Tax season may be behind you, but that doesn’t mean your financial to-do list is finished. For subscription-based businesses where revenue is recurring but expenses and churn can fluctuate this is actually the perfect time to take a deeper look at your numbers and prepare for the rest of the year.
At Goodman CPA, we believe financial strategy shouldn’t be reactive. Here’s how to turn your post-tax season lull into long-term momentum.
Start with Your Financial Statements
Your tax return may be in the rearview, but the real value lies in what it tells you. Now’s the time to sit down with your financial statements, profit and loss, balance sheet, and cash flow, and ask: What story do these numbers tell?
For subscription-based businesses, understanding deferred revenue, customer lifetime value, and churn’s impact on profitability is essential. Are you recognizing revenue properly? Are your expenses aligned with revenue growth? Are there areas of overspending or underinvestment?
Reviewing these reports with your CPA can surface key insights and help ensure your books are set up for clear, accurate reporting year-round, not just during tax time.
Assess Your Cash Flow and Runway
Steady revenue doesn’t guarantee healthy cash flow. Post-tax season is a smart time to analyze how much cash you actually have on hand and how long it’ll last given your burn rate and upcoming investments.
Ask yourself:
- Do you know your monthly recurring revenue (MRR) and customer acquisition cost (CAC)?
- Are you collecting payments on time?
- Are vendor contracts, tools, or headcount draining more cash than anticipated?
When cash flow is predictable, growth becomes more sustainable. If it’s murky, that’s your cue to refine your budget and tighten up forecasting.
Set Financial Goals That Align With Growth
Once you’ve assessed where things stand, the next step is to define where you’re going. What does success look like in the next quarter? The next year?
This might include:
- Reaching a certain ARR milestone
- Reducing churn by a percentage
- Increasing customer lifetime value
- Building up a specific cash reserve
Whether you’re optimizing cash flow, setting aggressive growth goals, or just cleaning up your books, now is the time to act.
Clean Up and Customize Your Chart of Accounts
If your current chart of accounts is vague, bloated, or hard to decipher, it’s going to slow you down. Subscription-based businesses need visibility into key metrics—MRR, ARR, customer support costs, R&D spend—so you can make quick, informed decisions.
A well-structured chart of accounts helps you:
- Track revenue by product tier or customer cohort
- Identify spending patterns across departments
- Present clear, digestible data to investors or lenders
It’s worth the effort to tailor your accounts now so you’re not scrambling when you need answers fast.
Consider Bringing in Strategic Support
If your business is growing and finances are becoming more complex, it might be time to bring in a strategic partner—like a fractional CFO. At Goodman CPA, our Team of 3 model provides you with a tax advisor, a financial strategist, and a bookkeeper, so you’re never flying solo.
Whether you need help modeling revenue, raising capital, or reworking your pricing strategy, the right support can unlock smarter growth and take the pressure off your internal team.
FAQs: Your Post-Tax Season Questions, Answered
Do I really need to review my financials if I just filed my taxes?
Yes. Your tax return is a backward-looking report. Your financial statements help you look ahead and identify what needs to change in real-time.
What’s the difference between profit and cash flow?
Profit is your revenue minus expenses on paper. Cash flow is what’s actually moving in and out of your accounts—often the more important number for staying afloat.
How often should I update my financial goals?
Quarterly is a good rhythm for most businesses. This keeps you agile and allows time to adjust based on performance, new investments, or market shifts.
When should I consider a fractional CFO?
If you’re scaling quickly, need help with forecasting, or are preparing for fundraising or acquisition, a fractional CFO can help bridge the gap between day-to-day accounting and long-term strategy.
Turn Tax Season Into a Growth Season
The best-run businesses don’t hit pause after tax season—they use this window to refine, realign, and re-energize their financial plans. Whether you’re optimizing cash flow, setting aggressive growth goals, or just cleaning up your books, now is the time to act.
Need help making sense of your post-tax season numbers?
Let’s turn your financial data into strategic action. Schedule a call with Goodman CPA and let’s prepare your business for the year ahead.