the saas business model and metrics

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The SaaS Business Model & Metrics David Skok, Matrix Partners

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Page 1: The SaaS business model and metrics

The SaaS Business Model & Metrics

David Skok, Matrix Partners

Page 2: The SaaS business model and metrics

Before we get started, there’s one useful concept to discuss…

Page 3: The SaaS business model and metrics

3 STAGES OF A STARTUPAnd how the CEO should manage the company

Page 4: The SaaS business model and metrics

Search for Product/Market Fit

Scaling the Business

Search for Repeatable & Scalable Sales Model

Conserve Cash Invest Aggressively

Page 5: The SaaS business model and metrics

The SaaS Business ModelDavid Skok, Matrix Partners

Page 6: The SaaS business model and metrics

What we were used to: Licensed Software

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Page 7: The SaaS business model and metrics

What’s so different about SaaS?

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Cash Flow for a Single Deal

CAC (Cost to acquire the customer) Subscription payments * GM%

Page 8: The SaaS business model and metrics

Cash Impact of a typical deal

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Negative Cash Flow

Page 9: The SaaS business model and metrics

If cash flow is bad for one customer, what happens when we grow, and add many more customers?

Page 10: The SaaS business model and metrics

Modeling a slow increase in the number of customers added every month

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Cash Flows

CAC

SubscriptionPayments

* GM%

Page 11: The SaaS business model and metrics

Cumulative Cash Flow

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Page 12: The SaaS business model and metrics

The SaaS Cash Flow Trough

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$6,000,000

$7,000,000

Page 13: The SaaS business model and metrics

“The thing that surprises many investors & boards of directors about the SaaS model is that, even with perfect execution, an acceleration of growth will often be accompanied by a squeeze on profitability and cash flow.”

Ron Gill, CFO at Netsuite

Page 14: The SaaS business model and metrics

What’s the impact of faster growth?

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$5,000,000

$10,000,000

$15,000,000

$20,000,000

$25,000,000

2 moreCustomers/Month

5 moreCustomers/Month

10 moreCustomers/Month

Page 15: The SaaS business model and metrics

What’s the impact of faster growth?

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2 moreCustomers/Month

5 moreCustomers/Month

10 moreCustomers/Month

Cash Flow Trough gets deeper

Page 16: The SaaS business model and metrics

“As soon as the product starts to see some significant uptake, investors expect that the losses / cash drain should narrow, right?

Instead, this is the perfect time to increase investment in the business, which will cause losses to deepen again.”

Ron Gill, CFO at Netsuite

Page 17: The SaaS business model and metrics

What typically happens…

Courtesy of Ron Gill, CFO at Netsuite

Page 18: The SaaS business model and metrics

When your SaaS business is losing money at an increasing rate, how can you tell if the business is going to work eventually?

Page 19: The SaaS business model and metrics

UNIT ECONOMICSA Powerful Tool

Page 20: The SaaS business model and metrics

Unit Economics

Can I make more profit from my customers than it costs me to acquire them?

Page 21: The SaaS business model and metrics

Unit Economics

Cost to Acquire a Customer Lifetime Value of a Customer

CACCAC LTVLTV

Page 22: The SaaS business model and metrics

A Viable Business Model

CAC

CAC LTVLTV<

But surprising how many Entrepreneurs underestimate CAC

Page 23: The SaaS business model and metrics

Computing the Customer Lifetime

Customer Lifetime = 1

Churn

Page 24: The SaaS business model and metrics

How Churn affects LTV

1% 2% 5%$0

$20,000

$40,000

$60,000

$80,000

$100,000

$120,000

$100,000

$50,000

$20,000

LTV vs Churn RateLTV

Monthly Churn

Page 25: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer Churn vs $ Dollar Churn

Page 26: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer Churn vs $ Dollar Churn

Customer 1$1k MRR

Customer 2$5k MRR

Starting period

Page 27: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer 1$1k MRR

Customer Churn vs $ Dollar Churn

Customer 2$5k MRR

Customer 2$5k MRR

Customer 1 Churned50% Customer Churn

17% $Dollar Churn

Starting period A year later

Page 28: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer 1$1k MRR

Customer Churn vs $ Dollar Churn

Customer 2$5k MRR

Customer 1$1k MRR

Customer 2 Churned50% Customer Churn

83% $Dollar Churn

Starting period A year later

Page 29: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer 1$1k MRR

Negative $ Dollar Churn

Customer 2$5k MRR

Customer 2$7k MRR

Customer 1 Churned50% Customer Churn-16% $Dollar Churn

Starting period A year later

Page 30: The SaaS business model and metrics

Negative Churn

Expansion Revenue

from Existing Customers

Revenue Lostfrom Churning

Customers>

Page 31: The SaaS business model and metrics

Implies another part of the Sales Funnel

Expand, Upsell,

Cross Sell

Top of Funnel

Middle of Funnel

Sales

Page 32: The SaaS business model and metrics

How do we get Expansion Revenue?

