A Look Back: “SaaS Metrics Masterclass: Key Business Metrics, Pricing Strategies and Billing Models with Stripe’s Head of France and Southern Europe, Guillaume Princen” (Video + Transcript) - The Entrepreneurial Way with A.I.

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Saturday, April 30, 2022

A Look Back: “SaaS Metrics Masterclass: Key Business Metrics, Pricing Strategies and Billing Models with Stripe’s Head of France and Southern Europe, Guillaume Princen” (Video + Transcript)

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In the run up to SaaStr Europa 2022 in Barcelona on June 7-8, we’re taking a look at some of the top all-time SaaStr Europa sessions.

Want to know what to expect at SaaStr Europa? Check out this 2018 Europa session with Guillaume Princen, Head of France and Southern Europe @ Stripe, where he talks about the metrics you need to be focused on in your startup. If you don’t have the time to watch the whole session, here are the main metrics you should be mindful of.

1. MRR, obviously. Or maybe ARR, depending on your model.

2. Churn. Something we all hate, but still important.

3. Average Revenue per Customer

4. Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)

5. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

& a few others.

Want to see more content like this? Join us at SaaStr Europa 2022.

Transcript

Head of France and Southern Europe @ Stripe | Guillaume Princen

Thank you very much. Hi, everybody. Good to see you today. Thanks for coming. So growth of the kind of subscription, eCommerce industry has been over 100% year on year for the past five years, according to McKinsey. This wasn’t the case. I mean, this is quite new. It wasn’t the case 20 or even 10 years ago, where the business models of the internet were more focused on eCommerce, marketplaces, or even advertising. So the first question is what made SaaS so successful. If you kind of that question, thinking about the stakeholders and the decisions and companies of using SaaS products, there’s kind of three types. One is customers. Customers love SaaS products and tools because it simply works. You don’t need to maintain. Errors are very limited, and it simply works. The other piece of it is there’s a perception that SaaS products are less expensive. Now, whether in actual dollars it’s true or not is not the only question. It’s also a perception of risk. Basically you can more easily start using products.

The second constituent there is the developer. Why do developers love SaaS products? They love SaaS products. They love consuming SaaS products not because of the billing model, but because of the delivery model. The last kind of constituent here is investors and business owners. And basically SaaS revenue models is just magical for investors and for businesses. Why is that? Because they’re both recurring and predictable. And you can basically predict revenue ahead of time and therefore raise money early on to grow even faster. But when entrepreneurs launch a SaaS business, it’s often quite hard to know how they’re doing. And that’s what we’re seeing every day. They’re kind of coming to us stripe as a SaaS business, wondering how good am I doing? How good is my business doing? Are my numbers any good? So this is obviously a pretty difficult question to answer, and I’m sure many of you guys in the room are kind of thinking about that question. Because it depends highly on the product, on the market, what the founders want to do with the company, and on the different types of markets here.

And so nevertheless, there are sort of a few rules of thumbs out there today that I kind of wanted to share and discuss with you today. The first obvious rule of thumb is to identify the metrics that are essential to running a SaaS business. Whatever the SaaS business, there actually are a set of metrics. And I’ll go pretty quick on these. This is pretty important for companies because getting these right at the very beginning will not only provide you short-term growth, but also will have a huge impact on long-term, giving how compounding revenues for SaaS businesses are. So we’re gonna have a very quick look, and I’m going to kind of speed through the main metrics. Then go into what are the levers. And the main levers SaaS companies can play with. First one and the most important one is obviously the MRR, monthly recurring revenue. Or annual recurring revenue for some types of companies. This is basically the metric you want to be improving all over. I think when you’ve understood this slide, it basically structures all the levers that you can play with a SaaS business.

