What to Do If Your Business Decelerates
A top SaaS VC to me the other day: “Once a SaaS business decelerates, it becomes almost hopeless.?No one will buy you, fund you, or join you.”
This VC?certainly had a point.?The good thing about SaaS is the revenue recurs.?The bad news is it always has to be recurring by a materially higher absolute amount each quarter, each year.??You can’t go from $4m ARR one year to just $5m ARR the next and really get anywhere.?You can’t go from $15m ARR one year and then only $20m ARR the next and beat the competition.?If this is the best you can do … then you’re on a slow and painful march to irrelevance and atrophy.?It also probably shows you’ve sort of?fallen out of product-market fit. ?Cloud is so big today, that if you are past $1m-$2m ARR and have happy customers, you should be growing at a decent clip.?If you have product-market fit.
But …
The real truth, deceleration, it happens to all of us.?At least at some small scale.??At least for a few quarters.?I wrote a piece some time ago, a personal favorite, about?Our Year of Hell .?When a bad hire at a key time, and some confusion on strategy, led us to our worst year ever on a Year-over-Year growth rate basis.?More on that?here .
So what do you do, if you decelerate??For me back in the day, the answer was a “simple” matter of bringing in?a great VP of Sales .?It cured our problems in 60 days.?More on that?here .?But?why?did it solve our problems??Because as rough as that year was, as terrible as it was (and I seriously thought about bringing in?someone else to carry the burden) … it turned out we still had the leads.?People were still coming by to the Open House.?They just weren’t buying at the prior rate.
And so what I learned, and what I’ve helped other founders with since, is that at least 8 times out of 10, if you decelerate post Initial Traction … if you act quickly enough … you?can?Reignite Growth.?It’s true.
Let’s analyze the problems that cause deceleration and what you can do about them.
Problem #1:?“I’ve tapped out my market.”?Answer:?Of course you have.?Everyone has and does.?You think Salesforce, now routinely closing nine-figure deals across 5+ Cloud product lines, is really selling to the same SFA-for-SMBs market it started with??Of course not.?NetSuite also grew upmarket in a similar way.?At Adobe Sign / EchoSign, we started with a freemium model but went upmarket.?Today, the entire freemium market for e-signatures is probably still < $20m ARR —?out of a $4B market .?Not enough for the players to make on freemium alone.?Box turned into the enterprise content management of choice for the CIO’s office.?It sure didn’t start there.?So everyone has to redefine their markets.?How do you do this?
Problem #2:?“The Competition is Killing Us.”?Of course it is.?At least sometimes.??That’s competition.?Most SaaS markets aren’t natural monopolies.?They’re?natural oligopolies .?(More on why?here ).?And in oligopolies — we see brutal competition, on just about everything, except sometimes pricing.
What do you do??My top tips if the competition really is killing you, more than last year:
Problem #3:?“My Team Isn’t Good Enough and I Can’t Attract the Great Ones To Join Me.”??Yes, this is a real problem.?And boo-hoo you aren’t Dropbox-cool.?Time to suck it up and spend at least 25% of your time scouring the earth for great hires.?Look, there is?someone?out there that is better than your suboptimal VP of Sales / VP of Marketing / VP of Engineering / VP of Whatever — that actually does need a job.?If you’re accelerating, take your time here on these hires.?But if you’re decelerating —?any?upgrade will make a difference.?So make one.?Deceleration is the time when a Good Plan Today is Better than a Perfect Plan Tomorrow is especially true in hiring.?If your VP of Engineering doesn’t want to build features for your big customers, or can’t hire … just find someone 50% better.?That’s enough.?And make the hire.?On the spot.?And given them whatever it takes, equity, cash, it doesn’t matter.?You have to reignite growth.?Make It So.
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Deceleration happens to all of us.?I could tell you the story of several CEOs of multi-billion dollar SaaS companies that lost faith?and desperately tried to sell themselves at tough times.?When things decelerated.
Look at the chart below?from?Tom Tunguz ?nicely charting Hubspot’s revenues pre-IPO.?Today, they’re worth $7?billion.?As you can see below, they had their own deceleration year.?And then rebounded?incredibly?the next year.?In fact, after their deceleration … they accelerated?faster?than the average SaaS company to IPO.?Awesome.
It has happened to all of us.?And you can’t turn around a tanker?in 1/10th of a mile .?You can’t change everything overnight.?You can’t reignite?growth in 30 days.?You just can’t.
The key is to Act?Now though.?Now.?Make the one great hire (like I did).?Focus on your relative competitive advantages, and double down there.?Find future growth through your outliers.?Start today.?Don’t screw around.
What won’t work is Inaction.??There is no place for Ostrich behavior in SaaS.?Get off Twitter.?In fact, stop reading articles on LinkedIn.?And do something right now, today, that can help at least a smidge.?As horrible as it is, you can survive if you decelerate for just a few quarters.?You can rebound, as long as the leads are there, as long as the prospects at least come by, even if they don’t buy.?But, if you decelerate for 15-18 months straight?… you’ll be dead in the water.
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