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SMART Selling in the SaaS world

By | October 9, 2009, 10:58am PDT

Summary: What we all could learn from Sonar6 Post #3 from the HR Technology show SaaS (software as a service) is supposed to cost less. At least that’s what all the vendors tell me. It’s also supposed to be easier to use and easier to implement. I’ve often wondered if these lower cost ideals are really true. Why [...]

What we all could learn from Sonar6

Post #3 from the HR Technology show

SaaS (software as a service) is supposed to cost less. At least that’s what all the vendors tell me. It’s also supposed to be easier to use and easier to implement. I’ve often wondered if these lower cost ideals are really true. Why am I such a Doubting Thomas? Because most SaaS vendors are on-premise converts to SaaS. These firms haven’t really changed anything about their business. They still sell the same way. They still implement software the same way. And so on. If it’s all the same, except for the business model, how can it be cheaper?

I saw the answer last week and I got it from a different kind of vendor. Their lessons are important for all SaaS and SaaS wanna-be firms to study and copy.

So, imagine you’re a software vendor, like Sonar6, trying to sell into the North American market. Now suppose that your firm is based in New Zealand. It’s at least 6,000 miles between Auckland and San Diego and over 8,000 miles from Auckland to NYC. Can you imagine Sonar6’s cost of sales if they need to send over pre-sales personnel for even some of their larger prospects?

Cost of sales for many software firms is one of their largest cost items. I’ve seen old school firms fly in 6-8 product experts, sales people, industry experts, change management specialists, project managers and the ever-present ‘regional/ industry client relationship’ executive. That last person flew the most air miles, spent the night in the most expensive hotel room and won’t remember one of the prospect’s names by nightfall. But, he/she will pay for dinner and breakfast for ‘the team’.

Prospects will make these folks come in at least three times to do product demonstrations. They may need to come back two more times to explain the proposed work plan. Next, there could be three more prospect visits by a negotiating team to try to close the deal.

The cost of sales includes a lot of travel costs, time spent in non-billable activity, time spent responding to RFPs and prepping for demonstrations and more. The opportunity cost, that is service time that could have been billed, is huge, too. It’s expensive and customers pay for it indirectly.

Sonar6 looked at several of these components and changed their way of doing business. Here’s their approach:

- they put their software pricing on their web site. Without the haggling, they can avoid a lot of wasteful and expensive negotiation trips

- they make their product available for free for 30 days. If you like it, you can buy it. If you don’t, that’s okay too as Sonar6 hasn’t spent anything with this sales effort.

- they created their applications to be so logical, so intuitive and so compelling that they sell themselves. Seriously, if you’re going to sell an application that runs on the Internet, it ought to be so obvious and straightforward to use that it doesn’t require a phalanx of trainers and change agents to help explain its myriad eccentricities.

When you do these things, your cost of sales plummets. You don’t need to hand-hold prospects. You don’t need to play time-consuming negotiating games. You don’t need to create expensive work programs. You get the point.

The second big area of change to win in SaaS applications is to achieve true multi-tenancy. Katherine Jones is covering that point in a companion post. Suffice to say, if a vendor can apply upgrades to hundreds of customers simultaneously, then the cost of their operation plummets. An old-school application that is hosted is not multi-tenant and it can’t be operated as cheaply as a SaaS product. SaaS applications need to be cheaper than packages and bespoke software. When they are, SaaS vendors can win. Cost of operations, like cost of sales must be reduced.

Cost of SaaS operations also go down when the vendor is smart about where they run their operations and what they use for hardware. Some of the vendors we met at the HR Technology show use low cost cloud service vendors like Google and Amazon. When it’s all done, I’ll bet these providers may be far less costly than the data centers many SaaS operate themselves.

So, when you’re evaluating a SaaS vendor, see what they’ve done to reduce their cost structure, especially in the cost of sales and cost of service delivery. Yes, look at their SAS 70 compliance efforts but also look inwardly to see if they truly understand how to get their costs, and yours by inference, down to record lows. That’s the smart way to evaluate SaaS vendors. And that’s how your costs will come down, too.

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Brian is currently CEO of TechVentive, a strategy consultancy serving technology providers and other firms. He is also a research analyst with Vital Analysis.

