Bits & Bytes

The BitTitan Blog for Service Providers

03/07/2017
Saher Ghattas
ModernMSP_SaaS

The SaaS Sales Model That Sails At 80 Knots

I am very fortunate to have worked with many SaaS organizations, either for a three-month consulting period, or a full six months to a year service to help them in bootstrapping their sales and marketing engine. We believe that SaaS selling is a lot like sailing. I personally love sailing. In sailing, the goal is speed in knots per hour, the input is wind, and everything between is a conversion point, including the sails and the sailors. In SaaS, the goal is MRR in dollars per month, the input is leads, and everything in between is a conversion point, including the tools and the sales people.

There’s a lot of variation in how you can maximize speed via the interaction of those many factors, both in sailing and in sales, but at the end of the day, both are defined by physics, the quantitative relationship between inputs and conversion points. They define what sails to use under what conditions, how many sailors to staff, and what each of them should be doing.

Let’s start with a special number: 78. The number 78 is compounded over a 12-month cycle. For example, if you start in January and you acquire one new client (n) every month, and you never lose one, then at the end of December you will have gathered 78 months’ worth of revenue:

78Xn=12Xn+11Xn+10Xn+9Xn+8Xn+7Xn+6Xn+5Xn+4Xn+3Xn+2Xn+1Xn

This special number allows you to determine, within reason, how much MRR you need to acquire to hit your target.

Example:

2016 ARR goal is $2,000,000

2015 ARR goal was      $440,000

NEW ARR in 2016 $1,560,00 divide by 78

Then your new MRR /month is $20,000

So, with your annual revenue goal and the number 78, you have determined the new MRR you need to secure each month to hit the annual recurring revenue target. The big question is how to staff against that target (which we define as SaaS metrics from MRR to leads). Let’s take the last example $20,000 in MRR for an ARR Stream of $2M.

Note: Most companies at the “beginning to scale” stage do not have these ratios down pat, but we have worked with a full range of SaaS organizations, so we will provide some default averages.

For Example: (Impact of CHURN on your Monthly NUMBERS)

 

 

  • $20,000 MRR Goal

 

 

  • Cross Sell: +7%

 

 

  • Upsell +3%

 

 

  • Assuming client Churn is -5%

 

 

  • Your month will be $21,100

 

 

Factors that will affect your calculations:

 

 

  • Cross Sell: New decision makers get involved to buy more/new services.

 

 

  • Upsell: The same decision makers buy more of the same services, for example more seats (expansion), or increase the service package at an increased price.

 

 

  • Renewal: The Same people buy the same service at the same or increased price when the contract expires, this can be either monthly, quarter or annually.

 

 

Factors that will involve revenue loss scenarios:

 

 

  • Lose a customer, you lose the revenue, the seat count and the logo.

 

 

  • Lose usage with the same number of customers. This can be a client downgrading its package for all its seats, resulting in a loss of revenue, yet you are not losing them as a customer, nor losing any seats.

 

 

  • Lose the seats: Fewer users inside your customer use your services. Some users may even increase usage. Logo churn is not impacted, revenue churn can even be positive, but you are now depending on fewer seats, thus your upsell/cross Sell potential is threatened.

 

 

Who is Responsible for Upsell/Cross Sell/ Renewal?

It is important to note that there are real differences between various types of SaaS business, “not one size fits all.” For example, a platform service such as a CRM and that of an application services such as a VOIP or UCaaS Services are very different.

Why?

CRM platform committed to a $5,000 in MRR for a Total ACV of $60,000 often has limited revenue upside. From 1- 1.2X. In this case the upselling/cross sell opportunity is treated more like a renewal with perhaps some seat additions. That being the case, a Customer Success Manager (CSM) with some training is likely able to do the job.

However, an application service such as a $10/month communication service is a different creature.

Think of a client whose West coast sales team buys a license for five seats at $50/month or $500 in ACV. In this case, the goal of the service team is to get all 500 users on the services. This means 100 times the upsell/cross sell opportunity. That is more complex.

The CSM in this case would only work on the onboarding process and get the first users happy, after that they signal to the AE (tier2) or AM (tier1) that the account is ready for upsell. Taking the above into account, and armed with the basic formula, we can now calculate the headcount needed to deliver against the first MRR goal.

Don’t over think this! All we need is to get a draft right. And there is always plenty of time to tune things. The key points are that your VP of Sales and your Marketing Manager need to work together to ensure that marketing is also covering the customer delicately during this process.

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