Your monthly recurring revenue changes every month. And from month to month it will change based on three things. One is your churn. SaaS businesses have churn. Two is the growth of your existing customers. Three is your new customers that’s kind of how we’re gonna structure the rest of the discussion today. So let’s quickly dive into a few more metrics. Churn, think we’re all familiar with what churn is. It’s basically lost customers. And this is a metric you kind of look at at a monthly or annual basis. So typically a business who loses five percent of his customers every month, you can basically come up with the fact that the average lifetime of a customer for that business is gonna be 20 months. Churn defines your average lifetime of your customer. Quickly on gross margin. Gross margin isn’t really something we look at that much in SaaS businesses because it’s basically your MRR minus your cost of goods sold. SaaS businesses don’t have high cost of goods sold. So they have between five and 15 percent. So we often just kind of talk about MRI.

The other interesting thing, specificity about SaaS businesses, is that you don’t really try to kind of optimize for the costs. Because you’d much rather work on churn or average revenue and new customers rather than on reducing your cost giving how much lever there is on these first three levers. Average revenue per customer. It’s basically how much does a customer bring you revenue on average. Now the reality is the real metric you want to look at is how much a customer going to bring revenue to you over its entire lifetime. And that kind of brings a few notions together. We talked about churn. Five percent monthly churn gives you a 20 month average lifetime. Well how much is that customer going to bring you over 20 months? If he’s spending 30 euros per month, that’s going to be 600 euro lifetime value. That’s one of the main metrics you’re looking at. Lifetime value. How much is a customer going to bring you over his lifespan using your product?

This is very linked to the CAC, the next one. Customer acquisition. Customer acquisition is basically how much do you spend in terms of sales people, sales team, and in terms of marketing to acquire a new customer. LTV and CAC are obviously super important to look at together. If you have low LTV’s, customers basically bringing you small amounts of revenue over their lifetime, you can’t have a high CAC. You have to have a model where CAC is very low, and where basically LTV pays for CAC with a certain multiple. That equation basically makes up your profitability. Now talking about profitability for a second, we all know the stories vehicled by the press about the hockey stick kind of growth in the internet but also in SaaS businesses. The reality is, SaaS businesses, more than many others, are prone to losing money at the beginning. Like they’re working on their product that hopefully is scalable. And without having much customers. And customers, the few customers they have are paying on a recurring kind of revenue basis. So you’re not kind of touching lots of money at the beginning.

The good news is given that’s this is predictable and recurring revenue, you can actually raise money pretty early on because you’re actually able somewhat to draw out this curve to your investors. So now that we’ve kind of done a quick run through of the main metrics of SaaS businesses, I’d like to kind of focus on these three things. Basically the three levels of growing your SaaS business: getting more customers, reducing churn, and increasing your ARPU per customer. Start with increasing the number of customers, getting more customers. The key here is knowing what your sales model is. And there are basically two sales models out there. Kind of extreme sales models out there for SaaS businesses. One is what I call the low touch sales model. This is products that sell themselves. This is products that kind of sell themselves on channels such as website, email, free trials. These are products that usually have a free trial then kind of upgrade to pay kind of model. They typically have a relatively low ARPU, but also given that this is self serve, a very low CAC. This is a self serve type businesses.

High touch sales on the opposite, is where customers need some help in deciding whether or how to adopt your product. This is basically designed around there being an intensive human interaction and human process to convince businesses to adopt your tools. Successfully operationalize it and continue using it. This is the Salesforce model. And Salesforce basically invented the playbook here. These are typically high ARPU. Like high revenue per user. Tens or hundreds, sometimes millions dollars per year. But also generally pretty high CAC, customer acquisition costs. And you really need to know where you want to be on that spectrum. There’s obviously hybrid models. Companies try to do both and some of them succeed. But it’s actually hard. Because the DNA of the company is usually either low touch, either high touch. Just to say a little bit more about this, if you look at the sales functions are structured.

Low touch you’re gonna talk a lot about what we call customer success teams. Customer success teams are basically about building at scale this self-serve engine. Both in terms of lead generation, in terms of support, in terms of potential sales. And one of their roles is also going to be to upsell from a free product to a paid product, or to upsell different types of products. High touch sales on the other hand is basically … Sales is the beating heart of the organization. With very specialized sales roles from the STR’s at the qualification stage to generating leads to account executives who will close those deals. And account management, which is basically around for retention and also upsell of different products. These are fundamentally different models. Again, there’s no rule here. There’s no generality. It’s hard to make generalities. But generally, low touch models have a very, very strong focus in terms of culture and company on the product. Because you need to have a product that’s easy enough to use and understand for it to be able to sell itself on its own without any human interaction.