If we only have one SaaS product, what more can we sell

the customer?

Page 33: The SaaS business model and metrics

Variable Pricing AxesA critical factor for expansion revenue

Page 34: The SaaS business model and metrics

EnterpriseEdition

ProEdition

BasicEdition

Features

Page 35: The SaaS business model and metrics

Users

EnterpriseEdition

ProEdition

BasicEdition

Features

Page 36: The SaaS business model and metrics

Users

Depth ofUsage

Examples:- Mailing list size- Database size- Amount of storage used

EnterpriseEdition

ProEdition

BasicEdition

Features

Page 37: The SaaS business model and metrics

Revenue from one group of customers (cohort) with no upsell/cross-sell

Time

$’s

Upsell revenuefrom the same cohort N

egat

ive

Ch

urn

Revenue from a single cohort

Page 38: The SaaS business model and metrics

CRR and DRR

CRR: Customer Retention RateDRR: Dollar Retention Rate

Annual Numbers – expressed as a percentageLook at the year ago cohort

Page 39: The SaaS business model and metrics

WHY CHURN IS SO IMPORTANT

Page 40: The SaaS business model and metrics

Revenue Lost with 2.5% monthly Churn

Renewals

Lost dueto Churn

YEAR 3

$3m $7m

Becomes harder & harder to

replace this with new bookings

Renewals

Lost dueto Churn

YEAR 6

$30m $70m

Page 41: The SaaS business model and metrics

Impact of Negative Churn

Page 42: The SaaS business model and metrics

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Jan 85% 75% 65% 62% 61% 58% 57%

Feb 87% 78% 70% 67% 63% 59%

Mar 88% 84% 79% 75% 71%

Apr 92% 89% 86% 82%

May 93% 89% 85%

Jun 94% 90%

Jul 96%

Months after starting usage

Coh

ort

Shows improving first month churnShows churn stabilizing

in fourth month

Cohort Analysis

Page 43: The SaaS business model and metrics

CUSTOMER SUCCESSAn important new function

Page 44: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer Success

• Not just the responsibility of Customer Success department• Product

• Design• Quality (response time, bugs and downtime)

• Sales• Don’t over sell the product• Don’t sell the product to the wrong customer types

• Marketing• Marketing to customers, not just prospects

• But good to have single executive who has this as their top priority

Page 45: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer Success

Focusing on retention a

month before the contract

expires

Page 46: The SaaS business model and metrics

Customer Success

Focusing on retention a

month before the contract

expires

Focusing on successful on-

boarding

Page 47: The SaaS business model and metrics

CHI – Customer Happiness Index

• Find a way to predict the likelihood of churn

• Most common and simple technique: Usage

• More sophisticated:• Score usage of specific features higher than others

• E.g.• Commenting on someone else’s posts on Facebook = Low• Creating your own post = High

Page 48: The SaaS business model and metrics

High Usage does not correlate with High Value

Usage

Business Value

Optimal

Worst

Page 49: The SaaS business model and metrics

My Suggestion

• Consider a CHI score based on Business Value achieved, and find a way to measure automatically in the app• Example:

• How many new leads did you bring the customer?• How much did you improve the lead to customer conversion rate?

Page 50: The SaaS business model and metrics

ANOTHER IMPORTANT VARIABLE

Time to Recover CAC

Page 51: The SaaS business model and metrics

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Months to recover CAC: 6.3 Months to recover CAC: 12.5

Months to recover CAC: 18.8

Cumulative Cash Flow

Impact of Months to Recover CAC

6.3 monthsto recover CAC

12.5 monthsto recover CAC

18.8 monthsto recover CAC

Page 52: The SaaS business model and metrics

Cumulative Cash Flow

Impact of Months to Recover CAC

6.3 monthsto recover CAC

12.5 monthsto recover CAC

18.8 monthsto recover CAC

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$25,000,000

Months to recover CAC: 6.3 Months to recover CAC: 12.5

Months to recover CAC: 18.8

2x Deeper P&L trough2x longer to reach breakeven

3x Deeper P&L trough3x longer to reach breakeven

Page 53: The SaaS business model and metrics

Two Guidelines for SaaS success

LTV CAC> 3x

Months to recover CAC < 12 months

Required for Capital Efficiency

Page 54: The SaaS business model and metrics

What Metrics should we use to measure a SaaS business?

