Having been involved in a number of SaaS companies over the last decade, we’ve noticed a series of recurring trends where growth is concerned. We recently attended SaaStr Annual with 14,000 other SaaS executives to discuss the latest trends in SaaS.
In this piece we go through some of the prevailing trends and ideas within the SaaS industry in 2024, which small, medium and large SaaS companies alike should consider as key focus areas this year.
Bessemer Venture Partners gave their annual State of the Cloud presentation which delivered some highly actionable points.
One especially useful section structured a framework – GRIT – to better understand the critical growth metrics of a SaaS business beyond standard revenue growth, and see where you rank compared to the likes of Slack and Twilio. If you’re anywhere close to them, you’re doing something right.
During a great presentation by Hubspot’s Brian Halligan, he points to creating a consumer-grade frontend and an enterprise-grade backend as one of the keys for growing SaaS businesses.
Your frontend should be easy to use with a clear value proposition, tying into a strong trend with SaaS businesses moving downstream, that can attract SMBs and create lasting, value-led connections.
When it comes to your backend, it needs to be robust and scalable enough to sell and handle larger clients. Being adaptable to varying customer situations and delivering measurable value will be paramount.
3) Look further afield when it comes to your buyers’ journey
Buyer or customer journeys are not a new topic, especially when selling SaaS (however it’s important to be aware of how you can create an optimized buyer journey for your business). However, during this year’s SaaStr there was still a great deal of attention paid to how we can look at a complete buyer journey and what lessons we should learn from this analysis.
These lessons were highlighted especially during a talk by Iterable, Segment, Madkudu, and Intercom which we’ve summarized:
SaaS pricing is a subject we’ve written about a number of times. People buy into features or value; as a consequence, your pricing needs to reflect that. By knowing who your audience is, the focus shifts and your pricing should reflect the value of your product. This is amongst a series of other techniques which allows you to differentiate your positioning.
Segmenting users by needs and willingness to pay allows you to know who you’re building for, in time by doing this you can align pricing with building accretive value and personalize monetization with predictive data. By jumping into pricing by the value we’ve covered finding out what your customer truly values and what that means when practically implementing that value.
The COO of Intercom, Karen Peacock shared her essential tactics that helped scale the company from $1M to $500M:
In brief, going into 2024 you should be aware of these main takeaways. Firstly implementing a GRIT system to better understand your critical growth metrics, as well as being sure you create touch points early on when mapping out your customers’ journey.
With your customers in mind, it’s also important to segment your users by their needs and willingness to pay. Actioning on these strategies places you in a better position to take on the SaaS industry within 2024.