The Journey to SaaS Profitability
Four considerations for
software executives
Technology Institute
October 2014
. . For SaaS providers, the journey to profitability is
filled with challenges: Is your company ready?
more economic value by balancing
their utilization needs – it increases
the focus on managing cost and
complexity for the vendor.

Highlights
Software providers moving from
on-premise to SaaS offerings can
expect major disruptions to the
company’s operating model
requiring:
ï‚· Expanded revenue model and
new profitability drivers
ï‚· New operational and technical
requirements
SaaS exposes your company to a
new world of enterprise risk
considerations, especially if your
company is also offering “onpremise” software
The role of the CIO needs to shift
to become much more customerfacing requiring significant
organization and cultural changes
Start preparing now as the
complexity of your operations will
only increase
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is
driving increased operating model
complexity and disruption in the
software industry.
Instead of selling their software to
customers to run on-premise,
software companies offer “Softwareas-a-Service” by running and
operating the software on behalf of
their customers. This typically
requires them to offer 24/7 online
purchasing capabilities, on-demand
provisioning and on-going support…
while getting paid only as service is
consumed. While this gives customers
1
Overview
Traditionally, the mature software
industry has been marked by a steady,
single digit Compound Annual
Growth Rate (CAGR). However, SaaS
companies are experiencing doubledigit growth and disrupting the
industry so much so that traditional
software companies are looking at
offering SaaS: 82% of net new
commercial applications are built
specifically for cloud delivery.
Looking
forward, $1 of every $5 spent on
applications will be consumed via
SaaS by 2016.1 So what does all of this
mean?
As customer demand mounts in the
market place, more companies are
now focusing R&D efforts on cloud
computing paradigms. Their reasons
for moving to this model are varied:
more market share, better
relationships with customers, faster
sales cycles, new market segments,
R&D cost reduction or licensing
simplification. The drivers for a
business model change to SaaS
are varied – and the one
constant is massive change and
disruption to a company’s
operating model.
IDC: The Coming of the 3rd Platform and What this
Means for Software Business Models, Doc #240918,
May 2013
1
Where might your company feel
impact?
1.
Operating Model Changes.
Independent Software Vendors
(ISVs) need to transform their
operating model around a new set
of Lead to Cash (L2C) capabilities
that orient around a new
customer experience.
Executives
should recognize the difficulty,
level of complexity and
commitment involved and
understand where others have
succeeded or failed.
2. New Profitability Levers. Your
performance management
processes will require changes.
SaaS requires a “consumption
based” economics approach with a
greater emphasis on key metrics
such as Committed Monthly
Recurring Revenue (CMMR) and
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
among others.
3.
Technology. Many companies
are managing both an on-premise
and SaaS environment (hybrid).
This reality introduces inherent
challenges of straddling two
unique business models. The role
of the CIO is being stressed like
never before.
4.
Risk and Compliance. SaaS
introduces a new world of
additional complexity and risks. As
such, companies need to place an
increasing priority on developing
strong internal control activities;
incorporating them into their
existing governance programs.
.
Driving profitability in a SaaS business model requires
major structural changes around a new set of operational capabilities:
More Personalized Sales:
Shifts towards recurring revenue
growth and on lowering customer
acquisition costs.
Data Analytics:
Significantly more emphasis on
consumer analytics and
personalized campaigns
New Support Models
Shifting emphasis away from
product expertise to driving usage
and customer success
Real Time Enterprise
The priorities of IT shift as more
demand is placed on availability,
quick time to value, and real time
usage analytics and insights.
SaaS Product
Development
Becomes more about the
experience and consume
ability vs. a feature pile on
Consumption Economics
A new set of demand
forecasting and revenue
recognition requirements such
as usage based billing
At a glance
2
. Ensure your company’s operating model is oriented
around a new customer experience
Channel Convergence
The traditional software channels of
reseller and value-added reseller,
retail, and OEM are changing. Is
your channel strategy aligned?
IDC predicts that by the end of 2014
30% of net-new business software
purchases will be made through an
online marketplace operated by an
ISV or third party.2
eCommerce and Mobility
The mobile channel is expected to
erode the importance of ecommerce as the leading digital
channel for multichannel retailers.
By 2017, slowing growth rates in ecommerce revenue will mean this
channel will account for no more
than 25% of overall retail revenue
for leading multichannel retailers.3
Sales and Marketing
Traditional software providers
focused on large, one-time
transactions, and were also focused on
penetration of large accounts. In the
SaaS model, initial revenue might be
low – but should ideally increase over
time. This means that SaaS sales
organizations need to drive recurring
revenue growth and optimize
customer acquisition cost (CAC).
