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Bitcoin World 2026-05-22 20:55:10

Inside the AI startup ARR inflation: How VCs and founders juice revenue numbers to create winners

BitcoinWorld Inside the AI startup ARR inflation: How VCs and founders juice revenue numbers to create winners Last month, Scott Stevenson, co-founder and CEO of legal AI startup Spellbook, ignited a debate across the tech industry by publicly accusing AI startups of inflating their revenue figures. In a post on X, he described a ‘huge scam’ where companies misuse the metric annual recurring revenue (ARR) to appear far more successful than they are. His claim that ‘the biggest funds in the world are supporting this and misleading journalists for PR coverage’ resonated deeply, drawing over 200 reshares and responses from high-profile investors and founders. The core of the controversy: CARR versus ARR The primary tactic, according to interviews with over a dozen founders, investors, and startup finance professionals, involves substituting ‘contracted ARR’ (CARR) — revenue from signed but not yet onboarded customers — and presenting it simply as ARR. Traditional ARR is a trusted metric from the cloud era, representing the annualized value of active, paying customers under contract. CARR, however, counts future revenue that may never materialize if customers cancel during implementation or fail to renew. ‘For sure they are reporting CARR as ARR,’ one investor told Bitcoin World on condition of anonymity. ‘When one startup does it in a category, it is hard not to do it yourself just to keep up.’ Another VC reported seeing companies where CARR is 70% higher than actual ARR, with a significant portion of that contracted revenue unlikely to convert. Why VCs look the other way The incentives for venture capitalists to tolerate — or even encourage — inflated ARR are clear. A startup that publicly claims $100 million in ARR attracts top talent, premium customers, and favorable press coverage, creating a self-fulfilling narrative of market dominance. ‘Investors can’t call it out,’ one VC admitted. ‘Everyone has a company monetizing CARR as ARR.’ Jack Newton, co-founder and CEO of legal startup Clio, which was valued at $5 billion last fall, told Bitcoin World that some investors ‘look the other way when their own companies are inflating numbers because it makes them look good from the outside in.’ This tacit approval helps VCs ‘kingmake’ their portfolio companies, artificially boosting their perceived market position. The pressure to grow at any cost The AI boom has intensified expectations for hypergrowth. Hemant Taneja, CEO of General Catalyst, noted on a podcast that traditional growth trajectories like ‘1 to 3 to 9 to 27’ are no longer sufficient. ‘You got to go like 1 to 20 to 100,’ he said, referring to millions in ARR. This pressure, combined with sky-high valuations, creates a powerful incentive to fudge the numbers. Michael Marks, founding managing partner at Celesta Capital, told Bitcoin World: ‘The valuations have gotten higher, and so the incentives are stronger to do it.’ Several sources confirmed that some startups report annualized run-rate revenue — extrapolating a single month or quarter of usage-based billing — as ARR, which is inherently volatile and misleading for AI companies that charge per outcome. Transparency versus short-term gain Not all startups participate. Some founders prioritize clean books, understanding that public markets will eventually scrutinize their metrics. Ross McNairn, co-founder and CEO of legal AI startup Wordsmith, called the practice ‘short-sighted’ and warned that it ‘is going to come back and bite you.’ He added that exaggerating revenue creates an even higher hurdle when justifying valuations after market corrections. Alex Cohen, co-founder and CEO of health AI startup Hello Patient, captured the sentiment of many insiders: ‘To everyone who’s inside, it just feels fake. You read the headlines and you’re like, “I don’t believe it.”‘ Conclusion The widespread inflation of ARR among AI startups is not a victimless act. It distorts market signals, misleads journalists and potential hires, and erodes trust in the broader startup ecosystem. While some VCs and founders benefit in the short term, the practice risks creating a bubble of artificially propped-up valuations. For startups that choose transparency, the path may be harder, but it builds the credibility needed for long-term success. FAQs Q1: What is the difference between ARR and CARR? ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue) counts revenue from active, paying customers under contract. CARR (Contracted ARR) includes revenue from signed contracts where the customer has not yet started paying or using the product, making it a less reliable metric. Q2: Why do VCs allow startups to inflate ARR? VCs benefit from the narrative of a fast-growing portfolio company, which helps attract more investors, talent, and press coverage. Publicly calling out inflated numbers would harm their own investments and industry reputation. Q3: Is this practice legal? While not necessarily illegal, it can mislead investors, journalists, and the public. ARR is not audited under GAAP, which focuses on collected revenue. If inflated figures are used to secure funding or deals, it could raise legal and regulatory concerns. This post Inside the AI startup ARR inflation: How VCs and founders juice revenue numbers to create winners first appeared on BitcoinWorld .

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