Disclosure

Brian Sommer

I am co-owner of TechVentive, Inc. The company has been engaged on numerous consulting engagements, often for technology firms, service firms and litigators. As a general rule, I do not write about current clients of TechVentive. Should that occur, I will note this in blogs. Readers should assume that I have had client relationships with many ERP and other technology providers. Some of these relationships may be quite small and short-lived while others more significant. One of TechVentive's business units publishes research reports about technology providers. As a result, this business receives small amounts of revenues from a wide variety of software firms, software buyers and others when they purchase copies of reports. Some firms do secure reprint rights to these reports. None of these purchases, individually, represents a significant amount of total revenue for me and the nature of it is hard to predict where it will come from. I also provide some marketing strategy and/or market segmentation work for software firms as I have developed a unique database that segments the largest 4000+ technology buyers in the world. Many technology firms periodically engage me for unique views into this database for future marketing campaigns. I do not blog about these efforts and do not blog about client firms while they are active clients unless some pressing news story erupts. If that event occurs, I will indicate any perceived or real conflict of interest. Occasionally, I will develop unique intellectual property pieces for technology or service providers. If I should blog about a vendor with whom I have recently developed a special information product, I will note this in a blog to avoid any appearance, real or unintended, of bias. For the most part, I have no investments in technology firms. While I've been offered friends and family stock and other inducements in the past, I have steadfastly refused these. I used to be a partner with Andersen Consulting and had no ownership stake in the firm for many years. I frequently refer to this in my blogs and do not hide my prior association with the company. I did purchase a few shares of Accenture and Cognizant stock in late - 2008. I have sold some of those positions in late 2009. Readers should assume that most software conferences that I write about involved some measure of fees waived and/or travel reimbursement. I do not charge vendors to attend these events nor will I accept payment for same. I do get reimbursed for many speaking engagements. I generally note at the end of blogs whether the vendor reimbursed me for travel expenses. Generally, this includes airfare and hotel. I do not request, receive nor accept travel perks such as first class airfare.

Biography

Brian Sommer

Brian is in a unique position to diagnosis the winners and the losers in technology and services. He was the longest running (10 years) and most senior director of Andersen Consulting's (now Accenture's) global Software Intelligence unit - a position that required him to pick the best possible software solutions for hundreds of clients globally. He advised the firm on ERP software market forecasts and helped establish manpower planning estimates by vendor for deployment globally.

Brian continues to remain close to technology buyers and sellers. When he left Andersen Consulting, he co-created a dot-com with blogger and former arch-enemy at Price Waterhouse, Vinnie Mirchandani. That firm helped broker efficient services contracts between software buyers and systems integrators. Since then, he's created TechVentive, Inc. - a company that helps technology firms better understand their markets - and Vital Analysis - the research and publishing arm of TechVentive.

Brian still travels the world and publishes an impressive number of articles, research reports and blog posts annually to help software and services buyers make better business decisions. He can be reached at: brian @ vitalanalysis.com

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RE: SMART Selling in the SaaS world
todd@... 19th Oct 2009
Excellent post, Brian! You're right that the main
challenges of SaaS companies today are reducing the
cost of sales and operations. It may take some time
for enterprise customers to convert to the model of
web-based sales, however. Enterprise customers still
tend to want a more traditional sales approach
involving an account manager and team. One way for
SaaS companies to afford this approach is to partner
with a larger organization that can sell on their
behalf.

Todd Lane
www.appregatta.com
0 Votes
+ -
Thanks Brian
TerryLeClair 13th Oct 2009
Great blog post Brian. I am the CEO of a new Real Estate SaaS company an we have now been post-launch for 3 months. It's a slow process and we have been struggling to try and find the right road map. This has given me more clarity and a couple of ideas. We have an amazing product but educating the consumer is our struggle and we need to (like everyone else)get to cash flow positive as soon as possible as we are self funded and it has been a long road. I would like YOUR personal opinion on a "free trail period". We have avoided that as we felt Realtors (I know them as I also own a real estate company) would sign up, not use the product due to procrastination and laziness and never continue on with our service? I personally hate the "auto start payment process" where if the user has to call in to cancel or they start to get billed but maybe that is teh best strategy? Your thoughts?
Regards
Terry LeClair
CEO, RealtySites PLUS
0 Votes
+ -
RE: SMART Selling in the SaaS world
todd@... 19th Oct 2009
Excellent post, Brian! You're right that the main
challenges of SaaS companies today are reducing the
cost of sales and operations. It may take some time
for enterprise customers to convert to the model of
web-based sales, however. Enterprise customers still
tend to want a more traditional sales approach
involving an account manager and team. One way for
SaaS companies to afford this approach is to partner
with a larger organization that can sell on their
behalf.

Todd Lane
www.appregatta.com

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