Moreover, account growth also
depends on a stronger partnership
IDC, The Coming of the 3rd Platform and What this
Means for Software Business Models, doc #240918,
May 2013
3 Gartner, Predicts 2014: Digitalization in Retail Means
M-Commerce Grows, E-Commerce Slows,
Personalization Misfires and 3D Printing Transforms,
November 2013
2
3
with the support organization – to
keep the cost of sales/renewals low.
As
the trend of online marketplaces
continues to accelerate and SaaS
increases its penetration into new
segments, the sales organization also
needs to modify its channel strategy.
Marketing executives now have a
premium placed on “real time”
customer experience analytics. Data
analytics on usage and the customer
experience are critical to driving
personalized campaigns, whereas
traditional ISVs focused on large,
broad marketing campaigns.
Product Development
In the SaaS world, even though
providers are leveraging the same
platform for multiple clients,
successful vendors are able to channel
client feedback on the product’s
weaknesses and strengths rapidly into
R&D and production operations.
Therefore frequent release cycles are a
critical component of a SaaS business.
Moreover, in the SaaS world, if the
product does not perform, customers
will simply not stay. Frequent release
cycles are a means to address
historical insight complexities such as:
add functionality to make customers
happy, or run the risk of losing them.
CIOs must actively re-think their
software development lifecycles and
transform them to enable greater
customer centricity.
The CFO and COO organizations need
to ensure that transactions are
evaluated real time (vs.
predetermined reporting periods) and
that a more nimble Lead to Cash
capability supports this. Companies
need to forecast demand impacting
CAPEX and COGS run rate. They also
require subscription or transaction
based agreements and a new way of
recognizing revenue.
Technology
Companies that run a hybrid
environment face the burden of
managing multiple infrastructures.
Unlike traditional on-premise
licenses, the SaaS model has much
heavier customer touch points with
more frequent interactions.
Given the
frequent release cycles with SaaS, IT
needs to ensure consistent availability
with non-disruptive upgrades and
continued interoperability.
Also, IT has a much greater ability to
partner with the business and provide
real-time feedback to R&D and
product marketing teams… if they are
capturing the right data. Sentiment
analysis through digital and social
channels can provide a treasure of
market insights. Usage-based
monitoring and feature-based metrics
provide insights into consumer
patterns.
Finance and Business
Operations
SaaS profitability remains a key
challenge for many companies.
Customer acquisition costs are high
and payback periods can be years out.
Ensure your company’s operating model is oriented around a new customer experience
.
Are you ready for a new profitability dynamic?
Metrics Matter
The key levers of operational
profitability change when a
company moves from a traditional,
on-premise model to a SaaS model
To lower the average Sales and
Marketing cost for customer
acquisition, focus on channel
optimization and reducing the length
of the sales cycle. Actively measure
and manage customer engagement to
accelerate payment time. Automation
can drive cost takeout as well.
2. Increase Committed Monthly
Recurring Revenue (CMRR)
Renewal
Rate
Customer
Churn
SaaS Objective 101
In addition to standard profitability
metrics (e.g.
EBITDA), here are 5
metrics that are central to a SaaS
company’s operating model.
Engineering your operations to
drive these is an essential first
step in driving SaaS profitability.
1. Lower Customer Acquisition
Cost (CAC)
CAC is often the largest expense for
SaaS companies and a key indicator
for profitable growth.
Most software vendors want new
(large) enterprise customers.
Unfortunately, acquiring them
requires tremendous efforts from
marketing, sales, training, account
management teams and so forth. All
of these teams need to carefully
orchestrate a value proposition that is
differentiated.
Compound this issue
with more SaaS choices for consumers
-- and the difficulty of customer
acquisition increases.
This is often the best growth indicator
for a SaaS company, as this metric
provides a pipeline view by measuring
Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) +
signed contracts. It helps differentiate
between “one time” fees and recurring
fees; and in identifying churn.
To maximize CMRR, your firm will
want to drive competitive pricing and
offers in the marketplace. Also,
projects that optimize sales channels
should be prioritized.
3.
Optimize Churn/Renewal Rate
Your customer renewal rate serves as
a key indicator of the value of your
company’s annuity stream. The
importance of a strong customer
experience plays a critical role here.
4. Increase Customer Lifetime
Value (CLTV)
The profitability and financial health
of a software vendor can come by
understanding the present value of a
customer.
