While I’ve blogged about thispresentation before, I only recently stumbled into this full-length video of this very popular session — a 30-minute blaze through some subtle SaaS basics. Enjoy!
Below please find the slides from the presentation I gave today at SaaStr 2018, about which I wrote a teaser blog post last week. I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed making it.
I hope to see everyone next year at SaaStr — I think it’s the preeminent software, SaaS, and startups conference.
In an effort to promote my upcoming presentation at SaaStr 2018, which is currently on the agenda for Wednesday, February 7th at 9:00 AM in Studio C, I thought I’d do a quick post sharing what I’ll be covering in the presentation, officially titled, “The Best of Kellblog: 10 Non-Obvious Things About Scaling SaaS.”
For SaaStr 2018, I’m getting my own session and I love the title that the folks at SaaStr came up with because I love the non-obvious. So here they are …
The 10 Non-Obvious Things About Scaling a SaaS Business
1. You must run your company around ARR. Which this may sound obvious, you’d be surprised by how many people either still don’t or, worse yet, think they do and don’t. Learn my one-question test to tell the difference.
2. SaaS metrics are way more subtle than meets the eye. Too many people sling around words without knowing what they mean or thinking about the underlying definitions. I’ll provide a few examples of how fast things can unravel when you do this and how to approach SaaS metrics in general.
3. Former public company SaaS CFOs may not get private company SaaS metrics. One day I met with the CFO of a public company whose firm had just been taken private and he had dozens of questions about SaaS metrics. It had never occurred to me before, but when your job is to talk with public investors who only see a limited set of outside-in metrics, you may not develop fluency in the internal SaaS metrics that so obsess VC and PE investors.
4. Multi-year deals make sense in certain situations. While many purists would fight me to the death on this, there are pros and cons to multi-year deals and circumstances where they make good sense. I’ll explain how I think about this and the one equation I use to make the call.
5. Bookings is not a four-letter word. While you need to be careful where and when you use the B-word in polite SaaS company, there is a time and place to measure and discuss bookings. I’ll explain when that is and how to define bookings the right way.
6. Renewals and satisfaction are more loosely correlated than you might think. If you think your customers are all delighted because they’re renewing, then think again. Unhappy customer sometimes renew and happy ones don’t. We’ll discuss why that happens and while renewal rates are often a reasonable proxy for customer satisfaction, why you should also measure customer satisfaction using NPS, and present a smart way to do so.
7. You can’t analyze churn by analyzing churn. To understand why customers churn, too many companies grab a list of all the folks who churned in the past year and start doing research and interviews. There’s a big fallacy in this approach. We’ll discuss the right way to think about and analyze this problem.
8. Finding your own hunter/farmer metaphor is hard. Boards hate double compensation and love splitting renewals from new business. But what about upsell? Which model is right for you? Should you have hunters and farmers? Hunters in a zoo? Farmers with shotguns? An autonomous collective? We’ll discuss which models and metaphors work, when.
9. You don’t have to lose money on services. Subsidizing ARR via free or low-cost services seems a good idea and many SaaS companies do it. But it’s hell on blended gross margins, burns cash, and can destroy your budding partner ecosystem. We’ll discuss where and when it makes sense to lose money on services — and when it doesn’t.
10. No matter what your board says, you don’t have to sacrifice early team members on the altar of experienced talent. While rapidly growing a business will push people out of their comfort zones and require you to build a team that’s a mix of veterans and up-and-comers, with a bit creativity and caring you don’t have to lose the latter to gain the former.
I hope this provides you with a nice and enticing sample of what we’ll be covering — and I look forward to seeing you there.
I’m Dave Kellogg, advisor, director, consultant, angel investor, and blogger focused on enterprise software startups. I am an executive-in-residence (EIR) at Balderton Capital and principal of my own eponymous consulting business.
I bring an uncommon perspective to startup challenges having 10 years’ experience at each of the CEO, CMO, and independent director levels across 10+ companies ranging in size from zero to over $1B in revenues.
From 2012 to 2018, I was CEO of cloud EPM vendor Host Analytics, where we quintupled ARR while halving customer acquisition costs in a competitive market, ultimately selling the company in a private equity transaction.
Previously, I was SVP/GM of the $500M Service Cloud business at Salesforce; CEO of NoSQL database provider MarkLogic, which we grew from zero to $80M over 6 years; and CMO at Business Objects for nearly a decade as we grew from $30M to over $1B in revenues. I started my career in technical and product marketing positions at Ingres and Versant.
I love disruption, startups, and Silicon Valley and have had the pleasure of working in varied capacities with companies including Bluecore, Cyral, FloQast, GainSight, MongoDB, Pigment, Recorded Future, and Tableau.
I currently serve on the boards of Scoro (work management) and SMA Technologies (workload automation).
I previously served on the boards of Alation (data intelligence), Aster Data (big data), Granular (agtech), Nuxeo (content services), and Profisee (MDM).
I periodically speak to strategy and entrepreneurship classes at the Haas School of Business (UC Berkeley) and Hautes Études Commerciales de Paris (HEC).
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