No matter where a business falls on the SaaS generational spectrum, hypergrowth at a loss is no longer a viable strategy.
With classic software businesses experiencing the lowest growth rate within the industry (by a wide margin of 36%2), the transition to SaaS operating model should be priority #1. It’s the only way forward. After all, the move to SaaS has been the single biggest change in enterprise software in the last 20 years. It’s turned industry business models – and the way that the financial market has valued them – on their heads.
Gen 1 SaaS businesses need to capitalize on their cash flow and profit margins, to accelerate public cloud adoption while finding growth in new or adjacent market segments. This includes exploring a well-defined strategy that targets opportunities down-market via growth areas such as small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs).
Classic and Gen 1 SaaS businesses can harness their healthy capitalization to make transformational acquisitions that would have looked impossible just a few months ago. And to increase customer acquisition and retention rates, a Gen 1 SaaS business can adopt second and third-generation companies’ product-led growth strategies.
Meanwhile, many Gen 2 and Gen 3 SaaS businesses that responded quickly to the unprecedented increase in demand during the pandemic benefited from a significant sales boost. For some companies, however, the demand is waning. Now facing a less buoyant and less stable economic climate, these companies’ business models are being challenged: strategies, including consumption pricing and the scaling of operations to drive massive, transformational enterprise deals, must now be re-evaluated. These businesses could benefit from the tactics of classic and Gen 1 SaaS businesses in expanding channels, scaling processes, and achieving operational efficiencies.
Of course, the pressures of each business vary, particularly within the context of the software market’s new normal, but certain common guidelines apply.