This is an important metric,
as it serves as a leading indicator of
operational efficiency.
In simple terms, ensure your CLTV >
CAC. If you spend more time reducing
churn and enhancing the customer
experience, the lifetime value will
increase. Moreover, you will want to
find ways to reduce acquisition costs.
5.
Maximize Free Cash Flow
Perhaps the most obvious, Free Cash
Flow (FCF) is a critical metric for SaaS
companies. There are obvious cash
flow problems with subscription
models as companies spend upfront to
acquire customers and recognize
revenue slowly over a period of
months. The time to recover the CAC
results in negative cash flow during
that period, stressing operations.
With SaaS, vendors face a new and
empowered customer who wants
consumption-based pricing and has
the ability to opt out monthly.
Customers can select pay per usage
(PPU) options, and due to a more
flexible and frequent enterprise
agreement, are more empowered to
provide feedback on a regular basis.
Customer can also elect to leave
altogether.
Are you ready for a new profitability dynamic?
4
.
Evolve the role of the CIO to be more consumercentric
What it means for your
business:
SaaS business models are oriented
around a new Lead to Cash (L2C)
lifecycle that is much more
consumer-centric. Technology
needs to enable this new dynamic.
----------------------------------------Sales channels are changing as
online marketplaces and app stores
are becoming much more prevalent.
Is your IT organization proactively
building teams to manage these?
----------------------------------------The role of the CIO needs
to evolve from managing
assets to be a chief
“orchestrator” of
product innovation.
A new Lead to Cash (L2C)
lifecycle pivots around an
empowered customer. Is your
technology strategy ready?
The “North Star” for software
companies is a unified, seamless
customer experience with targeted
offers and sustained profitable
growth. The challenge companies have
is transforming their L2C processes to
enable this.
Consider the following
questions:
What are your customers willing to
pay?
How do your customers buy?
In the near term, SaaS cycles often
create additional sales motions (vs.
reducing them). Optimize your selling
motions and leverage new and
emerging channels (online
marketplaces, mobile) to drive share
growth.
How do customers consume your
services and what are they entitled to?
Not only do companies need to meter
and measure for services provided,
they also need to enable strong order
management and fulfilment
processes.
How do customers pay for your
services?
Consumption-based economics are
new to many organizations. The first
matter that needs to be developed are
new billing and revenue recognition
models that allow for transparency
into usage patterns with real-time
monitoring that is tied to billing
activities.
Billing in this new model
needs to align with accounting
practices (e.g. FASB).
New customer experiences are
changing technology
requirements
A new reality for CIO’s: Business
units increasingly circumvent IT as
barriers to technology adoption fall;
when uncoordinated, this raises costs,
increases risk and fragments data.
When it comes to SaaS pricing
strategies, enterprises should have a
keen focus on strategic levers such as,
operating margins, freemium/trials,
and appropriate sales incentives and
commission structures.
5
Evolve the role of the CIO to be more consumer centric
After all, why go through IT when
business units can often procure the
same technology faster and cheaper
elsewhere? By the end of 2016, 40% of
all IT sales will be decided by the line
of business executive.4
So how does the CIO stay relevant? By
evolving to a customer facing
“orchestration role” and leading with
experience and analytics to enable
product innovation. The days of
providing IT infrastructure and
operations support are over.
Evolving Infrastructure and Delivery
Requirements:
CIOs must address incremental
dynamics.
ï‚· Application availability and nondisruptive upgrades are central to
SaaS effectiveness
ï‚· Faster software development
lifecycles
ï‚· Usage analytics and user insights
are essential
ï‚· Usability and quick time to value.
SaaS customers have choices and
can opt out, so an IT organization
needs to be agile.
ï‚· Managing two infrastructures
(on-premise + SaaS) creates the
need for separate talent and
processes and a greater ability for
the CIO to manage cost and
complexity
IDC, The Coming of the 3rd Platform and What this
Means for Software Business Models, doc #240918,
May 2013
4
.
Are you ready for a new set of strategic and
compliance risks?
48% of application producers don’t
have the technology in place to
know what product version or
platform their customers are using5
----------------------------------------SaaS brings with it the burden of
additional complexities in
managing risks for software
providers
----------------------------------------“Adding better software
enforcement and security” ranked
#2 on a recent IDC survey of CIO’s
regarding expected changes in
software licensing6
SaaS profitability requires a
strong understanding of new
risk dynamics and complexities
According to Gartner, “by 2019 cloud
computing and the new digital
economy will cause subscription
pricing to overtake perpetual licensing
and maintenance.”7 For SaaS
providers, this is obviously a
promising trend; however, it comes
with inherent risks that need to be
understood and proactively managed.
