Why the Right 7 Metrics Beat 44K Wrong Ones for Startups
Learn how 512Financial CEO Bart Davis equips founders to navigate growth. From identifying the right KPIs to leveraging AI and making intentional hires, he shares practical strategies for building scalable, capital-efficient businesses.
Founders often drown in a sea of metrics, but according to Bart Davis, Co-Founder and CEO of 512Financial, the key to startup success is tracking what truly matters. On a recent episode of the Austinpreneur podcast, Davis sat down with Capital Factory’s Nick Spiller to share what he’s seeing across the early- and growth-stage landscape, from “metric bloat” to the rise of capital-efficient businesses. Davis, who has guided 512Financial from a team of two to more than 50, shared six essential drivers of startup growth backed by financial discipline and fractional leadership and why the right 7 metrics beat 44,000 wrong ones.
1. Start With the Metrics That Keep You Up at Night
Early-stage companies face pressure to prove performance. But many respond by overbuilding dashboards and underprioritizing what actually matters.
“We started working with a company recently that said they could produce 44,000 metrics,” Davis said. “How many of those really matter? You have to identify the 4 to 7 that truly move the needle for your business.”
This discipline becomes even more essential as a startup scales. With limited resources, founders can’t afford to chase noise. Instead, Davis urges leaders to start with a simple filter: What wakes you up in the middle of the night?
“If I’m going to wake up and think, ‘Are we going to have cash by the end of December?’ or ‘How’s our employee engagement holding up?’, those are probably your core metrics,” Davis said. “Those are the ones you need systems around first.”
When you’re clear on what truly matters, whether that is the right 4 or the right 7 metrics, the rest of your strategy becomes easier to execute.
2. Hiring Is the Hidden KPI
While founders often obsess over financial or product metrics, Davis points to another leading indicator of success: early hiring decisions.
“People are the single biggest source of either the most pain or the absence of pain,” Davis said. “If you get some of those early hires right, your life gets a lot easier. If you get them wrong, the inverse.”
That’s why Davis still interviews every single hire at 512Financial, even with a 50-person team. He emphasizes cultural fit and alignment just as much as capability.
“I’m not the expert in every area we hire for,” he said. “But I need to know if they fit with the kind of humans we have in the room. That’s what drives our work product.”
Get the people part right early, and you create a strong foundation for scale.
3. The Skill Gap is the Real Threat, Not AI
From accounting automation to recruiting tools, AI is creeping into every business function. Davis sees this shift as inevitable, but not catastrophic.
“AI isn’t going to take your job. Somebody who knows how to use AI is going to take your job,” Davis said. “Our role as a services firm is to stay current, evaluate what tools can actually do, and learn fast.
His own exposure to the AI Collective, a local group of tech leaders directly led to 512Financial’s acquisition of executive search firm HireBetter. The takeaway? Innovation is about tools, but even more about the proximity to people using them. AI may not replace humans, but it will reward those who learn how to partner with it.
4. Acquisitions Are About People, Too
The HireBetter acquisition was a strategic move to help 512Financial support clients beyond their fractional stage.
“We help companies grow from a handful of employees to the point where they need full-time CFOs or HR leaders,” Davis explained. “Now, instead of saying ‘good luck,’ we can help them hire that next executive.”
Just as important was the leadership bench it added to 512Financial. The deal brought Velveth Schmitz and Amy Ancira into new roles as Chief Revenue Officer and Chief Customer Officer, helping Davis build toward a 100-person future.
“I was de facto the CRO, CCO, and CMO,” Davis said. “We knew we needed to build the next layer of leadership. This let us do that, with people we already trusted.”
Strategic growth means planning for leadership continuity as well as head count.
5. Transparency Builds Trust in Compensation
Equity can be a powerful retention tool, but Davis believes it only works if expectations are aligned. For a bootstrapped, service-based company like 512Financial, that meant taking a different route.
“We asked ourselves: Is giving equity a meaningful incentive here, or is it disingenuous?” Davis said. “We’re not going to get a unicorn valuation. So, we opted for profit sharing instead.”
Every six months, 512Financial shares a portion of its profit with employees equally. It’s a model designed to reward real contribution, not just hypothetical upside.
“It keeps us honest and aligned. People know what they’re part of, and what they’re building,” Davis said.
This clarity around value exchange reinforces the culture of ownership, even without stock.
6. Conferences Are About People, Not Panels
When asked how founders should approach events like Austin Tech Week, Davis came back to the same theme: meet people, stay open.
“I didn’t go to the AI Collective looking to make an acquisition. I just went to learn,” Davis said. “And that led to a deal that added a Chief Revenue Officer and Chief Customer Officer to our team. You never know where one conversation will take you.”
Real opportunities often emerge from curiosity. It’s important to identify events as a chance to connect, learn, and engage.
Ultimately, organizations succeed when leaders focus their attention where it matters most, and whether he’s talking about the right 7 metrics for startups, hiring, or AI, Davis returns to this same foundational insight. To benefit, remember to build systems around your own critical KPIs, hire intentionally, use tools strategically, and never underestimate the power of proximity.
Watch the full episode of the Capital Factory Austinpreneur podcast.
