india saas survey 2016 - decoding our saas industry
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jointly by Signal Hill – iSPIRT
India SaaS Survey Results 2016
2
Foreword
Welcome to the Second edition of the India SaaS Survey by Signal Hill, India’s largest software investment banking
advisory practice, together with our partners iSPIRT, the Indian Software Product Industry Round Table.
Applying the lessons learned from the first edition, we have changed the way we collect data and the way we present
our results, but with the same objective in mind: to tap into the pulse of a burgeoning ecosystem by providing credible
benchmarking data and insightful analyses.
This year, we are proud to report that we received responses from 76 respondents (iSPIRT estimates indicate that this
may represent 10% of the total SaaS ecosystem in India) up from 39 respondents last year including some of the most
prominent SaaS companies operating in India. We sincerely thank all participants for their time and effort in completing
this survey and look forward to ever increasing participation every edition going forward.
As before, we are committed to refreshing the survey results on an annual basis. As the India SaaS ecosystem continues
to grow, we fully expect to increase overall survey participation, as well as the insights and benchmarking data provided.
If you have any suggestions to improve the survey or questions that you would like to see covered, please do write to us
at indiasaassurvey@signalhill.in.
3
Key Takeaways of India SaaS Survey 2016
2
4
Emergence of NCR as a new hotspot for SaaS companies in the Indian ecosystem. It has moved up three places
to come to the second position this year 1
3
Increased interest in vertical focussed SaaS players with majority of respondents being vertical focussed this
year; Vertical focussed SaaS players occupy majority share of the scaled and funded respondent pie
Enterprise focussed clients have reported higher median growth rates compared to SMB/SME focussed players.
That said, SMB/SME focussed players forecast better growth in the coming one year
Though inside sales is by far the most preferred and effective sales channel, post the $1Mn ARR mark
respondents do report an increased usage of feet on street (which is still #2 after inside sales)
7 The median CAC payback period (for >$1Mn ARR) is 6-12 months
5 ‘Try and Buy’ is the most preferred sales model (vs. sales channel) amongst respondents
6 Horizontal and Vertical SaaS players report similar median growth rates, however companies that focus on the
US as their primary market (as against India or Asia) reported distinctively higher median growth rates
4
Agenda
Respondent Set 1
Business Focus 2
Growth Rates 3
Sales And Delivery 4
Profitability 5
Other Metrics 6
Funding 7
Signal Hill Credentials 9
Participants 8
iSPIRT Credentials 10
Respondent Set
Profiling Survey Respondents 1
6
2016 India SaaS Survey
• This report provides an analysis of the results of the survey of private SaaS companies in India which Signal Hill India’s
team in co-operation with iSPIRT conducted in Sept-Nov 2016
- This report is the result of the second annual SaaS survey conducted by Signal Hill & iSPIRT
- The survey results include responses from senior executives of 76 SaaS companies in India
• Representative statistics on the survey participants
‐ $0.5Mn-$1Mn Median ARR1 as of survey date, with 35 respondents having an ARR greater than $1Mn
‐ Median employee strength: 35
‐ Median customer count: ~100; 28% with more than 1000 customers
‐ 51% of the companies were started in the last 5 years
‐ 67% of the companies started out as SaaS players
1 ARR – SaaS portion of ARR as reported by respondents during the survey period Sept’16-Nov’16. The same metric has been used throughout the report
7
Where Are Survey Participants Headquartered?
NCR has jumped up the list to 2nd position (25% of the India based players) versus the 4th position (9%) last
year
India Headquarters Distribution
1
* ROI - Rest Of India;
A point not brought out by
our sample: between Zoho
and FreshDesk alone iSPIRT
estimates ~$400Mn in
revenue, >$100Mn in funding
and 4,000+ employees in
Chennai. This creates a
massive ecosystem for many
other SaaS startups to be
created
Chennai: India’s SaaS Hub
32%
25%
19%
15%
5% 4%
Bangalore
NCR
Mumbai/Pune
Chennai
Hyderabad
ROI
8
Which City Has The Most Scaled (ARR >$1Mn) SaaS Players?
Reinforcing NCRs position, based on our sample, it now hosts more “scaled” SaaS start ups than any other city - or
has significantly higher survey fill rates…
1
1SaaS portion of ARR 2Considered a subset of 35 respondents meeting the criteria of >1Mn ARR for the this analysis
Geographic Distribution of Respondents HQ (ARR1>$1Mn)2
Headquarter City
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
ARR Key
5
3 2
3
1
3
4
1
1
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
NCR Bangalore Chennai Mumbai/Pune Hyderabad
>$10.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn
$2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn
9
What Is The Distribution Of ARR Across Our Sample?
The relatively young Indian SaaS ecosystem has a median ARR of $0.75Mn2 compared to a median of ~$5Mn3 in
the US SaaS ecosystem
1
1ARR reported by respondents during the months of September, October and November. ARR for SaaS portion of business
2The middle value of the median ARR range has been taken 3Median Revenue for FY15 per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
Distribution Of ARR1
Median Range
11
6 4
6 6 5
2
11
6
3
8
3
2
3
0
5
10
15
20
25
<=$0.25
Mn
$0.25 Mn
-$0.5 Mn
$0.5 Mn -
$1.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -
$2.5 Mn
$2.5 Mn -
$5.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -
$10.0 Mn
>$10.0
Mn
Horizontal Focussed
Vertical Focusssed
Journey to $1Mn ARR
It typically takes a
median of 2-4 years to
reach $1Mn ARR
10
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
<10 10-20 20-30 30-40 40-50 50-75 75-100 100-150150-250250-500 >500
What Is The Employee Strength Across Our Sample?
Our sample shows a median employee strength of 35, likely reflecting higher survey participation rates
amongst <$1Mn ARR SaaS startups
1
1Taking a subset of 35 respondents
Employee Strength
Median (35)
Average number of employees
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
Journey to $1Mn ARR
Companies with an ARR
>$1Mn1 have a median
employee strength of
100. We would
reasonably expect a
$1Mn ARR company to
have ~50 employees
11
When Was Your Company Launched?