The complexity of SaaS and the reality
that most large companies employ a
hybrid model further demonstrates
the need to understand risks.
Flexera Software, 2012 Key trends in Software Pricing
and Licensing Survey
6 IDC, IT Buyer Market Guide: Software Licensing and
Provisioning, doc #242279, August 2013
7 Gartner, Predicts 2014: The Digital Economy and the
Cloud Raise New Licensing, Services and ITAD
Challenges for ITAM and Procurement, November
2013.
5
Software executives must begin to
address several new dynamics. Here
are a few examples:
ï‚· Information Security and Data
Privacy: From user access to
encryption to source code access,
the list of security risks can be
extreme. Reputational risks (not to
mention financial and operational
risks) depend on a strong security
program. Architecture security
considerations are also essential.
ï‚· Data Resiliency and Disaster
Recovery: By hosting your client’s
most sensitive data, you assume
the risk (and financial liability) of
either losing or mishandling it.
Physical access controls, data
center selection and resiliency
programs are just a few examples
of major considerations for SaaS
providers.
ï‚· Compliance Risks: Ensure your
SaaS processes are in compliance
with existing and emerging
regulatory requirements IFRS,
ISO, SOC reporting and new
revenue recognition standards are
among requirements that should
be considered.
Finally, as enterprises begin
considering the use of cloud, the
following questions should be
considered prior to making a
determination on your SaaS provider:
1.
How will assurance be provided to
SaaS cloud customers over
metering of usage and billing
integrity?
2. How are you ensuring logical
segregation of multiple customers'
data in both live processing
environments and backup/off-site
storage environments?
3. What types of controls or
procedures are in place to ensure
that sensitive client data is
retained/destroyed in a secure
manner?
4.
What types of authentication
mechanisms do we have that
restrict each customer's access to
their own data?
ï‚· Consumer-Centric Risks: This is
perhaps the single most import set
of risks faced by SaaS companies
as a premium is placed on
attracting and retaining customers.
“Experience” risks are vast but can
be mitigated by strong planning
beginning with customer
requirements. Do you have
capacity or other performance
issues? Is your support
organization delivering a strong
experience? Do you support your
client’s mobile devices?
Are you ready for a new set of strategic and compliance risks?
6
. PwC can help
The journey to profitability is fraught with challenges. To successfully meet these challenges head on:
ï‚· Ensure your operating model clearly supports and enhances a new and increasingly-demanding customer
experience;
ï‚· Take stock of your performance management processes and ensure you’re measuring the right metrics to drive
better customer retention and a lower customer acquisition cost;
ï‚· Ensure your IT organization and the role of the CIO is clearly supporting a new set of Lead to Cash (L2C)
processes that represent fundamental changes from the status quo; and
ï‚· Manage shareholder expectations accordingly.
ï‚· Finally, prepare for a new set of strategic and operational risks that pose real-time challenges to your SaaS
objectives.
For a deeper discussion about Software-as-a-Service, please contact one of our practice leaders:
Mike Pearl
Global Cloud Computing Leader
(408) 817 3801
michael.pearl@us.pwc.com
Patrick Pugh
US Software and Internet Advisory Leader
(206) 398 3008
patrick.pugh@us.pwc.com
Let’s talk
Please reach out to any of our technology leaders to discuss this or other challenges. We’re here to help.
Tom Archer
US Technology Industry Leader
408 817 3836
thomas.archer@us.pwc.com
Cory Starr
US Technology Assurance Leader
408 817 1215
cory.j.starr@us.pwc.com
Kayvan Shahabi
US Technology Advisory Leader
408 817 5724
kayvan.shahabi@us.pwc.com
Diane Baylor
US Technology Tax Leader
408 817 5005
diane.baylor@us.pwc.com
Acknowledgements
The following PwC professionals contributed their experience and knowledge to produce this paper.
Jonathan T. Finch
Technology Sector Director
(858) 405 8792
jonathan.t.finch@us.pwc.com
Jasmin Young
Technology Sector Director
(408) 221 5588
jasmin.young@us.pwc.com
Eric Tan
Technology Sector Director
(857) 413-7594
eric.tan@us.pwc.com
About PwC’s Technology Institute
The Technology Institute is PwC’s global research network that studies the business of technology and the technology of
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