a16z Podcast - SaaS Go-to-Upmarket
Episode Date: May 29, 2020For a SaaS company, it's easier to move upmarket than down, and this gives SaaS startups the advantage against incumbents. In this episode, David Ulevitch and our newest enterprise general partner K...ristina Shen look at the SaaS go-to-upmarket with a focus on how to price for the move, including why so many founders underprice, how to think about free versus paid trials, and navigating the transition to larger accounts.
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The content here is for informational purposes only, should not be taken as legal business,
tax, or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not directed
at any investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund. For more details, please see A16Z.com
slash disclosures. Hi, and welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm DOS, and in this episode, I talk
SaaS, go-to-market, with David Ullovich and our newest Enterprise General partner, Christina Shen.
The first half of the podcast looks at how remote work impacts the SaaS go-to-market and what the
smartest founders are doing to survive the current crisis. The second half covers pricing approaches
and strategy, including how to think about free versus paid trials and navigating the transition
to larger accounts. But we start with why it's easier to move up market than down and the
advantage that gives a SaaS startup against incumbents. If you have a cohort of customers that are
paying you $10,000 a year for your product, you're going to find a customer.
customer that self-selects and say they're willing to pay $100,000 a year. Once you get one of those,
your organization will figure out how you sell to, how you satisfy and support customers at that
price point and that size. But it's really hard for a company that sells up market to move down
market because they've already baked in all that sort of expensive heavy lifting sales motion.
And so as you go down market with a lower price point, usually you can't actually support it.
Does that mean that it's easier for a company to do this go to market if they're a new
start up as opposed to if they're pre-existing SaaS.
It's culturally very, very hard to give a product away for free that you're already charging for.
It feels like you're eating away at your own potential revenue when you do it,
so that most people who try it end up pulling back very quickly.
This is actually one of the key reasons why the bottoms up SaaS motion is just so competitive
and compelling and so destructive against the traditional sort of sales-driven
SaaS motion because if you have that great product and people are choosing to use it,
It's very hard for somebody with a sales-driven motion and all the cost that's loaded into that
to be able to compete against it.
There's so many markets where initially we would look at companies and say, oh, well,
this couldn't possibly be bottoms up.
It has to be sold to the CIO.
It has to be sold to the CISO or the CFO.
But in almost every case, we've been wrong and there has been a bottoms up motion.
The canonical example of Slack.
It's crazy that Slack is a bottoms up company because you're talking about corporate messaging and
how could you ever have a messaging solution that only a few people might be using,
and only a team might be using.
But now it's just like, oh, yeah, some people started using it,
and then more people started using it, and then everyone had slack.
I think another class example is Dropbox versus Box.
Both started as bottoms up businesses, try before you buy.
But Box quickly found their path of saying, hey, I'd rather sell to IT and Dropbox
said, hey, we've got a great premium motion going, and they catalyze their business around
referrals and giving away free storage and share storage.
in a way that really helped drive their bottoms up business.
It's a big leap to go from selling to smaller customers to larger customers.
How have you seen SaaS companies know or get the timing right on that,
especially since it does seem like that's really related to this idea of scaling your
Salesforce?
Don't try to go from like a 100-person company to a 20,000 person company.
Start targeting early adopters, maybe their late-stage pre-IPO companies,
then newly IPO companies.
Starting in tech tends to be a little bit easier because they tend to be early
your doctors. Going vertical by vertical can be a great strategy as well. Targeting one customer
who might be branded in that space can help brand yourself in that category. And then all their
competitors also want your product if you do the job, a lot of times people will dedicate a sales
rep to each vertical so that they become really, really knowledgeable in that space and also build
their own brand and reputation and know who are the right customers to target. So right now,
you've got a lot more people working remote. Does this move to remote work mean that on-premise
software is dying? And is it accelerating the move to software as a service?
This remote work and working from home is only going to catalyze more of the conversion
from on-premise over to cloud and SaaS. In general, software spend declines 20% during an economic
downturn. This happened in 08. This happened to 01. But when we look at the last downturn in
2008, SaaS spend actually for public companies increase on average 10%, which means there's a 30%
spread, which really shows us that there was a huge catalyst from people moving on-premise
of SaaS.
As people work remote, the ability to use SaaS tools is much easier than having a VPN
back into your corporate network we've been seeing that inside sales teams have been doing
larger and larger deals and essentially moving up market on the inside without having to
engage a field sales teams.