With just 9 respondents founded in the last two years, our survey is weighted towards companies started pre-2015.
Younger companies may be busy figuring out their business and product...
1
Company Launch Date
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
Respondent Founding Year
6
11
9
13
8
5 4
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
Before
2010
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
20
12
When Did Respondents Pivot? 1
Pure SaaS Players vs Partial SaaS Players1 Pivot To SaaS
26%
74%
Partial SaaS
Pure SaaS
1Pure SaaS players are respondents with SaaS products contributing >60% ARR as of survey date
2Please note that there is a possibility of survivorship bias
From 2011 onward the Indian product ecosystem appears to have embrace the SaaS model with ~90% of
respondents starting out as SaaS businesses rather than pivoting2
Company Launch Date
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2003 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Started out as
a SaaS
business
Pivoted Later
13
Key Takeaways From Respondent Profiling
1
2
3
Boasting ten $1Mn+ ARR respondents (out of a total of 35 $1Mn+ ARR respondents), our
sample shows that the NCR region is bubbling with activity
The Indian SaaS ecosystem is dominated by young companies with a median ARR of ~$0.75Mn
and median employee strength of ~35
While SaaS pivots are a feature of the Indian product ecosystem, the SaaS business model
appears to have gained prominence from 2011 with founders starting pure SaaS businesses,
rather than pivoting
Business Focus
Market And Product Focus Of The Respondents 2
15
What Is India’s USP In Competing With Global SaaS Companies ? 2
Reported USP1
Nu
mb
er
of
Resp
on
ses
Unique Selling Proposition (USP)
1 Respondents were asked the following question - What do you see as India’s USP in competing with global SaaS companies?(respondents were given the option of choosing multiple criteria)
Our sample appears to be betting on low cost (but high quality) talent and low cost inside sales to build world class
SaaS businesses. Next year, it would be interesting to add ‘outright innovation’ to the list of USPs
62
48
25 23
21
15
4
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Favourable
skill to cost
ratio
Cost effective
inside sales
Huge talent
pool
Products
more suited
for developing
markets
Mature
customer
service
capability
Mobile first
market &
skillsets
Other
These two buckets are
effectively the same
and emphasize that
our greatest strength
is skill to cost, whether
in sales or otherwise
16
How Long Does It Take To Develop a SaaS Product? 2
Most respondents built their product (likely referring to the first commercially available version) within a 12 month
window
Time Taken To Build First SaaS Product
63%
30%
4% 3%
<=12 months
12-18 Months
18-24 Months
>24 Months
We attempted various
slices of this data set by
year of founding, </>
$1Mn ARR, vertical/
horizontal, etc. but
found that this metric
remained remarkably
consistent
17
Vertical vs. Horizontal SaaS 2
Vertical vs. Horizontal Focus Vertical and Horizontal Split By Product Launch Date
This year 53% of our sample focused on vertical SaaS products vs. 37% last year. In particular, over the last 3
years vertical SaaS product launches have overtaken horizontal ones
Product Launch Date
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
53% 47%
Vertical
Horizontal
1 2
3 5
4 2
10
7 6
1
5
4
3 6
7
6
4
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
2005 2006 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Journey to $1Mn ARR
64% of $1Mn+ ARR
respondents are vertically
focused
18
Which Is The Most Popular Vertical For A SaaS Product? 2
Vertical Focus Area1
While TMT focused SaaS dominated our sample this year we note that TMT itself could cover a diverse group
of distinct verticals
Vertical Sector
1 Includes a subset of 40 respondents
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
13
9
5 4
3 2 2
1 1
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
19
Which Is The Most Popular Horizontal Focus Area? 2
Horizontal Focus Area1
The top three horizontal areas were broadly the same as in last year’s survey, showing that India continues to
favour ‘human focused’ SaaS vs. ‘machine focused’ SaaS
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
1 Includes a subset of 32 respondents
Horizontal Sector
7 7
6
4 4
2
1 1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
20
Which Geography Contributes The Maximum Revenue? 2
Unchanged from last year, the US is the most favoured destination for Indian SaaS startups. With that said, whilst
companies are building for global markets, the first market for companies to get traction in is typically India
Geography Contributing Maximum Revenue By Respondent Size1
1Subset of 76 respondents.
