Maybe Every SaaS Contract Should Have An Automatic Out Clause

Maybe Every SaaS Contract Should Have An Automatic Out Clause

To get all the best SaaStr content delivered directly to your inbox weekly, subscribe for free?here.

Lately at SaaStr, we’ve become more and more buyers of SaaS software ourselves.?Our own tiny little team and organization has grown, and we have to start putting the infrastructure in place for a $20m+ business.

And it’s been a vivid reminder of what I hate so much about buying software:

  • Vendors selling you software you never use or deploy.
  • Salespeople pushing you to sign multi-year contracts you don’t want.
  • Less tech-savvy buyers being told software does things it doesn’t do.
  • Being “qualified out” by a BDR.
  • Not being able to talk to a salesperson, having to go through a BDR.
  • Not being able to do a free trial, or even really try out a product first.
  • A salesperson discouraging you from doing a free trial, even when one is available.
  • A salesperson discouraging a pilot, even when one is possible.

The list goes on.?Traditional SaaS sales is incented to close 1+ year contracts without no outs as quickly as possible, and where possible, for every possible seat you might ever use in Year 1.?That’s the game.

And yet … it does add friction to many sales processes.?Not necessarily the most enterprise sales processes, but often, many other ones.?Freemium tried to revolutionize how we buy and try software, but that’s not a model that works for most solution-oriented products that require more evaluation and business-process change.

This edition of the SaaStr Insider is sponsored by?A-Lign

No alt text provided for this image

So what’s the right answer???Maybe giving everyone an out.?

  • Slack,?in some ways, pioneered a hybrid of this by, at least for quite a while, only charging you for the seats you actually used.
  • The majority of?Zoom?customers now pay monthly
  • And?MongoDB?found they closed more when they stopped having their sales team push annual contracts!?More on that?here.

Maybe in the 2020s, it’s time to stand behind our products more and just let every customer cancel whenever they want.?For any or no reason:

  • First, if the customer is unhappy and isn’t going to renew, in the long run, it doesn’t matter if they cancel on month 4 or simply don’t renew on month 12.?They won’t be part of your long-term revenue base either way.
  • Second, SaaS buyers are all veterans now.?It’s time to start letting them buy the way they want to buy.?There aren’t many customers left who are new to any segment of SaaS, let alone SaaS itself.?If they want to buy annually, great.?If they want to buy quarterly, terrific.?If they prefer utility pricing, maybe that’s the way there.?If they want to pay with Bitcoin, maybe just let them.?A little more on that?here.
  • Third, we’ve all figured out that having sales processes that, in the end, close customers that don’t “stick” is a net negative.?Having even 5% of your customers be sold products that simply don’t work for them not only drags down your NPS, it creates huge stresses on customer success, support, etc.?It also creates drama for the sales team, too, if you have to deal with clawbacks and other related issues.?These mis-sold customers are incredibly distracting to the organization.

In the long run, in SaaS, any customer that churns was never really a customer at all — unless you get them back later.

Maybe make onboarding, and buying, as simple as possible.?Maybe just let the customer buy, at a given price point, however, they want to buy.?Drive up your NPS, and close the deal even faster.?And maybe just let them cancel and leave whenever they want.?Just give them a pro-rated refund, and move on.?And say thank you for trying us.?And let them know they can have this refund whenever they want, no questions (or not too many, at least) asked.

I bet you close more.

No alt text provided for this image

'Tis the season and SaaStr's favorite mascot Hexie is helping spread the Holiday Cheer with an epic giveaway! Enter the giveaway for your chance to win season passes to all SaaStr events in 2023, including SaaStr Annual in SF, SaaStr Europa in London, and SaaStr APAC in Singapore.

The SaaS sales industry is pretty disgraceful, I have to say. The nature of the beast is such that it drives really bad vendor behavior. "We need to book this services engagement ARR, not NRR. Can you agree to making this look like a software purchase" is a good one. Another one is, "oh, we're happy to increase your user counts year over year but, please, don't ever ask us to ratchet those numbers down. I know you may face a downturn but that's not my problem." Calgon, take me away.

回复

There is an easy solution to this very real problem Jason M. Lemkin It’s Usage-Based Pricing (UBP). SaaS subscription fatigue is real and reaching a breaking point. With the subscription model as you’ve outlined the customer has carried all the risk and is left holding the bag. There is no accountability on the vendor side. Having a contract out clause does nothing. Vendors will dodge around that too (strong arm you to not get out and make it difficult). Customers of companies that lead with Usage-Based Pricing don’t have this problem. And in turn companies can focus on building and innovating and driving up usage. #cloud #saas #pricing

回复

while points are valid from a buyer standpoint. However, if there is an out clause/ you generally cannot book the revenue till the end of the term. in annual contracts, that's the kiss of death to your Bookings growth.

回复
Alex Reed

Chief Commercial Officer | Board Member | Strategic Advisor

2 年

We subscribe (pun intended) to that idea! Out clause, only pay for users (no zombie seats), etc. Not only is it the right thing to do, it signals trustworthiness to people who have scars from past software experiences. And wouldn't ya know, net retention is above 150% ??

Ryan Finkelstein

CEO at Bayard Bradford | Elite HubSpot Partner | Portal Consolidation | Manufacturing, Oil & Gas, Logistics

2 年

I think selling the users up front is an interesting point. If they didn't get you to buy what you'll need 6 months from now, would you be willing to pay a larger premium to purchase at that later date? I think that's the alternative. Let you ask for the users but prices need to be higher.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Jason M. Lemkin的更多文章

社区洞察