In fact, a lot of the new SaaS companies today, rather than building out a field team,
they sort of have a hybrid team where they have people that are working, closing deals
on the inside. And if they had to go out and meet with a customer, they would do that. But by
large, most of it was happening over the phone, over email, and over video conferencing. And
all the deals now, by definition, are going to be done remote because people can't go visit
their customers in person. So with bottoms up, did user behavior and buyer behavior change so
the go-to-market evolved? Or did the go-to-market evolve and then you saw user and buyer behavior
change? I'm curious with this move to remote work. Is that going to trigger more
changes or has the go-to-market enabled that change in user behavior, even though we see that
change coming because of a lot of forces outside of the market? So I definitely think they are
interrelated, but I do think it was a user change that catalyze everything. We decided that
we preferred better software, and we tried a couple products. We were able to purchase off our
credit card. And then IT and procurement eventually said, wow, everyone's buying these already. I might
as well, get a company license and get a company deal, so I'm not paying as much. And so,
well, obviously, software vendors had to offer the products that could be self-served. Users started
to realize they had the power. They wanted to use better software. They paid with their credit
cards. And now software vendors are forced to change your go-to-market to actually suit that
use case. If that's the case that when user behavior has changed, it's tend to be the first
catalyzing driving force of bigger changes in the go-to-market. What are some of the changes you
maybe foresee for SaaS because the world has changed to this new reality of remote work and more
distributed teams. We're in a very uncertain economic environment right now. And a couple of things
have become very clear over the next three to nine to 15 months. You're going to find out which
SaaS products are absolutely essential to helping a business operate and run and which ones were
just nice to have and may not get renewed. I think on the customer buying side, you're very likely
to see people push back on big annual commitments and prefer to go month to month where they can,
or you'll see more incentives from superstar startups to offer discounts for annual contracts.
You're going to see people that want to push back.
They might sign an annual contract, but they may not want to pay up front.
They may prefer to meter the cash out radibly over the term of the contract.
And as companies had empowered and allowed budget authority to be pushed down in organizations,
you're going to see that budget authority get pulled back, more scrutiny on spending,
and likely a lot of SaaS parks not get renewed that turn out to not be essential.
I think the smartest founders are making sure they have the runway to continue to exist,
and they're doing that in a couple of ways.
They're preserving cash.
They are making sure that their existing customers are super, super happy
because retaining your customers is so important in this environment.
And the third is you want to make sure that you have efficient or profitable customer acquisition.
Don't spend valuable dollars acquiring customers, but smartly acquire customers efficiently,
that will add to your great existing customer base.
To go into pricing and packaging for SaaS for a moment,
what are some of the different pricing approaches
that you see SaaS companies taking?
The old-school way of doing SaaS go-to-market
is bundle everything together,
make the pricing super complex,
you don't actually understand what you're paying for,
you're forced to purchase it because you need one component of the product.
New modern SaaS pricing is keep it simple,
keep it tied to value,
It makes you you're solving one thing really, really well.
You want to make it easy for your customers to give you money.
And so if your customers don't understand your pricing, that's a huge red flag.
Sometimes founders will try to over-engineer their pricing model.
We talk a lot about everything has to be 10x better than the alternatives.
But it's much easier to be 10x better when you solve one thing very, very well,
and then have simple pricing around it.
I think the most common that most people know about is PEPM or per employee per month,
per month where you're charging basically for every single seat. Another really common model is
like the freemium model. So think about like a Dropbox or an Asana or Skype, where it's trigger
based. You try the product for free, but when you hit a certain amount of storage or a certain
amount of users, then it converts over to paid. And then you also have a time trial where you get
the full experience of the product for some limited time period. And then you're asked if you
want to continue using the product to pay. And then there's also pay as you go. And particularly
pay as you go as a usage model. So Slack will say like, hey, if your users aren't actually
using the product this month, we won't actually charge you for it. The example that Christina
made about Slack and users, everybody understands what a user is. And if they're using the product,
they pay for it. If they're not using it, they don't pay for it, that's a very, very friendly
way to make it easy for your customers to give you money. If Slack came up with a pricing model
that's like based on number of messages or number of API integration calls, like the customer
would have no idea what that means. There's also the consumption model. So Twilio only
charges you for every SMS text or phone call that you make on the platform any given month.
And so they make money or lose money as your usage goes.
The pricing is very aligned to your productivity.
Generally, those are for products where the usage only goes in one direction.
So if you think of a company like Databricks where they're charging for storage or like
Amazon's S3 service, it is very aligned with the customer, but it also strategically aligns
with the business because they know the switching cost is very high, the churn is very low,
And generally, in those businesses, you're only going to store more data so they can charge based on usage or volume of data.
Recently, there's been a huge trend about, I would say, like, payment as a revenue.