Page 55: The SaaS business model and metrics

We care about recurring revenue

MRR Monthly Recurring Revenue

ARR Annually Recurring Revenue

Page 56: The SaaS business model and metrics

Net NewMRR/ACV

Expansion MRR/ACV (Existing Customers)

Churned MRR/ACV(Lost Customers)

New MRR/ACV(New Customers)

Page 57: The SaaS business model and metrics

Always ask to see Bookings over TimeEntrepreneurs always happy to show their MRR over timeBut this doesn’t tell whether their bookings are growing

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun

$(15.0)

$(10.0)

$(5.0)

$-

$5.0

$10.0

$15.0

$20.0

$25.0

$30.0

$35.0

MRR Bookings

New MRR

Net New MRR

Expansion MRR

Churned MRR

Page 58: The SaaS business model and metrics

Salesperson Unit EconomicsAnother valuable analysis

Page 59: The SaaS business model and metrics

How Revenue Builds for a SaaS Salesperson(assuming no ramp up time)

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec$0

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

$35,000

$40,000

$45,000

With Churn of 2.5%

Jan Custs Feb Custs Mar Custs Apr Custs

May Custs Jun Custs Jul Custs Aug Custs

Sep Custs Oct Custs Nov Custs Dec Custs

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec$0

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

$35,000

$40,000

$45,000

With no Churn

Jan Custs Feb Custs Mar Custs Apr Custs

May Custs Jun Custs Jul Custs Aug Custs

Sep Custs Oct Custs Nov Custs Dec Custs

Page 60: The SaaS business model and metrics

The Cash Flow Gap

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$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

Net profit - New Sales Hire

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Month 2

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Month 4

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Month 6

Month 7

Month 8

Month 9

Month 10

Month 11

Month 12

$-

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

MRR vs Expenses – New Sales Hire

MRR

Expenses

CashGap

(Slightly later breakeven point, because Gross Profit is less than MRR)

11 months to breakeven

Page 61: The SaaS business model and metrics

The SaaS Cash Flow Trough

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$(200,000)

$(100,000)

$-

$100,000

$200,000

$300,000

$400,000

$500,000

Cumulative Net Profit - New Sales Hire

23 Months to get back the investment

Total amount invested:

$110k

But a great return on

investment

Page 62: The SaaS business model and metrics

Search for Product/Market Fit

Scaling the Business

Search for Repeatable & Scalable Sales Model

Conserve Cash Invest Aggressively

Page 63: The SaaS business model and metrics

What happens at the company level when we add 2 new sales hires every month?

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$(250,000)

$(200,000)

$(150,000)

$(100,000)

$(50,000)

$-

$50,000

$100,000

$150,000

Net profit

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$(3,000,000)

$(2,000,000)

$(1,000,000)

$-

$1,000,000

$2,000,000

$3,000,000

$4,000,000

Cumulative Net Profit

32 Months to get back the investment

Total amount invested:

$2.6m

First profitable month: 21

Worst loss: $190k in month 11

Page 64: The SaaS business model and metrics

Comparison: hiring one versus two sales people per month

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$(400,000)

$(200,000)

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$200,000

$400,000

$600,000

$800,000

$1,000,000

Net Profit

1 sales hire a month 2 sales hires a month

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$(3,000,000)

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$(1,000,000)

$-

$1,000,000

$2,000,000

$3,000,000

$4,000,000

Cumulative Net Profit

1 sales hire a month 2 sales hires a month

The time to breakeven remains

the sameThe cash flow

trough is halved

Not adequately shown, but the acceleration after

breakeven is also halved

Page 65: The SaaS business model and metrics

Salesperson Unit Economics

CAC

OTE LTVQuota<5x

On Target Earnings

A typical good ratio is around 6x in SaaS

Page 66: The SaaS business model and metrics

Annual up-front paymentInstead of Monthly

Page 67: The SaaS business model and metrics

What happens if we collect a year’s payment in advance?

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$10,000,000

$15,000,000

$20,000,000

$25,000,000

$30,000,000

$35,000,000

$40,000,000

Cumulative Cashflow comparision - monthly

payments vs year in advance

Cumulative Net Profit

Cumulative Net Cash Flows

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$(500,000)

