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@TechCrunch

Technology news and analysis with a focus on founders and startup teams. Got a tip? https://t.co/J0WxnZxSRY

San Francisco, CA 参加日 Mart 2007
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TechCrunch
TechCrunch@TechCrunch·
There’s just one day left! This is your reminder that Startup Battlefield applications don’t get stronger sitting in drafts. We want promising imperfection, send them in before it’s too late: spr.ly/6015B8Vcc3
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TechCrunch
TechCrunch@TechCrunch·
Are AI companies inflating their annual recurring revenue? There’s a lot of nuance, and accounting minutiae involved…but there are many reasons to look at big AI revenue claims with an equally large grain of salt. spr.ly/6010B8pNq0
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Scott Stevenson
Scott Stevenson@scottastevenson·
Excellent reporting by @MTemkin at @TechCrunch on how AI companies are inflating revenue by reporting CARR as ARR. Please retweet so that we can get back to reality and permanently kill CARR as a valuation anchor. Delusion is not good for anyone. "One VC told TechCrunch that he has seen companies where CARR is 70% higher than ARR, even though a significant chunk of that contracted revenue will never actually materialize." “Investors can’t call it out,” a VC told TechCrunch. “Everyone has a company monetizing CARR as ARR.” The biggest thing that has surprised me since my tweet went viral was the amount of nervous, sheepish laughter from VCs on the topic: "Haha... Oh, I'm not sure if it's that big a deal 🙂" While other VCs say privately: "We see this constantly and it's becoming a serious problem." techcrunch.com/2026/05/22/how…
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Scott Stevenson@scottastevenson

It’s time to expose a huge scam in AI startups: Contracted ARR The reason many AI startups are crushing revenue records is because they are using a dishonest metric The biggest funds in the world are supporting this and misleading journalists for PR coverage. The setup: Company signs 3-year enterprise deals. Year 1 is discounted (say $1M), Year 2 steps up ($2M), Year 3 is full price ($3M). They report $3M as “ARR” — even though they’re only collecting $1M right now. The worst part: The customer has an opt-out option at 12 months! It’s not actually a 3 year contract. In the chart below, by Q5 the company is trumpeting ~$100M “ARR” to press, while actual cash-generating, in-effect ARR is ~$35M. That’s ~3x inflation. On top of this, enterprise AI companies are bundling full-time “forward deployed engineers” into deals massively reducing margins, sometimes producing Year 1 negative margins. At some point customers are going to start triggering their opt-out clauses or aggressively negotiating down Year 3 pricing. And a wave of enterprise AI companies may collapse.

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