It's particularly common in vertical markets where SaaS companies are adding payments as a revenue in addition to their employer subscription revenue.
So if you look at like Shopify, for example, more than 50% of their revenue is actually payment revenue.
They're actually making money every single time you purchase something off one of their shopping cart websites.
When you're working with a founder or a SaaS startup, how have you seen them find the right
pricing model for their product, for their market?
Step one is just talk to a lot of customers. Try to figure out like what is the market pricing
for possible alternatives or competitors, understand their pain points, their willingness to
pay, just throw a price out there. You have to have a starting point in order to actually
test and iterate, particularly in the SMB or the bottoms up business.
You can actually test and iterate pretty, pretty quickly because you have so many data points.
I always tell founders, maybe if step one is to just go out there and talk to customers,
step two is just double your prices.
I don't think there's ever been a great company with a great product that's fallen apart because
their pricing was wrong.
I think they've left money on the table for sure.
A lot of SaaS startup founders really, really underpriced.
You don't want to find out two or three years later that you were 200% underpriced.
A very common thing that SaaS companies do, they'll have the basic package that either is free or
low cost that you can just sign up online for. They'll have a middle package where they show some
pricing. And then they'll have the enterprise package where you have to contact sales to find out
more. And that way, they don't actually have to show the pricing for that third package. And that gives
the salespeople the flexibility to address pricing on a per deal basis. When you're working with
companies, why are they underpricing their products? I think it's psychological. People need to
price on value and they don't know how much value they're delivering relative to, oh, it only costs
me $100 a month to provide this service. So I just need to charge $200.
but if it turns out you're saving your customer of $50,000 a year,
then you're held the end of price.
You have to remember, SaaS is essentially a proxy for outsourced IT.
You're spending money on a SaaS service to not have to pay to develop something internally
or to have to pay IT to support something that's more complex on-prem.
Software is much cheaper than people, and so generally the price point can be much higher.
And the other thing, too, is your value increases over time.
You're delivering more features, more product, you understand the customer better.
It's the beauty of the SaaS model and cloud model that you can,
iterate and push code immediately and the customer immediately sees values so a lot of times people
have the same price point from the first customer sold to three years later for their 200th customer
they've sold and quite frankly you've delivered so much value along the way that your price point
should have gone up the thing i say is a lot of people discount per seat pricing a lot as they
move up market we tend to tell people that the best validation of your product having great
product market fit is your ability to hold your price point and so while there is some natural
discounting on a per seat basis because people do deserve some volume discounting. I would say try to
resist that as much as possible. Especially for a technical founder, it's so tempting to get in there
and fiddle with these knobs. How do you know when it is time to experiment with your pricing and
packaging? If you're looking at your business and you see that you are doing more deals and
they're closing faster, you should raise their pricing and you pay attention to how long it takes to
close deals and whether the lot and the number of deals is staying consistent as you do that. And at some point,
you're going to find out when you're losing deals on price.
I think a moment where companies have to sort of plan ahead and try to avoid having
a course correct is as they roll out massive pricing or packaging changes, which are pretty
natural as companies move up market, but how they navigate that transition to larger accounts
and how they either bring along or eventually move away from those smaller, earlier customers
who got them to where they are tends to be really important because they can get a lot of noise
on Twitter, they can get a lot of blowback from their customers.
Zendesk is a company where they rolled out a major packaging change, and when they rolled it out,
they hadn't planned on grandfathering in their early customers because they got a lot of pushback.
Very quickly, they put out a blog post and they said, hey, we hear what you're saying.
We appreciate you building the business that we've become today.
We do need to have a package for the future, but all the people that have been customers so far
will be grandfathered in for at least a period of time into the old model.
The nice thing is if you iterate pricing constantly, you don't really have this problem
because your customers would be used to pricing changes.
You normally pair them with new features, and it all kind of works out.
But if you have to go through a big grandfather change,
I tend to lean towards treating your early customers really, really well.
They adopted when you weren't a big company yet.
They probably co-built the product with you in many ways.
And so it's great to get more dollars out of your customer base,
but treat your early customers really well.
Are there any other failure modes that you see startups really falling into
around pricing and packaging or any common mistakes that they make?
I think a lot of founders don't always map out the cost or the model of their pricing and their product relative to their cost of actually doing sales and doing marketing and doing customer acquisition.
Inside sales is so popular in Silicon Valley when you're selling more to an SMB or a midmarket type customer, the expectation is that you're educating and helping the customer or prospective customer over the phone.
And so you're not expected to be as high touch.
But 5K is kind of almost the minimum price point you need to sell to the SMB with an inside sales team in order to pay for the outbound costs and all the conversion.