ARR Range
No. of Respondents: 22 12 7 14 9 7 5
1
1 5 3
4
4 4
1
4 14
9
2 9
5
6
3 1
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
<=$0.25Mn
$0.25 Mn -$0.5 Mn
$0.5 Mn -$1.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn
$2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn
>$10.0 Mn
5%
59%
33%
3%
Europe
India
North America
Rest of Asia
Geography Contributing Maximum Revenue
Key
Ordinarily, we
would expect
to see more US
prominence in
this bucket…
21
Customer Focus, SMEs vs. Enterprises 2
Customer Type
68%
32%
SMB/SME (Small and
Medium Business)
Large Enterprises
Our sample is split 2/3rd in favour of SME focused SaaS; We were surprised however to see a lower than anticipated
median number of customers for SME focused players, likely due to a large number of small respondents…
100
50
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
SME/SMB Large Enterprises
Median Number Of Customers By Type
No
of
Cu
sto
mers
Customer Type
Key
22
Key Takeaways From Business Focus Section
1
2
3
Unlike in 2015, the 2016 survey hints that the Indian SaaS ecosystem is increasingly focused
on vertical SaaS offerings
With regard to horizontal SaaS, we note a continued paucity of ‘machine focused’ SaaS in
favour of ‘human focused’ SaaS
While the US is still the largest market for Indian SaaS players (a point corroborated by our
experiences in the market) there are a number of respondents that have achieved meaningful
scale by focusing on customers in India
Growth Rates
Growth Profile Of The Respondent Set 3
24
5 5
11
5
6
3
5
11
9
4
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
10%-25% 25%-50% 50%-100% 100%-200% 200%-300%
How Fast Did/Will Respondents Grow Their ARR? (>$1Mn ARR only) 3
ARR Growth1
1Subset of 32 respondents
Median ARR Growth Rate
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
Median range for current and
future growth
If we consider only more ‘mature’ respondents with ARR >$1Mn the reported median historical & future growth
rates remain unchanged
25
How Fast Did/Will Respondents Grow Their ARR? (<$1Mn ARR only) 3
ARR Growth1
1Subset of 29 respondents
Interesting to note that respondents in the <$1Mn bucket are growing more slowly than their scaled peers but are
bullish on the future based on projected growth rates
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
Median ARR Growth Rate
3
5
10
2
4
5
0
4
6
7
6 6
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Current YoY Growth
Projected YoY Growth
Median Range for current growth
Median Range for projected growth
26
0
1
2
3
4
<=$0.25 Mn $0.25 Mn -$0.5 Mn $0.5 Mn -$1.0 Mn $1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn $2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn $5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn >$10.0 Mn
How Fast Is Our Sample Growing Its ARR? 3
$1Mn+ ARR respondents reported higher median growth rates when compared to sub $1Mn ARR respondents. Its
likely that the more nascent players still have to figure out their sales models
Historical Median ARR Growth
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
ARR Range
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
G
row
th R
ate
Median (>$1Mn ARR)
Median
(<$1MnARR)
No. of Respondents: 15 10 7 12 8 7 5
27
What Is The Distribution Of Respondents Growth Rate By Size? 3
While the sub $5M growth split is similar, >$5M split seems very different, however it is hard to make a conclusion
based on the size of the subset
Profile Of ARR Growth By Respondent Size1
1Considering a subset of 35 respondents
ARR Range
Sh
are
of
resp
on
den
ts
No. of Respondents: 14 9 7 5
YoY ARR Growth Range
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
$1.0 Mn -$2.5
Mn
$2.5 Mn -$5.0
Mn
$5.0 Mn -$10.0
Mn
>$10.0 Mn
100-300%
50%-100%
<50%
28
Distribution Of Respondents’ Historical Growth Rate By Customer Focus 3
Regardless of scale, respondents focused on enterprise accounts reported faster growth than those focused on
SMEs, potentially reflecting the sales experience of the Indian SaaS ecosystem
Historical Growth Rate For >$1Mn ARR1 Historical Growth Rate For <$1Mn ARR2
1Subset Of 35 Respondents 2Subset Of 25 Respondents
0
1
2
3
4
5
Large Enterprises SMB/SME (Small and Medium
Business)
0
1
2
3
4
5
Large Enterprises SMB/SME (Small and Medium
Business)
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
200%-300%
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
200%-300%
Median
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
Median
100%
50%-100% 50%-100%
25%-50%
29
Growth Expectations (Business Confidence) By Customer Focus 3
Projected vs Actual Growth Rate - SMB/SME Focus Projected vs Actual Growth Rate - Enterprise Focus
0
1
2
3
4
5
Historical YoY
ARR Growth Rate
Projected YoY
ARR Growth Rate
0
1
2
3
4
5
Historical YoY
ARR Growth Rate
Projected YoY
ARR Growth Rate
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
25%-50%
50%-100% 50%-100%
100%
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
By splitting historical & future growth expectations by customer focus we see that respondents focused on
SMB/SME appear to be more bullish on the future. Could SME SaaS be seeing a pick up?
30
Where Do Respondents See Maximum Growth Potential? 3
~70% of respondents, regardless of size, look to the US and the Rest of Asia as their key geographies to sell into
Geography With Maximum Growth Potential
1Excluding respondents with an ARR of >$10Mn and <$1Mn
ARR Range
Geography Seen With Maximum Growth Potential By Respondent Size1
No. of Respondents: 14 9 7
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
$1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn $2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn $5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn
45%
24%
21%
5% 5%
North America
Rest of Asia
India
Europe
Middle East and Africa
Key
31
2
5
7 7
6 6
1
6
8
6
5 5
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
<10% 10%-25% 25%-50% 50%-100% 100%-200% 200%-300%
Vertical
Horizontal
Distribution Of Respondents Growth Rate By Horizontal vs. Vertical Focus 3
ARR Growth, Horizontal vs. Vertical1
Both vertical and horizontal SaaS respondents show comparable distributions in their growth rates, i.e., one
doesn’t grow any faster than the other
Median Range
1Subset Of 62 Respondents
Nu
mb
er
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
YoY ARR Growth Rate
32
Distribution Of Respondents Growth Rate By Geographic Focus 3
Median ARR Growth By Geography1
1Subset Of 58 Respondents. Considering only the geographies of India and NA as these are the only two significant geographies 2Subset of 4 companies
A good reason to focus on the US market: respondents focused on America have higher median growth rates; our
experience in the market corroborates this finding
0
1
2
3
4
5
India North America Other
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
200%-300% M
ed
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
Geography Generating Maximum Revenue
2
50%-100%
200%
50%-100%
33
The Journey To $1Mn ARR 3
