Startup Frontier

How to Value a Startup, by Stage

Valuing a startup is not one problem but several, because the right method changes as the company matures. At pre-seed you are pricing a hypothesis; by Series A you are pricing data. This is the map from one end of that journey to the other.

Written by Denis Voldman Head of Product, DealMatrixEdited by Philipp Sakuler Business Development, DealMatrixReviewed by Berthold Baurek-Karlic CEO, DealMatrixUpdated 10.06.2026
Founders pitching to venture investors

Startup valuation is the low-data end of private company valuation. The further back you go toward founding, the less financial evidence exists, and the more the valuation rests on judgement about people, markets and potential. As the company matures, hard numbers gradually take over. The skill is knowing which lens to use when.

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One principle runs through every stage: valuation moves from qualitative hypothesis to data-driven analysis as uncertainty falls. The methods don’t compete, they hand off.

Early stage: pricing a hypothesis

At pre-seed and seed there is usually no revenue, often only a prototype or minimum viable product, and no validated business model. Discounted cash flow is useless here, there are no reliable cash flows to discount. So valuation leans on structured judgement about the factors that predict future success, rather than on financial statements.

Several established methods formalise that judgement. They are covered in depth in the DealMatrix Valuation Engine; in brief:

  • The Berkus method, assigns value to a handful of de-risking milestones (idea, prototype, team, partnerships, early sales).
  • The Payne scorecard, benchmarks the startup against the typical funded company in its region and sector, adjusting up or down on weighted criteria.
  • Risk-Factor Summation, starts from a base value and adjusts for a checklist of risks (market, technology, management, funding, regulation).
  • The Venionaire Rating, a standardised model that links qualitative factors to a broad market dataset, bridging judgement and data.

What they share is a goal: turn subjective conviction into something consistent and comparable, without pretending the underlying uncertainty has vanished.

What actually drives early-stage value

Because the financials are thin, a small set of value drivers does the heavy lifting:

Team

In the earliest rounds the founding team is often the single most important factor. Investors weigh domain expertise, prior founding experience, execution ability and the complementarity of the team. The implied value can even be benchmarked against the cost of recruiting equivalent talent, the logic behind acqui-hire valuations.

Market size (TAM, SAM, SOM)

A startup’s ceiling is set by its market. The standard framing splits it into TAM (total addressable market, the whole theoretical opportunity), SAM (serviceable available market, the slice the product can serve), and SOM (serviceable obtainable market, the share realistically winnable). A large, growing market raises the probability of the outsized outcome venture investors are underwriting.

Product & product-market fit

Reaching product-market fit, clear, durable demand, is the pivotal turning point. It is the moment hard metrics first become available, and valuation can shift from hypothesis to measurement.

Technology, IP & scalability

Proprietary technology, defensible intellectual property and, above all, scalability, the ability to grow revenue far faster than costs, drive long-run value. Note that patents are a double-edged signal: useful for fundraising and marketing, but not by themselves a reliable predictor of success.

Growth stage: pricing the data

From around Series A, recurring revenue and real customer behaviour appear, and valuation pivots to quantitative evidence. Two families of metric dominate:

The metrics that matter at growth stage
MetricWhat it tells you
CACCustomer acquisition cost, efficiency of growth spend
LTVCustomer lifetime value, durability of revenue
LTV / CACWhether each customer earns back more than they cost
Churn / retentionHow sticky the revenue base is
Rule of 40Growth rate + profit margin ≥ 40% signals a healthy model

These unit economics tell you whether the business gets more efficient as it scales. Positive unit economics are the green light for applying the market approach, valuing the company on revenue multiples drawn from comparable businesses, the same toolset used across the whole private market.

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AI is rewriting the scaling playbook. Agentic AI and LLMs are pushing automation, and therefore capital efficiency, sharply upward, which is starting to reshape the unit-economics benchmarks investors apply to early-stage software.

Late stage: converging on the public markets

By the scale-up and pre-IPO phase, valuation looks much like that of an established company. Revenues are significant, cash flows more predictable, and a DCF becomes genuinely usable alongside public-market multiples. Capital-market factors, governance, regulatory readiness, share-class structure, move to the foreground, and liquidation preferences can drive a real wedge between headline valuation and per-share value.

Value any startup, at any stage.

The DealMatrix Startup Valuation Engine runs Berkus, the scorecard, the VC method and more, and ties them to live market multiples for growth-stage companies.

Try the Valuation Engine →

Sources & further reading

  1. Kaplan, S. N., & Strömberg, P. (2004). Characteristics, Contracts, and Actions: Evidence from Venture Capitalist Analyses. Journal of Finance.
  2. Damodaran, A. (2009). Valuing Young, Start-up and Growth Companies.
  3. Litzka, B. (2014). Kein Patentrezept für Start-Ups: Die Eignung von Patenten als Erfolgsindikator für Technologie-Gründungen (dissertation).
  4. Babu, A.; Mathews, A.; Chinmaya, A. (2023). A Practical Guide for Startup Valuation. Springer Nature.
  5. DealMatrix (2026). Startup Valuation Engine.

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