Because there is typically a team that sits around the quota-carrying rep.
And so I do think price matching how much your price point is compared to what your go-to-market motion is matters a lot.
Other big failure modes that I see, people guess the ramp time of a sales rep wrong.
And ramp time really ties to the segment of customers selling into it.
It tends to be that you're selling into the enterprise, ramp time for sales reps because sales
cycles are so long, tends to be much longer as well. Could be six months plus, could be a year.
While if you're selling more into this SMB or mid market, the ramp time to get a wrap up
and running can be much shorter three to six months. Because the sales cycles are shorter,
they just iterate much faster and they ramp up much more quickly.
The other thing that people have to understand is that sales velocity is a really important
component to figuring out how many reps you should be hiring, whether it's
whether they should be inside reps or field reps.
If it takes you 90 days to close a deal,
that can't be a $5,000 a year deal.
That has to be a $50,000 or even $150,000 a year deal.
And Christina, I know you've done a lot of work with metrics,
so how do those play in?
Probably the one way to sum it all together
is how many months does it take to pay back customer acquisition costs?
And very commonly within the SaaS world,
we talk about a 12-month-pack payback.
And the reason why is we typically want to see
for every dollar you spend on sales and marketing,
you get a dollar back within a year and that means you can tweak the inputs any way you want
let's say doing paid acquisition is really effective for you then you can spend proportion
more on paid acquisition and less on sales reps vice versa if you have a great inbound engine
you actually can hire a lot more sales reps and spend more on sales headcount with all formulas
one it's a guide rail so if you have customers that retain really really well let's say you sell into
enterprise and you've got like a 90 or 95% annual retention rate, then your CAQ payback could
be between 12 and 24 months. But let's say you're selling to SMB and let's say churn is
2 or 3% monthly, which ends up being like 80 to 90% annual retention. And because your customer's
less sticky, then I would recommend looking at a CAQ payback of 6 to 12 months. How should you
think about doing a free trial versus a paid trial? On the one hand, the bottoms up motion where
people can try essentially a full version of a product before they buy it is extremely
powerful. On the other hand, I've started to try to think about how I advise companies
when they are thinking about a free trial for something that might cost $100,000 a year for
the customer or $200,000 a year. Do we do a paid pilot that has some sort of contractual
obligation that we meet them, they turn into a commercial engagement? So I do think the beauty of
the bottoms up business is that you can get people who try the entire experience of the product for
free and then they fall in love with it and a certain percentage will convert and that works
really really well for products that can self-serve when you start moving up market to more
complex products part of the challenge with doing trials is it takes work on the company side for
implementation customers success and sales to actually implement the product whether it be
integrations IT has to give access etc and to lose that self-serve ability which is so amazing in the
trial and so I tend to be more in the camp of paid trials if it cost you money to actually
deploy the trial and when you're selling to bigger customers they associate value when they have
to pay and once a customer has to pay you then they feel a need to make the project successful
and thus they will onboard schedule things give you data and access if you can get to a point
where you get the customer to do that paid pilot such that the
only difference between a pilot and an actual customer is just the signing of a contract.
To me, that's very powerful. Now, that does force you to have a really good pre-sales motion
to make sure that you can deliver on the promise you've made to your customers. When companies
don't have a great product and they paper over it with professional services and sales engineering
and post-sales support, that paid pilot thing doesn't work because the experience isn't good enough.
So I think it really is incumbent on the SaaS company that does a paid pilot to make sure that they
do have a great experience and are able to deliver on that experience.
And one emerging trend recently is people signing annual contract with a one or three month
out as a replacement to the paid pilot because it's kind of the best of both worlds.
The SaaS company that's selling the product gets a higher level of commitment and the customer
gets the optionality of opting out in the same way as a trial without any callback and it really comes
down to where procurement falls in. Sometimes procurement is at the beginning of that decision,
which makes it more like an annual contract. Sometimes procurement is at the one or three-month
opt-out period, which means the customer already has a great experience, loves the product,
and it's an easier way to convert procurement to actually sign on. And that is a really good segue
into renewals. I always tell founders, you might have this subscription business, but it's not a
recurring revenue business until the second year when the revenue actually recurs. I think you
really have the first three months to get a customer up and running and happy. And if they're not,
you then have about three months to fix it.
And if all that works out,
then the remaining six months of the contract
can be focused on upsell and expansion.
You don't want to find out in the 11th month
that the customer never actually deployed
or they're never logging in.
Awesome.
Thank you, Christina.
Thank you, David.
Thanks so much for having us.
This is fun.
Yeah, a lot of fun, great topics,
and our favorite thing to talk about.