$-

$500,000

$1,000,000

$1,500,000

$2,000,000

$2,500,000

Cashflow comparison - monthly payments vs

year in advance

Net profit Net Cash Flows

Eliminates the cash flow trough, and means $35m more cash in this

scenario

Looking at the whole company picture when hiring 2 sales people per month

Page 68: The SaaS business model and metrics

MORE ON CACThe impact of sales complexity

Page 69: The SaaS business model and metrics

Sales Complexity

FreemiumNo Touch

Self-Service

Light TouchInside Sales

High TouchInside Sales

Field Sales Field Sales with SE’s

Page 70: The SaaS business model and metrics

How I assumed the two would relate

Page 71: The SaaS business model and metrics

A rough estimate of CAC versusSales Complexity

FreemiumNo Touch

Self-Service

Light TouchInside Sales

High TouchInside Sales

Field Sales Field Sales with SE’s

$0-$40

$30 – $200

$300 - $800

$3,000 - $8,000

$25,000 – $75,000

$75,000 – $200,000

Rough Estimates of Cost of Customer Acquisition (CAC)

Page 72: The SaaS business model and metrics

The relationship is roughly exponential

Clearly adding Human Touch dramatically

increases costs

Page 73: The SaaS business model and metrics

Sales Complexity

CAC (logarithmic)

10x

10x

10x

Page 74: The SaaS business model and metrics

Understanding Public SaaS companies

Page 75: The SaaS business model and metrics

Example Operating Model

Revenue100%

CoGS24%

Sales & Marketing

51%

R&D15%

G&A13% Loss (6%)

Page 76: The SaaS business model and metrics

Break apart Sales & Marketing

Revenue100%

CoGS24%

Sales & Marketing

51%

R&D15%

G&A13% Loss (6%)

Expansion &

Retention25%

New Customer

Sales26%

Page 77: The SaaS business model and metrics

To make it comparable with a traditional software business, eliminate New Customer Sales, as those benefit the future

Revenue100%

CoGS24%

Sales & Marketing

51%

R&D15%

G&A13%

Profit20%

Expansion &

Retention25%

New Customer

Sales26%

CoGS24%

R&D15%

G&A13%

Loss (6%)

Expansion &

Retention25%

Page 78: The SaaS business model and metrics

Profit20%

Expansion &

Retention25%

CoGS24%

R&D15%

G&A13%

Now look at DRR (Dollar Retention Rate):

• Example DRR = 123% (Zendesk’s number)

• The existing customer base with no additional revenue is growing at 23% annually

• So you have a business growing 23% year-on-year, generating 20% Profit

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SUMMARY

Page 80: The SaaS business model and metrics

Summary

• Expect to see the P&L / Cash Flow trough

• Use Unit Economics to evaluate the business

• Look for negative churn, (where DRR > 100%)

• Use SaaS metrics, not traditional metrics

Page 81: The SaaS business model and metrics

The 3 Keys to SaaS Success

1 Acquisition

2 Retention

3 Monetization

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• Visit my blog at www.forEntrepreneurs.com

For more information…

Page 83: The SaaS business model and metrics

APPENDIXSome more adanced topics

Page 84: The SaaS business model and metrics

The Magic Number

• In general, I don’t like the Magic Number• Hard to explain and understand

• BUT – a public company may not give:• LTV:CAC ratio• Months to recover CAC

• So use Magic Number to calculate something roughly equivalent• First developed by the Josh James, CEO of Omniture• The key insight - if your Magic Number is:

• Above 0.75 – step on the gas• Below 0.75 – step back and look at your business • Below 0.5 – business probably not ready to expand

Page 85: The SaaS business model and metrics

The Formula for Magic Number

• QRR[X] = Quarterly Revenue in the current quarter

• QRR[X-1] = Quarterly Revenue in the prior quarter

• Sales & Marketing Expense [X-1] = Sales & Marketing expense in the prior quarter

𝑀𝑎𝑔𝑖𝑐 𝑁𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟=(𝑄𝑅𝑒𝑣 [ 𝑋 ]−𝑄𝑅𝑒𝑣 [𝑋 −1 ] )∗4  

𝑆𝑎𝑙𝑒𝑠∧𝑀𝑎𝑟𝑘𝑒𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝐸𝑥𝑝𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑒 [𝑋 −1]

𝑀𝑎𝑔𝑖𝑐 𝑁𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟=𝐼𝑛𝑐𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑠𝑒 𝑖𝑛𝑄𝑢𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑒𝑟𝑙𝑦 𝑅𝑒𝑐𝑢𝑟𝑟𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑅𝑒𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑢𝑒∗4  

𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑜𝑟 𝑄𝑢𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑒𝑟 ′ 𝑠𝑆𝑎𝑙𝑒𝑠∧𝑀𝑎𝑟𝑘𝑒𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝐸𝑥𝑝𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑒𝑠

Expressed in a slightly more readable form:

Page 86: The SaaS business model and metrics

Example Magic Number calculation

Q1 Q2 Q3

Revenue $1,000,000 $1,200,000 $1,500,000

Sales & Marketing Expense $800,000 $900,000

Magic Number 1.0 1.33

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2008 Magic Number Graph