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The Ultimate SaaS Metric: The Customer Lifetime Value to Customer Acquisition Cost Ratio (LTV/CAC)

I’m a big fan of software-as-a-service (SaaS) metrics.  I’ve authored very deep posts on SaaS renewals rates and customer acquisition costs.  I also routinely point readers to other great posts on the topic, including:

But in today’s post, I’m going to examine the question:  of the literally scores of SaaS metrics out there, if you could only pick one single metric, which one would it be?

Let’s consider some candidates:

Before revealing my single best-choice metric, let me make what might be an unfashionable and counter-intuitive statement.  While I love SaaS “unit economics” as much as anybody, to me there is nothing better than a realistic, four-statement, three-year financial model that factors everything into the mix.  I say this not only because my company makes tools to create such models, but more importantly because unit economics can be misleading in a complicated world of varying contract duration (e.g., 1 to 3+ years), payment terms (e.g., quarterly, annual, prepaid, non-prepaid), long sales cycles (typical CAC calculations assume prior-quarter S&M drives current-quarter sales), and renewals which may differ from the original contract in both duration and terms.

Remember that SaaS unit economics were born in an era of monthly recurring revenue (MRR), so the more your business runs monthly, the better those metrics work — and conversely.  For example, consider two companies:

If both companies have 80% subscription gross margins (GM), then the CAC payback period is 15 months for company A and 30 months for company B.  (CAC payback period is months of subscription gross margin to recover CAC.)

This implies company B is much riskier than company A because company B’s payback period is twice as long and company B’s money is at risk for a full 30 months until it recovers payback.

But it’s completely wrong.  Note that because company B does pre-paid deals its actual, cash payback period is not 30 months, but 1 day.  Despite ostensibly having half the CAC payback period, company A is far riskier because it has to wait 15 months until recovering its S&M investment and each month presents an opportunity for non-renewal.  (Or, as I like to say, “is exposed to the churn rate.”)  Thus, while company B will recoup its S&M investment (and then some) every time, company A will only recoup it some percentage of the time as a function of its monthly churn rate.

Now this is not to say that three-year prepaid deals are a panacea and that everyone should do them.  From the vendor perspective, they are good for year 1 cashflow, but bad in years 2 and 3.  From the customer perspective, three-year deals make plenty of sense for “high consideration” purchases (where once you have completed your evaluation, you are pretty sure of your selection), but make almost no sense in try-and-buy scenarios.  So the point is not “long live the three-year deal,” but instead “examine unit economics, but do so with an awareness of both their origins and limitations.”

This is why I think nothing tells the story better than a full four-statement, three-year financial model.  Now I’m sure there are plenty of badly-built over-optimistic models out there.  But don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.   It is just not that hard to model:

Now that I’ve disclaimed all that, let’s answer the central question posed by this post:  if you could know just one SaaS metric, which would it be?

The LTV/CAC ratio.

Why?  Because what you pay for something should be a function of what it’s worth.

Some people say, for example, that a CAC of 2.0 is bad.  Well, if you’re selling a month-to-month product where most customers discontinue by month 9, then a CAC of 2.0 is horrific.  However, if you’re selling sticky enterprise infrastructure, replacing systems that have been in place for a decade with applications that might well be in place for another decade, then a CAC is 2.0 is probably fine.  That’s the point:  there is no absolute right or wrong answer to what a company should be willing to pay for a customer.  What you are willing to pay for a customer should be a function of what they are worth.

The CAC ratio captures the cost of acquiring customers.  In plain English, the CAC ratio is the multiple you are willing to pay for $1 for annual recurring revenue (ARR).  With a CAC ratio of 1.5, you are paying $1.50 for a $1 of ARR, implying an 18 month payback period on a revenue basis and 18-months divided by subscription-GM on a gross margin basis.

Lifetime value (LTV) attempts to calculate what a customer is worth and is typically calculated using gross margin (the profit from a customer after paying the cost of operating the service) as opposed to simply revenue.  LTV is calculated first by inverting the annual churn rate (to get the average customer lifetime in years) and then multiplying by subscription-GM.

For example, with a churn rate is 10%, subscription GM of 75%, and a CAC ratio of 1.5, the LTV/CAC ratio is (1/10%) * 0.75 / 1.5 = 5.0.

The general rule of thumb is that LTV/CAC should be 3.0 or higher, with of course, the higher the better.

There are three limitations I am aware of in working with LTV/CAC as a metric.

 

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