Time Taken To Reach $1Mn ARR1
1Subset of 34 respondents with ARR >$1Mn
The vast majority of respondents at $1Mn+ in ARR took several years to get there. In our experience, start-ups
that exceed 3-4 years to achieve a $1Mn+ in ARR are often questioned by investors
Median
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
1
15
16
2
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
<1 year 1-2 years 2-4 years > 4 years
Journey to $1Mn ARR
Results show that the
journey to $1Mn ARR is
2-4 years
34
Key Takeaways From Growth Rates Section
1
2
3
50-100% annual growth rates are the benchmark in India, hopefully reflecting a young &
healthy SaaS ecosystem
While respondents targeting enterprise customers reported higher growth rates, SME focused
respondents appear to be more bullish on their future prospects, projecting much higher
growth in the coming year than in the year gone by
Corroborated by our own experiences, the US is still the #1 market for the Indian SaaS
ecosystem to sell into and companies focusing on the US are growing faster than their peers
Sales And Delivery
Channels & Delivery Methods 4
36
What Is The Most Used Sales Channel1? 4
While a trend over time would be useful, it is evident that inside sales is presently the most used sales channel
across respondents of all sizes
Most Used Sales Channel2 : >$1Mn ARR Most Used Sales Channel3 : <$1Mn ARR
1The question posed was – “Which of the following sales channels have you deployed? “ and respondents were given the choice to choose multiple answers. Hence the data should be interpreted
as such 235 respondents; 341 respondents
42%
31%
27%
Inside Sales
Field Sales/Feet
on street
Channel
Partners
48%
25%
27% Key
37
What Is The Most Productive Sales Channel1? 4
In addition to be being the most popular sales channel, inside sales proves to a be a very effective sales channel
irrespective of size of respondents
Most Productive Sales Channel : >$1Mn2 Most Productive Sales Channel : <$1Mn3
1The question posed was – “Which of the following sales channels have you found most productive? “ 235 respondents 341 respondents
18
15
2
Inside Sales Field Sales/Feet on
street
Channel Partners
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
25
10
6
Inside Sales Field Sales/Feet on
street
Channel Partners
0
5
10
15
20
25
30 Journey to $1Mn ARR
Although inside sales is
#1, FoS seems to pick up
for our $1Mn+
respondents
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
Sales Channel Sales Channel
38
30
22
7
2
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
<10% 10%-20% 20%-30% >30%
What Are The Sales Commissions For The Primary Sales Channel? 4
Sales Commissions As % Of Sales
Median Range
Reported sales commissions in the Indian ecosystem are higher than in the US (reported at 9%2)
Sales Commissions1
1As a percentage of Sales 2Per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
39
0
1
2
3
4
5
<10% 10%-20% 20%-30% >30%
Do Sales Commissions Impact Growth Rates? 4
Median Growth Rate vs. Sales Commissions1
<10%
10-25%
25%-50%
50%-100%
100%-200%
200%-300%
Sales Commissions
1Subset of 50 respondents
Median Range
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
23 21 7 2 No of respondents:
Although respondents paying commissions of 10%-20% reported the highest median growth rate its hard to make
a determination about further increases in commissions due to the small sub-sample
40
What Level Of Sales Commissions Do More Scaled Respondents Pay? 4
While no respondents at an ARR >$10Mn pays more than 10% in commissions, there doesn’t appear to be a
relationship between scale and commissions paid
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
<=$0.25 Mn $0.25 Mn -$0.5
Mn
$0.5 Mn -$1.0
Mn
$1.0 Mn -$2.5
Mn
$2.5 Mn -$5.0
Mn
$5.0 Mn -$10.0
Mn
>$10.0 Mn
>30%
20%-30%
10%-20%
<10%
Sales Commissions vs. Size
SaaS ARR
Sales Commissions Range
No. of Respondents: 22 12 7 14 9 7 3 Perc
en
tag
e o
f R
esp
on
den
ts
Increasing ARR
41
Which Sales Model Have Respondents Tried At Least Once? 4
Sales Model Tried At Least Once
Sales Model
No
Of
Resp
on
ses
Most of our sample (78%) has tried more than one sales model but rarely stepping outside of the four most
common examples
• Sales Model refers to the
various approaches to
conversion of prospects
• Sales Channel refers to
the various mediums
being used to approach
prospects
58
50
36
18
2
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Try and Buy
(subscription
with trial)
Enterprise Sales
(potentially with
a pilot)
Freemium
(Limited features
with add on
premium
features)
Revenue
share/Outcome
based
Other
42
What Is The Primary Sales Model Across Respondents? 4
Nearly 50% of our sample leverage the ‘try and buy’ model to drive sales with no clear variation by scale
Which Is The Most Prevalent Primary Sales Model? What Sales Models Do Respondents Use, By SaaS ARR
No. of Respondents: 22 12 7 14 9 7
49%
38%
10% 3%
Try and Buy (subscription
with trial)
Enterprise Sales
(potentially with a pilot)
Freemium (Limited
features with add on
premium features)
Revenue share/Outcome
based
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
<=$0.25Mn
$0.25 Mn -$0.5 Mn
$0.5 Mn -$1.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn
$2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn
>$10.0 Mn
5
43
What Sales Models Do The High Growth Respondents Use? 4
Growth vs. Sales Model Used
In line with previous survey findings, higher growth rates and enterprise sales models appear correlated in our
respondent set
YoY ARR Growth Rate
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
<10% 10%-25% 25%-50% 50%-100% 100%-200% 200%-300%
Enterprise Sales (potentially with
a pilot)
Revenue share/Outcome based
Freemium (Limited features with
add on premium features)
Try and Buy (subscription with
trial)
44
How Do The Respondents Host Their SaaS Service? 4
3rd party hosting has grown vs. last year’s survey (83% vs. 68%). Similarly, while AWS continues to dominate, its
share too has grown (71% vs. 58%)
Hosting Preference Type Of Third Party Hosting Service
71%
29%
Amazon Web Services
Rest
83%
17%
Third Party
Self Managed
45
10
20
8 8
12
6
12
0
5
10
15
20
25
<=2.5% 2.5%- 5.0% 5.0%- 7.5% 7.5%- 10.0% 10.0%-
12.5%
12.5%-
15.0%
>15.0%
What Are The Costs For Hosting? 4
Hosting Costs
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
Hosting Costs As A Percentage Of Sales
Median Range(7.5%)
Median hosting cost appear to have fallen YoY from ~10% of sales in last years survey to 7.5% this year
46
Key Takeaways From Sales And Delivery Section
1
2
3
Inside sales channels dominate our SaaS ecosystem, no surprise given their cost efficiency,
which is also something now well recognized in India
‘Try and buy’ seems to be the most popular sales model with no correlation with size
78% of respondents have tried more than one sales model. The dominant model, however, is
clearly ‘try and buy’ with enterprise sales coming in second
Profitability
Costs and Margin Drivers of Respondents 5
48
What Is The Revenue/FTE Across The Respondents?