High touch sales, on the opposite, since they’re much more human intensive in the process, the sales team is usually a pretty big beating heart of the organization. Again, there’s no rule here. That’s generally what we see. So there’s always this question that we get about how do you get your first customers? They have a great product. There’s basically two things here. First is really make sure to have the best product for a given need. Rather than a good product that fits many needs. That’s rule one. Rule two is just building your product won’t make your users or customers use it. Or won’t get you any customers in the first place anyway. This is kind of the founding story of Stripe. When Patrick and John in 2010 were at Y Combinator and spend their days doing office hours with the whole Y Combinator and a little water in the valley. Sitting down with folks and helping them to integrate Stripe on their U app. And kind of the day after trying to meet with them to have feedback on what they had seen. And that lasted for roughly six, nine, 12 months. That’s what they did for six, nine, 12 months. They built a product alongside their customers and their users.

This is also how Stripe continues to launch new products. We launched a billing product a couple months ago. And the way we launched that is we identified a certain number of potential users that we thought could be interested. And our product managers worked with those users day and night to figure out what exactly we had to build. Some of these users are in the room today. And will recognize themselves, so thanks a lot to them again. So we discussed getting more customers. Next thing is around reducing churn. The rule here is churn will basically make or break your business. And I think the next slide is pretty telling in that regard. If you plot monthly churn, 12 months out, you pretty quickly realize since this is compounding, if you have a 10% monthly churn, you basically got rid of three quarters of your business over a period of 12 months. If you have five percent monthly churn, you’ve got rid of half your business over the first 12 months. And if you have two percent monthly churn, you’ve gotten rid of 25% of your business.

Churn numbers can actually kill your business. That’s basically the message here. And you don’t want to be in that kind of green or what is it, orange, yellow category. So what is, after having said that, what is a good churn rate? Again, there’s no rules. It depends on the product. It depends on the industry. It depends on the length of the contract, if there’s a contract. It depends on consumer business. It depends on so many things. That being said, there are a few sort of rules of thumbs here that people, investors, and others look at. If you look at low touch sales models. If you think back at what I was saying before, two percent monthly churn is basically the best you can hope for. Two percent is a very good monthly churn for a low touch type business. Five percent is okay. 10% is a problem. 10% basically means you don’t have any product market fit. And your business is not sustainable.

For high touch sales businesses, it’s a little different. We generally don’t look at monthly churn. We look at annual churn, given the nature of those businesses that have annual or multi annual contracts with much bigger price items and tickets. Seven percent annual churn is good. Is actually very good. 10% is kind of reasonable. But you want to be careful if you start going beyond the 10, 15%. Again, this is annual for these high touch. One last thing on churn is there’s this notion of churn is bad, so I should absolutely avoid churn and maybe I should actually make it easier for people not to be able to churn. That’s not quite true. So what we see every day working with SaaS businesses and even ourselves is there’s a few things here. Again, no silver bullet. These are observations. Requiring credit card details before free trial usually helps ’cause you get much more qualified people. You can focus more on those.

Make it easy to up and downgrade. There’s nothing worse than a customer who doesn’t have the right plan for him ’cause he’s basically gonna want to churn. And make it easy for him to downgrade. It’s always better to have a customer who downgrades than a churning customer. And the last thing is let real quitters quit. Otherwise, you’re gonna enter all sorts of problems. You’re gonna have chargebacks. You’re gonna have extra costs because people are gonna start to say, “No. I didn’t want to pay for this service.” Bank, please reimburse this charge for me. And then you’re gonna have as a merchant, as SaaS business so many charges due to that. Now back to the three levers now. I’d like to talk about the last one, the ARPU. And this is also a personal perspective. I believe pricing is not enough … There’s not enough investment from companies going into pricing and thinking about pricing.

