures

The cash conversion cycle answers a practical question we walk through with nearly every founder we work with:

How long does it take for cash spent to come back into the business?

Not revenue on a dashboard.

Actual cash in the bank.

The CCC measures the number of days between paying for inventory and collecting cash from customers. It’s a simple concept, but the implications are significant, especially as companies move from early traction into sustained growth.

The cycle consists of three components:

  1. Days Inventory Outstanding (DIO)
    How long inventory sits before it sells, including production, shipping, storage, and time on the shelf.

     

  2. Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
    How long it takes to collect cash after a sale, accounting for payment processing, refunds, and customer terms.
  3. Days Payable Outstanding (DPO)
    How long the business takes to pay suppliers.

Together: Cash Conversion Cycle = Inventory Days + Receivable Days − Payable Days

Across dozens of brands, we’ve seen small shifts in these inputs create meaningful differences in cash availability.

Why Inventory Brands Feel This Pressure First

Service businesses typically get paid close to when the work is performed. Inventory brands pay long before revenue shows up.

In practice, cash leaves the business early when founders:

  • Commit to purchase orders
  • Pay manufacturers and freight
  • Store and manage inventory
  • Fund marketing ahead of sell-through

Cash returns later, often later than expected, when:

  • Products sell
  • Payments clear
  • Returns are processed
  • Inventory fully turns

We’ve seen many strong brands underestimate how wide this timing gap becomes as volume increases. Early on, it’s manageable. As growth accelerates, it quietly becomes the main constraint. This is where founders often feel like the business is doing well, but something still feels off.

What a Long Cash Cycle Is Really Signaling

In our experience, a long cash conversion cycle rarely points to one bad decision. It’s usually the result of reasonable decisions stacking on top of each other as the company grows.

Common patterns we see include:

  • Inventory sitting longer than planned
  • Reorders placed early to avoid stockouts
  • Vendor terms that haven’t evolved with scale
  • Customers paying slower than modeled
  • Marketing spend increasing ahead of collections

None of these indicate failure. They usually indicate growth outpacing structure. The challenge is that without visibility into the cycle, founders often respond by raising capital or pulling back spend, even when better options exist.

Improving Cash Flow Without Slowing Growth

One of the most consistent misconceptions we encounter is that improving cash flow means slowing down. In reality, the strongest brands we’ve worked with improve cash flow by tightening systems, not by shrinking ambition.

The levers that tend to matter most:

Inventory discipline

Brands that understand true sell-through, sku segmentation, lead times, and reorder logic make better growth decisions. This isn’t about minimizing inventory. It’s about aligning inventory with demand and timing.

Payment term alignment

As companies mature, vendor and supplier relationships can evolve. We’ve seen small improvements in terms materially change cash availability without harming partnerships.

Collection visibility

Many founders focus on booked revenue while underestimating how long cash actually takes to land. Seeing the difference clearly changes behavior quickly.

Cash-first forecasting

Revenue forecasts tell part of the story. Cash forecasts tell the story founders need to run the business with confidence.

Why This Matters Before You Raise or Scale

Investors pay close attention to cash cycles, even when founders don’t.

Across hundreds of conversations, we’ve seen that companies with unclear cash dynamics:

  • Appear riskier than their revenue suggests
  • Require more capital than expected
  • Lose leverage in financing discussions

Companies that understand and manage their cash conversion cycle:

  • Scale with more confidence
  • Need less external funding
  • Retain more control over their future

That advantage compounds as the business grows.

The Practical Next Step: Run a Cash Cycle Analysis

You don’t need perfect data or complex models to get started. You need a clear view of how cash actually moves through your business.

A basic cash cycle analysis helps founders:

  • Identify where cash slows down
  • Understand which levers matter most
  • Decide what to address now versus later

We’ve seen this exercise alone change how founders approach inventory, growth, and capital planning. Once the cash conversion cycle is visible, decisions become calmer, more intentional, and easier to defend. That clarity is what supports sustainable growth.