Despite a small sample size at higher ARRs, our sample shows that more scaled up respondents have cracked the
ability to drive revenues from their employee base
5
1Taking respondents having SaaS revenue contribution greater than 60% . Taking the Middle value for a particular ARR range since the data was collected in the manner of ranges
ARR/FTE Efficiency (ARR>$0.25Mn)1
ARR Range
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
$0.25 Mn -
$0.5 Mn
$0.5 Mn -
$1.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -
$2.5 Mn
$2.5 Mn -
$5.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -
$10.0 Mn
>$10.0 Mn
AR
R/F
TE (
in $
’000)
No. of Respondents: 9 6 12 7 4 3
Journey to $1Mn ARR
Post cracking the $1Mn
ARR mark our
respondents appear to
see significant gains in
productivity
49
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
What Is The Typical CAC1 That The Respondents Incur? 5
Respondents with ARR >$1Mn incur higher median CAC perhaps due to higher mix of Enterprise Sales which has
longer lead times and involves FoS
CAC (<$1Mn ARR)2 CAC (>$1Mn ARR)3
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1Customer Acquisition Cost 2Subset of 34 respondents 3Subset of 30 respondents
Median Range
Median Range
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
No
of
Resp
on
den
ts
CAC CAC
50
How Does The CAC To ARR Ratio Vary With Scale? 5
1This metric has been calculated utilizing the middle value of the CAC value ranges and the middle value of the ARR ranges collected 2CAC to ARR ratio is the Customer Acquisition Cost divided by the ARR per customer
CAC to ARR Ratio, by ARR (>$1Mn ARR)
38%
28%
25%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
$1.0 Mn -$2.5 Mn $2.5 Mn -$5.0 Mn $5.0 Mn -$10.0 Mn
ARR Range
Med
ian
CA
C t
o A
RR
Rati
o2
Respondents in the $1Mn-$2.5Mn ARR bucket spend more to acquire a customer than their larger peers. This is
likely related to chasing growth with sales models that are yet to stabilize
No. of Respondents: 15 10 7
51
In How Many Months Do The Respondents Typically Recover CAC? (>$1Mn ARR) 5
CAC Payback Period1
~2/3rd of our sample recover their CAC in <12 months, likely highlighting the low cost environment enjoyed by
Indian SaaS businesses; A surprising 14% of respondents, however, didn’t even track CAC recovery…
Median Range
1Subset of 35 respondents
17%
17%
29%
17%
6%
14%
<3 Months
3-6 Months
6-12 Months
12-18 Months
18-24 Months
Don't Track
52
What Are The Main Drivers Of Cost? 5
Top Driver Of Cost Where Does The Top Driver Of Cost Lie?
1Per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
16%
84%
Above Gross Margin
Below Gross Margin
While the US counterparts have sales and marketing as the top driver1 of costs Indian firms seem to have R&D as
the top driver of cost, a finding unchanged from last year’s survey
4% 8%
56%
28%
4% Other Direct Delivery
Staff
Product Support Cost
R&D/Product
Development
Sales & Marketing
Third Party
Software/licenses
53
0
5
10
15
20
25
<40% 40%-50% 50%-60% 60%-70% 70%-80% 80%-90% >90%
How Profitable Are The Survey Respondents? (At GM level) 5
Gross Margin
The median gross margin range for our sample was 60-70% vs. 75-80%1 in the US market. A lower gross margin
despite a lower cost base suggests some level of competitive pricing by Indian players vs their US counterparts
Median Range N
o O
f R
esp
on
den
ts
1Per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
Gross Margin Range
54
What Is The Profile Of The Gross Margin Generated By Respondents? 5
Neither vertical vs. horizontal focus nor customer types drives the gross margin of respondents as visible from the
graphs
Gross Margin By Vertical/ Horizontal Gross Margin By Customer Type?
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Vertical Player Horizontal Player
>90%
80%-90%
70%-80%
60%-70%
50%-60%
40%-50%
<40%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Large Enterprises SMB/SME (Small and Medium
Business)
>90%
80%-90%
70%-80%
60%-70%
50%-60%
40%-50%
<40%
55
In How Many Years Do Respondents Project EBITDA Break Even (From project launch date)? 5
Time To Breaking Even2
~50% of respondents project taking 3-6 years to breakeven at the EBITDA level post launch of product
Median Range
1Breakeven for SaaS portion of business 2Subset of 51 respondents-excludes respondents who have already broken even for analysis
36%
50%
14%
<3 Years
3-6 Years
6-10 Years
56
In How Many Years Do Respondents Project EBITDA Break Even, By ARR1? 5
Breaking Even By Size2
The reported, projected time to break even does not show a significant trend with ARR range.
