Software-as-a-Service is paradigm shift for the software industry. The most profound impact of SaaS is on the software businesses revenue and cost models and therefore the cascading impact it has on the way the business is organised.
Customer Acquisition for a SaaS business therefore requires a complete re-think. Since you are not going to get your money up-front, how are you going to fund the costs of acquisition? The conventional customer acquisition model where these costs are a manageable proportion of the cash generated up-front works fine in the old on-premise software business but will bleed you in the SaaS business. As a SaaS business you need to ensure that your CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) remain under first year revenues (and even less if you are not adequately funded).
CAC starts with the cost of creating awareness and includes the sales effort costs. But what very often is not added to the CAC is the cost spent in getting a new account to revenue (aka implementation) as well as the cost of retaining the account right up to the period to which you calculate your LTV (Life-time Value). Depending upon the nature of the product this could be a few months or a few years. Given that you have signed up an annuity based revenue stream, your cost rightfully must include what you need to spend to ensure the tenure of that annuity.
So what sales model should you adopt? The choices range from a pure web-based one to a the tried and tested feet-on-street model and a hybrid one where you use the web to generate leads and feet-on-street to convert those leads. There is also the option of building a channel partner networks and selling through them.
The choice of the sales model to be adopted must take into account two key dimensions: The complexity of your product and it’s price point. A complex one enterprise application for instance will require substantial sales and pre-sales consulting support to sell as opposed to personal productivity app. Selling the former through a web model may not lead to much sales while trying to sell the the latter through a feet-on-street model will lead to a very high CAC and a drain on cash flows.
Channel partners can be a substitute for company sales reps but only when the product is in a category with a well established business need and the product brand is recognised with some degree of pull.
If the strategy requires using low-price as a differentiator or the market is unable to accept a high price-point for a new entrant, it will be foolhardy to try and build a direct sales model. At least it will be struggle to scale the customer acquisition.
A way out of this is to remove the complexity from the sale and switch to a substantially on-line sales model. In my next post I will talk about the challenges in creating an on-line sales model for a more complex product that is generally expected to be sold through a direct sales model. Meanwhile, I would be waiting to hear from you what you think needs to be thought differently when considering Customer Acquisition for SaaS businesses.