By Kevin Dobbs
Montclair Advisors, LLC
Now that many software companies really feel that the risks associated with a second recession are firmly in the rearview mirror, it now seems like everyone is looking to grow their businesses.
I read a great post yesterday by Bruce Cleveland at InterWest Ventures about the Value of Growth for SaaS Companies, which I thought really accurately captured a challenge that many software firms face when transitioning to a SaaS model. This is a subject that is near and dear to me given my background as a reformed marketing executive and someone who was responsible lead generation at Oracle years ago during the Tom Siebel and Marc Benioff era. I think it was Tom Siebel when he was running Oracle’s inside sales team that told me “I want it to rain leads from the sky!” At the time I was actually shocked because he was asking me to literally drown his sales team with qualified opportunities who wanted to buy Oracle’s database products.
As I have come to learn that he knew exactly what he was talking about and his track record demonstrates that productive sales teams deliver amazing revenue growth results. Bruce’s post highlights that a SaaS company without meaningful growth is not worth very much and probably will fetch the low-end of the valuation curve, which is still pretty good in today’s crazy market (See last week’s post about the SaaS Bubble). So how are high flying SaaS companies like Salesforce and SuccessFactors achieving CAGR’s in excess of 30% every year? Check out this chart I put together on some of the leading publicly traded SaaS firms (sans Salesforce because they will skew the chart):
As you can see the companies with the higher growth rates are also the ones that have high market caps (valued more highly by Wall Street). What is really interesting is that SuccessFactors was able to grow by almost 50% for the past three years, even through one of the worst recessions in the last 100 years. The value of growth can also been seen by a company that recently went public, Cornerstone OnDemand, they have been rewarded with a market cap that is over $800M even though the company lost more than $40M last year. Seems crazy right? But they have a great organic growth story along with a major channel relationship with ADP which could also signal even faster growth in the future.
If you talk to any software sales rep they often complain about their pipeline and the lack of quality leads. Reminds me of those coveted Glengarry leads from Mitch and Murray downtown. So at the heart of all of these companies and their rapid growth rates is that they have all developed a core competency to generate high quality leads and build pipelines quickly.
(click on picture to see clip)
Here are some tricks that I have learned along the way that will help you to build out your SaaS lead generation strategies:
When most companies think about moving towards a Software-as-a-Service business model they often just change their pricing model. You know the drill, instead of charging a big perpetual license fee upfront with some services and then an annual maintenance fee, you switch over to a SaaS agreement that is structured quite differently; with the subscription being spread over the term of the agreement and some upfront services to get started.
Don’t get me wrong, changing your pricing is a big deal if you are a traditional software company. By changing your pricing dynamic you are moving from a Capital Expense (CapEx) to an Operating Expense (OpEx) orientation, this is a dramatic change! It’s even a bigger deal if you are a publicly traded software company. But the overall SaaS business model is really all about monitoring and measuring metrics, ratios and statistics.
I ran into a very interesting company recently, OpEx Engine, that has done extensive benchmarking of SaaS and technology companies, and has complied a library of operational metrics for over 50 public and privately held software firms. Lauren Kelley, OpEx’s CEO is an ex- Art Technology Group (ARTG) executive who realized that smart technology people were looking for these types of real-world benchmarks and operating metrics. Lauren’s team has spent the last two years accumulating a lot of really value information. I can’t tell you how many times I have looked for good comparative metrics on how much companies typically invested in sales and marketing, research and development and G&A when building out a business model. For instance, did you know that of all of the publicly-traded SaaS companies that DealerTracker (TRAK) has the lowest R&D investment as a percentage of their revenue? (4.9%) Did you also know that Salesforce.com (CRM), Omniture (OMTR), NetSuite (N), and SuccessFactors (SFSF) all spend more than 50% of their revenues on sales and marketing? That’s an easy one but you should definately check out the free information that Lauren provides on her site.
There are many other metrics that are needed to successfully run a SaaS company but one of the most important is your overall cost of sales and marketing. Understanding what your true Customer Acquisition Costs is a critical SaaS business performance indicator. I was recently at the SIIA On Demand Conference in San Jose where I heard Josh James, the CEO at Omniture present his sales and marketing modeling methodology, that he has dubbed the ‘Magic Number’ for SaaS companies. Since it would probably justify a completely separate post, all I can say that this is a really innovative way to determine if your % of sales and marketing spend is either too much or too little. Phil Wainewright wrote a great piece on the Magic Number - When to spend cash in a SaaS business - which is definitely worth reading. What Omniture has done really well is to figure out the overall profitability of their clients, market saturation, marketing effectiveness and the number of Quota Bearing Sales Reps (QBSR’s) that are required to grab market share. It’s cool.
Other sources of good SaaS market information and metrics are:
TripleTree, a boutique investment bank which conducts some solid SaaS research, Cutter Consortium, Saugatuck Technologies, and Jeff Kaplan’s firm Think Strategies.
If you hear of any other good ones, let me know.