Median Range
Perc
en
tag
e S
hare
ARR Range
1Breakeven for SaaS portion of business 2Subset of 71 respondents
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
<=$0.25
Mn
$0.25 Mn -
$0.5 Mn
$0.5 Mn -
$1.0 Mn
$1.0 Mn -
$2.5 Mn
$2.5 Mn -
$5.0 Mn
$5.0 Mn -
$10.0 Mn
>4 years
2-4 years
1-2 years
<1 year
Already broken even
57
Key Takeaways From Profitability Section
1
2
3
ARR/ FTE improves with scale, highlighting operating leverage available in SaaS businesses
and focusing on cracking the Sales engine early in business’ lifecycle
Indian SaaS startups recover CAC quickly – likely taking advantage of the low cost Indian
ecosystem
Respondents estimate that it takes them 3-6 years to break even at EBITDA level post
launch of SaaS product
Other Metrics
Common SaaS Metrics 6
59
What Is The Customer Lifetime Of The Respondents’ Customers? 6
Customer Lifetime In Months
We see spikes at the 12, 24 & 36 month marks, likely related to annual contracts
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
No Of Months
Median Range
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
2 3 5 6 9 10 12 13 14 15 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 33 36 >36
60
What Is The Revenue Retention Rate1 Of The Respondents? 6
Revenue Retention
Median Range
No Of Respondents
Reven
ue R
ete
nti
on
Rate
>50% of respondents2 have a revenue retention rate higher than 100%
1Revenue Retention Rate is defined as the revenues produced from customers acquired in period 1 divided into the revenues produced by the same customers in the next period expressed as a
percentage 2Respondents who track their revenue retention rate
100%
+ N
et
Rete
nti
on
N
et
Ch
urn
(Upse
lls
gre
ate
r
t
han
ch
urn
) (C
hu
rn g
reate
r
th
an
upse
lls)
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
<80%
80%-90%
90%-100%
100%-110%
110%-120%
120%-130%
140%-150%
>150%
61
What Is The Revenue Retention Rate1 By Customer Type? 6
Revenue Retention
Surprisingly, revenue retention is marginally better with SMB/SME customers even though enterprises typically
sign more long term contracts
1Revenue Retention Rate is defined as the revenues produced from customers acquired in period 1 divided into the revenues produced by the same customers in the next period expressed as a
percentage
Median Range: (90%-100%) ($100%-$110%)
Perc
en
tag
e S
hare
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Large Enterprises SMB/SME (Small and
Medium Business)
>130%
100%-130%
<100%
62
Which Contract Lengths Enable Better Revenue Retention1 Rates? 6
Revenue Retention By Contract Length
Unsurprisingly, data shows that revenue retention is improving as we are moving towards respondents with longer
period contracts
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Monthly Quarterly Half yearly Yearly Multi-year
contracts
Perpetual
License
>130%
100%-130%
<100%
Perc
en
tag
e S
hare
1Revenue Retention Rate is defined as the revenues produced from customers acquired in period 1 divided into the revenues produced by the same customers in the next period expressed as a
percentage
63
What Is The Customer Churn1 Of The Respondents (>$1Mn ARR)? 6
Customer Churn 2
Scaled respondents in the US ecosystem3 (>$2.5Mn ARR) display a median customer churn of ~10%
Median Range
1Churn = # of Customers that dropped by year end/ # Customers at the start of the year 2Subset of 35 respondents 3Per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
No Of Months
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
7
4
6
4 4
7
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
<5% 5%-10% 10%-15% 15%-20% 20%-25% >25%
Journey to $1Mn ARR
Post the $1Mn ARR mark
respondents see a
median customer churn
of 10%-15%
64
What Are Typical Contract Lengths? 6
Typical Contract Length Of Customers
Yearly and monthly contracts seem to be the most popular contract lengths for the respondents
28%
8%
7% 38%
18%
1%
Monthly
Quarterly
Half yearly
Yearly
Multi-year contracts
Perpetual License
65
What Do Contract Lengths Look Like By Customer Type? 6
Contract Length
More Than 70% of the contracts signed by large enterprise customers of the respondent are 1 year and above
Perc
en
tag
e S
hare
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Large Enterprises SMB/SME (Small and
Medium Business)
Perpetual License
Multi-year contracts
Yearly
Half yearly
Quarterly
Monthly
66
Which Kind Of Pricing Metrics Do The Respondents Use? 6
Distribution Of Pricing Metrics Used
This is in line with last years results where 53% of respondents used number of employees as the primary pricing
metric. This is the most popular pricing metric in the US1 as well
32%
1%
13%
45%
9% Based on usage
Database size
Number of transactions
Number of users or
employees
Other
1Per Pacific Crest Private SaaS Company Survey Results 2016
67
What Is The LTV/CAC Of The Respondents? (>$1Mn ARR) 6
LTV/CAC Distribution1
126 out of the 33 respondents track their LTV/CAC
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
LTV/CAC
The median LTV/CAC is 4-5 for respondents with an ARR >$1Mn
1
5
7
2
13
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
2-2.5 2.5-3 3-4 4-5 >5
68
Key Takeaways From Other Metrics
1
2
3
Revenue retention is better amongst respondents with SMB/SME customers
Respondents servicing large enterprises have more than 50% of their contracts with a period of
greater than 1 year
Respondents who sign contracts with a period of greater than a year have reported higher
revenue retention rates
Funding
Funding And Valuation 7
70
How Much Funding Have Respondents Raised? 7
Funds Raised To Date
No
Of
Resp
on
den
ts
Funding Raised
Median Range
Pointing to a young SaaS ecosystem, 38% of our sample is bootstrapped (perhaps by design?) with another 38%
having raised less than $5Mn
29
12
16
12
4 3
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Bootstrapped <$1Mn $1Mn-$5Mn $5Mn-$10Mn $10Mn-$20Mn >$20Mn
71
At What Revenue Multiple Have Respondents Raised Their Most Recent Round? 7
Funding Raised To Date1
Nu
mb
er
of
Resp
on
den
ts
Revenue Multiple
Given that our sample has a relatively low median ARR of $0.75Mn its no surprise to see a number of respondents
raising money at double digit revenue multiples, although the gap at 12.5-15x is notable
Median Range
1 Subset of 36 respondents
2
6
8
9
1
10
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
<5x 5x-7.5x 7.5x-10x 10x-12.5x 12.5x-15x >20x
72