And when you think about it, acquiring new customers is kind of hard. Got to go into new verticals, you have to do more marketing, you have to do more sales. It’s hard. Reducing churn is hard. Reworking your product. Everything we just said. Changing a price … you have to change the website, change a few things in the background. That’s something that’s relatively immediate if you want it to be immediate. And you’d be surprised the number of businesses we see. And even us at Stripe, I realize that internally. The number of companies we see at there who at some point when they launched a product put a price on it. It was relatively rationalized. This is where we’re putting that price, et cetera. And then three, four years down the line, the price hasn’t moved. But the market has moved. Competition has moved. Product has moved. So many things have moved. Have changed. And they haven’t really thought about pricing and how that should change. Pricing is so sticky inside companies.

The other thing is, the impact of pricing is so huge. Imagine you’re able to increase your pricing by one percent, 10%. That’s a one percent or 10% increase of your company value in a SaaS business. We’re looking at pure margin here. So I believe companies don’t think enough about pricing. And tend to focus much more on the very hard problems. But I think this is … Netflix increased their prices by a dollar a few months ago. What did it change? For customers, not much. For Netflix, that’s a three, four percent increase of value. Suddenly. So talked about pricing. New customers are sensitive about pricing, but there’s also your existing customers. That’s the beauty of SaaS businesses. And there’s so much you can do there to increase your ARPU. You can obviously upsell and launch new products and upsell new products. But there’s also your customer base. And some companies have done a good job at building products for customers that just grow tremendously. And if the usage of your product inside a given customer grows tremendously, chances are your revenue, your ARPU is gonna go tremendously.

So think about the kind of customers you’re aiming at, you’re targeting with your product. Because that alone can be some sort of amazing rocket ship for your business. I’d like to come back and say just a few words about pricing and pricing models. And what are the different pricing strategies? So there’s the flat rate pricing that we’ve all experienced. 30 dollars per month or 10,000 or 50,000 dollars per month. And then you also have the usage-based pricing. That’s typically the AWS model, depending on how much space you take, service space, you will pay more. Those two are great models, but each one of them has their flaw. And typically the usage-based model is very good because you can adapt your pricing to your underlying costs. If you’re Amazon, it’s servers, space. But for many customers that can be daunting. Because they sometimes don’t really know how much they’re gonna consume. And launching a new business, you’re not sure how much you’re gonna consume in terms of storage space. On the opposite, the flat rate is an advantage because it’s predictable for a customer. He knows his cost item, his cost line, and his PNL is gonna be X.

But for the merchant, if you’re Amazon web services, you can’t really rely on that because your cost might be higher than what you price. So what we’re seeing more and more of and a good practice is this hybrid model where you basically have a flat price but by tiers. So if you consume up to X, you will pay a 100 bucks per month. If you consume between X and Y you’ll pay 500, et cetera, et cetera. And people, this is something also that surprisingly companies don’t do enough. And it can actually be helpful in terms of customer acquisition. Another point on pricing strategies is there’s the classic, it’s been around for tens of years, per user model pricing. I’ll give you a license or whatever it is for each user and this is how much it costs per user. The problem here is so many of these clients and customers, the impact … They’re buying your product for a reason, right? It’s gonna improve their sales. It’s gonna make something faster internally or externally, more business, et cetera.

But that only depends on how well the product is adopted internally, inside that customer’s company, right? Like if you’re using Salesforce if nobody … If you have licenses all over the company but nobody uses Salesforce, you’re not getting much out of it. And so this kind of idea per active user and active … You can define, companies spend hours defining what an active user is, is actually much more reassuring for a customer. Because it hedges the risk of change management, training, that are not easy, simple stuff to do, especially in large companies. One last thing is, quick comment on the fact that one thing we’re seeing a lot as well is companies launching a product and adopting a certain pricing strategy and pricing model. And launching another product. And they automatically adopt the same type of model, then another product, same thing. If you have a portfolio of products, you should really think through every single product, how what’s the best way of pricing it for a customer. And sometimes you can also do bundles.