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
1 2 3 4 5
What Is The ARR Profile Versus The Funding Level Of Respondents? 7
As expected, funds raised correlates with ARR (but not necessarily with higher growth rates). Its also interesting to
see that bootstrapped ARRs compare well to those having raised seed funding (<$1Mn)
1 Subset of 72 respondents 2 Subset of 60 respondents
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
1 2 3 4 5
<$0.25Mn
$0.25Mn - $0.5Mn
$0.5Mn - $1Mn
$1Mn - $2.5Mn
$2.5Mn - $5Mn
$5Mn - $10Mn
Bootstrapped < $1Mn $1Mn-$5Mn $5Mn-$10Mn $10Mn-$20Mn
Median ARR vs Funding1 Median ARR Growth vs Funding2
Bootstrapped < $1Mn $1Mn-$5Mn $5Mn-$10Mn $10Mn-$20Mn
$0.25Mn-
$0.5Mn $0.5Mn-
$1Mn
$1Mn-
$2.5Mn
$2.5Mn-
$5Mn
$2.5Mn-
$5Mn
<$10%
10% - 25%
25% - 50%
50% - 100%
100% - 200%
200% - 300%
25%-50%
100%-200% 100%-200% 100%-200%
100%
Funding Raised Funding Raised
Med
ian
AR
R
Med
ian
Yo
Y A
RR
Gro
wth
Rate
73
Is The Customer Focus Determining The Level Of Funding ? 7
Out of respondents who founded companies post 2013 and were funded, 73% of them were vertical focussed SaaS
players (in-line with the global trend of focus on vertical SaaS players)
1 Subset of 19 respondents
Funding Raised VS Customer Type Focus (Companies founded post 2013)1
63%
37%
Vertical Focussed
Horizontal Focussed
74
Key Takeaways From Funding Section
1
2
Pointing to a young sample, 38% of respondents have raised <$5Mn and often at double digit
revenue multiples
Interestingly another 38% of our sample is fully bootstrapped. This could be related to the age
of our sample (i.e., they will raise funds as they grow), a preference for staying bootstrapped or
just being capital efficient
3 Increasing focus on Vertical focussed SaaS players with major funding activity happening in
these players
Participants
Some Of Our Survey Participants 8
76
Some Of Our Survey Respondents 8
1 Subset of 19 respondents
77
Some Of Our Survey Respondents 8
1 Subset of 19 respondents
Signal Hill Credentials
A Leading Tech Investment Bank 9
79
Overview Of Signal Hill 2/3rds Of Our Business Is Through Referrals & Repeat Clients
Signal Hill is the premier advisory boutique serving growth companies Winner of the 2016 Boutique Investment Bank of the Year award by the Global M&A Network’s M&A Atlas Awards
Established in 2002, Signal Hill has completed 700+ M&A advisory and financing transactions
Trusted strategic advisor to growth companies
More than 75 professionals
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Signal Hill Is A Recognized Premier Advisory Firm Recent Awards & Accolades
2016 Awards:
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(ITG) from Bregal Sagemount
2016 Finalist:
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2015 DEALMAKERS of the YEAR WINNERS
Winner at the 2016 Global M&A Network’s M&A Atlas Awards:
Boutique Technology Investment Bank of the Year – Signal Hill
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Bregal Sagemount
Winner at the 2015 Global M&A Network’s M&A Atlas Awards:
Boutique Technology Investment Bank of the Year – Signal Hill
U.S.A Private Equity Growth Deal of the Year – Primus Capital / Forte Software
Winner at the 2014 Global M&A Network’s M&A Atlas Awards:
Boutique Investment Bank of the Year – Signal Hill
Private Equity Small Middle Market Deal of the Year – FireMon / Insight Venture
Partners
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Award:
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Signal Hill works with companies to capitalize on promising trends and potential paradigm shifts in consumer and business behavior
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Signal Hill Team has closed transactions with all the above mentioned companies
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The Signal Hill Software Team - USA
Team Member Experience Background & Experience
Scott Wieler
Chairman & CEO
swieler@signalhill.com
+1 (443) 478-2405
30+
Has created more than $70+ billion in transaction value for clients through M&A, private placements, venture and growth capital, divestitures, fairness opinions/valuations, defense advisory and corporate restructuring
Prior to founding Signal Hill, was Head of the Global Telecommunications Group at DB Alex Brown MBA from The Wharton School and B.A. from Boston College
Chris Hastings
Managing Director
Head – Private Placements
chastings@signalhill.com
+1-917-621-3750
25+
25 years of experience in raising capital; leads the Private Placement group at Signal Hill, focusing on growth-stage companies across the technology space.
Prior to Signal Hill, was Principal at BerchWood Partners, with previous experience at Bear Stearns, Credit Suisse, Cantor Fitzgerald, Bank of America and Prudential Securities.
MBA from Wharton and a B.S. in Finance from the Pennsylvania State University.
Christopher A. Hieb
Managing Director
chieb@signalhill.com
+1-415-590-6891
20+
Focuses on Enterprise Software, Advanced Analytics, and Contact Center Infrastructure sectors. Prior to joining Signal Hill, was with Pacific Crest Securities for more than seven years building the
M&A practice Began his investment banking career at SoundView Technology Group, continuing his career at W.R.
Hambrecht as the Head of West Coast M&A, and then Oppenheimer as the Head of West Coast M&A B.S. degree in Nuclear Engineering from Purdue University
John Roediger
Managing Director
jroediger@signalhill.com
+1 415 962-4558
20+
Extensive sell side advisory experience; covers Enterprise Software, E-commerce, Financial Techology, Healthcare IT, Software sectors at Signal Hill
Prior to Signal Hill, was a Founderr at Montgomery & Co., Managing Director at JPMorgan and Partner at Hambrecht and Quist
Degree in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Southern California and served in the U.S. Navy
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The Signal Hill Software Team - INDIA
Senior-level involvement throughout the process is critical to driving outcomes
Team Member Experience Background & Experience
Klaas Oskam
Managing Director
koskam@signalhill.in
+91-80-3969-4701
20+
Extensive investment banking experience in Technology in last 10 years led & closed 30+ private placement & M&A transactions in TMT
Prior to Signal Hill, was a Director in the Investment Banking team of EY India, responsible for Technology M&A in the South of India.
Before moving to India in February of 2005, worked for eight years in Europe, primarily with Arthur Andersen / Deloitte in Technology M&A.
MSc in Economics / Finance from Groningen University
Nitin Bhatia
Managing Director
nbhatia@signalhill.in
+91-22-6712-8451
14+
Extensive investment banking experience in Technology, Media, Telecom & Education Prior to Signal Hill, was an Associate Director at Edelweiss Capital and Head of TMT practice Before Edelweiss, he was a VP (Corporate Finance) at Centrum Capital & has previously also
worked with Inductis, ECS & iNautix B.Tech. from IIT (BHU), Varanasi and MBA from IIM Ahmedabad
George Anthraper
Director
ganthraper@signalhill.in
+91-80-3969-4702
11+
Investment banking experience in Technology Prior to joining Signal Hill, was Director and Head of India Operations for Technology Holdings Before Technology Holdings, he was Associate Vice President at Avendus Capital; Began his career as
an Associate at Price Waterhouse MBA from the Indian School of Business and is a Chartered Accountant
Nishant Malhotra
Director
nmalhotra@signalhill.in
+91-80-3969-4712
10+
Investment banking experience in the Technology, Telecom, Enterprise Software and Internet & Digital Media sectors
Prior to Signal Hill, was Business Head for Wooqer, a retail-focused SaaS start-up. He was earlier an Associate at Standard Chartered Private Equity and have also worked with Avendus Capital and KPMG
BA from Brandeis University and MBA from The Wharton School
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A Leading Advisor In Software Transactions Signal Hill Has Won Numerous Awards In The Software Sector
Recent Awards And Nominations Of Signal Hill’s Software Transactions
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Signal Hill has deep experience and a rich history of working with enterprise software / SaaS companies
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iSPIRT Credentials
A Leading Think Tank 10
Public Tech Platforms APIs India Stack, Impact of inflection points
on Government/PSUs/Private Sector
across verticals
Playbook Market
Catalyst
Policy Technology
Stack
Enhanced Market Access Buy products vs unique solutions and
services - B2C or B2B, Local or Global
Events/Matchmaking/Deals
Product Business Skill
Building Services vs Product mindset
Lifecycle of entrepreneurship
Learn from peers/don’t reinvent
Simplified Regulations Fund of Funds, Stay-in-India Checklist, List in India,
Open APIs, Grand Challenges, Buying products not
Projects, No Software Patents, Financial Inclusion,
Healthcare Inclusion, Regulatory sandbox, Digital
goods tax definition, Net Neutrality Policy, Open
Source Policy, Privacy law, Civil society watchdogs.
What we do...
iSPIRT Brings Intensity to Building The Technology Ecosystem
30 yr Architects
10 yr Planners
5 yr Doers
• Think Tanks
• Universities
• Research Labs
• VCs
• Policy Makers
• Missionary entrepreneurs
• Bootstrapped entrepreneurs
• Mercenary entrepreneurs
Public goods
• Market maker
• Ecosystem builder
• Mindset shaper
iSPIRT:
iSPIRT Brings Intensity to Building The Technology Ecosystem
Impact made by iSPIRT for the Product Founders
Reviewed by: Aneesh Reddy - Capillary Technologies, Avlesh Singh - WebEngage, Avinash Raghava - iSPIRT, Girish Mathrubootham - Freshdesk, Ritesh Arora - BrowserStack, Shekhar Kirani - Accel Partners, Sunil Patro - SignEasy
Suresh Sambandam CEO, KiSSFLOW
Krish Subramaniam CEO, ChargeBee
Survey Co-Led by
93
Disclaimer & Contacts
Strictly Private & Confidential
This preliminary document has been prepared by Signal Hill Capital Advisory India Private Limited (“SHI”) for discussion purposes only. The information and opinions contained in this document are derived from public and private sources which we believe to be reliable and accurate but which, without further investigation cannot be warranted as to their accuracy, completeness or correctness. This information is supplied on the condition that SHI and any partner, employee or affiliate of SHI are not liable for any error or inaccuracy contained herein, whether negligently caused or otherwise, or for loss or damage suffered by any person due to such error, omission or inaccuracy as a result of such a supply. SHI and its affiliates are also not liable for any loss or damage howsoever caused by relying on the information provided in this document. In particular any numbers, initial valuations and schedules contained in this document are preliminary and are for discussion purposes only and does not constitute an opinion. The credentials mentioned herein include those transactions concluded by senior employees prior to joining SHI or by entities which have since merged with SHI and its affiliates.
Signal Hill is a leading independent advisory boutique serving the M&A and private capital raising needs of growth companies. Signal Hill’s experienced bankers provide deep domain expertise and an unyielding commitment to clients in our sectors: Internet & Digital Media, Internet Infrastructure, Services and Software. With over 700 completed transactions and offices in Baltimore, Bangalore, Boston, Nashville, New York, Reston and San Francisco, Signal Hill leverages deep strategic industry and financial sponsor relationships to help our clients achieve Greater Outcomes®.
iSPIRT Foundation connects and guides software product entrepreneurs and catalyses business growth. It’s an enabler of a stronger ecosystem. We encourage buyers to improve performance by leveraging software products effectively. We advise policy makers on interventions that can set the industry on a higher growth trajectory. We are a not-for-profit industry think-tank founded by key participants and proponents of the Indian software product industry
Klaas Oskam Managing Director
Email: koskam@signalhill.in Mobile: +91 97403 32000 Direct: +91 80 3969 4701
Nitin Bhatia Managing Director
Email: nbhatia@signalhill.in Mobile: +91 9920365756 Direct: +91 22 6169 5921
Nishant Malhotra Director
Email: nmalhotra@signalhill.in Mobile: +91 9961820040 Direct: +91 80 3969 4712
Varun Potturu Analyst
Email: vpotturu@signalhill.in Mobile: +91 7350123803 Direct: +91 80 3969 4702
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