Try to think from first principles at that point, every time you launch a new product. Because there’s nothing worse than a product that’s badly priced according to the wrong model just because for the wrong reason that your other products are built on that pricing model. So that’s something that we’ve been paying a lot of attention to. We have processing, et cetera, that’s based on usage. How much dollars do you get paid, and do you use Stripe for. Then we also have some flat rate pricing for other types of products like Atlas, that basically enables you to incorporate a company in the U.S. and have a bank account in the U.S. as a one off flat fee. And every time we launch a product, we really think through the pricing. And we have also other types of models that are not on here.

So I wanted to take a really quick example of a company who actually published a few numbers a year ago. Buffer, great company. So if you look at the August 2017 column, they have quite a few numbers here. Just to highlight a few, churn rate, 5.38 percent. That’s pretty good for a low touch sales model business. Revenue per customer is 17 dollars. Over the whole lifetime, the customer will bring 324 dollars. Like you’re not gonna build a whole freaking sales team with sales people spending days to close a customer if the customer’s going to bring you 324 dollars in the matter of its lifetime. And that’s why you have a customer acquisition cost of 40 dollars. Which is basically scaled marketing and things like that. So pretty good multiple between that CAC and that lifetime value, LTB. Now interesting thing, we talked about what are the levers to improve your SaaS business. I’m sorry this is a little small, I’ll try to voice it over. But basically if you look at a year before, same month, August. Their MRR has gone up by 40%. 43%, actually.

And if you think about the three levers that we discussed. One was customers. They did plus 28% on new customers. Churn rate, they increased actually, which is bad. But they increased their churn rate by nearly six percent. But on the opposite, they also increased the revenue per customer by 11%. So overall, their MRR has grown by 43%. That’s kind of how you think about optimizing and maximizing a SaaS business. So talking about buffer. Once you’ve found your product market fit, you’re immediately looking at acquiring new customers. And the beauty about SaaS businesses is they are possibly the businesses that scale the best internationally. You’re building a SaaS product, I mean there are exceptions of course, if you’re working in the healthcare industry. There are exceptions all over in this space. But they are generally the businesses that scale the best internationally. English is kind of okay as a language for most businesses to work on, if your clients are businesses. So one of the ways to scale and grow is to go international.

And when you go international, getting paid is not just about currencies. It’s also about payment methods. And people pay with different payment methods depending on where they are in the world and what types of customers, businesses or consumers, et cetera, they are. Companies don’t want to spend too much time thinking about how to solve for this complexity. In the same way they don’t spend any time anymore thinking about web hosting and things like that. This is one of the problems we at Stripe have been working on solving. Building economic infrastructure from payments to many different things, so that you, SaaS businesses, don’t have to do it yourself. And looking specifically at SaaS businesses, we’ve built this billing brick, which takes into account all the complexities of international growth and recurring revenue and various plans by currency, et cetera, that you guys deal with on a day to day basis.

Now why does this matter? It matters because we just spent 25 minutes talking about SaaS businesses, what are the leavers. And I tried to disclaim every time by saying there’s no real rule here. There’s kind of rules of thumbs. And you guys will need to figure it out. And that’s true. There’s no silver bullet. And the way you recognize fast-growing SaaS businesses, the way you become a fast-growing SaaS business is you have the flexibility and the agility to test things out, and to adapt, and to build, and to break, and to rebuild, and to rebreak. Pricing is one example I give. I spent a little bit of time on that. And you basically want to have an infrastructure as a SaaS business, that’s flexible, agile, that can enable you to do that. Your developers are busy. And you should keep them busy working on your core product. We all know developer talent is scarce. That’s one of the rarest resources you guys have. So I’d like to leave you with one question today. In the world where tech talent is so hard to find and to recruit, what are your software engineers spending their time on? Are they spending their time on building new products? Or are they spending their time on technical debt and trying to adapt to all the things you’re trying to launch all across the world? Thank you very much.

The post A Look Back: “SaaS Metrics Masterclass: Key Business Metrics, Pricing Strategies and Billing Models with Stripe’s Head of France and Southern Europe, Guillaume Princen” (Video + Transcript) appeared first on SaaStr.





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