First described in Harvard Business Review in 2008, hypergrowth is “the steep part of the S-curve that most young markets and industries experience at some point, where the winners get sorted from the losers.” It’s at this point where SaaS marketers reach a key turning point in their business — either tune in and take off or be taken out by the competition.
For early-stage software as a service (SaaS) companies, hypergrowth success is dependent on the organization’s go-to-market (GTM) strategy and business model. This article will show you how balancing two very influential metrics can maximize your software company’s growth.
So, what is the secret to achieving and maintaining hypergrowth? And how can you supercharge your SaaS business model to support it?
Lifetime value (LTV) and customer acquisition cost (CAC) — these two metrics alone can define the success of your SaaS business model. As the biggest influencers of unit economics, they’re the key numbers used to assess a business’s performance and growth potential.
In fact, LTV and CAC are used almost exclusively in forward-looking calculations for business growth. In the next couple of sections, we’ll look at how the ratio of LTV to CAC influences what you should spend to gain new customers and how it can help you figure out where to make that investment.
Knowing your SaaS company’s LTV:CAC ratio can help you keep a pulse on your growth trajectory. The ratio describes the relationship between:
For SaaS companies, it is used to predict the profit or loss margin on each subscription purchase. It can also help marketers understand how long it will take to recoup their marketing and sales investment.
Understanding your LTV:CAC ratio will help you determine how well your company might perform in the marketplace. The better the ratio, the better your business model supports hypergrowth.
The typical LTV:CAC ratio of a sustainable company is around 3:1. Companies in hypergrowth, however, often have an even higher one — closer to 5:1, where its customers are worth about five times (or more) the cost of acquiring them.
Companies with a ratio where CAC is equal to or higher than LTV are unsustainable and can be met with a quick decline. While some companies maintain a small or even negative LTV:CAC in their early days to achieve rapid user growth, this can be a dangerous strategy if there’s no clear plan to increase LTV and/or decrease CAC in the future.
Maintaining an ideal LTV:CAC ratio can be a challenge. Your circumstances can change quickly as your business grows and matures, or as your market changes.
But why? Here are a few examples:
Identifying the efficiencies and the inefficiencies that drive your LTV:CAC ratio can help you better encourage hypergrowth. For example:
If you find out you’re being too cautious about your CAC, you can choose to invest more in your marketing and sales efforts. Or, if you learn you are spending too freely, you can adjust your pricing and simplify your sales approach before you end up in unsustainable territory.
Balancing your LTV:CAC ratio is a process of trial and discovery. With a little work, building a business model that keeps your company moving in the right direction and identifying the factors that will help you scale quickly is possible.
Before we look at the factors that drive a balanced ratio, let’s first look at what it means to have an out-of-balance and balanced LTV:CAC ratio.
If your customers’ acquisition costs are higher than their lifetime value, your business model is considered out of balance and unsustainable. If your costs are lower, your model is balanced and your business is considered sustainable.
There is no perfect ratio, but as we mentioned in the last section, the companies with the most profitable business models earn a lifetime value of at least three times what they spend to acquire a customer.
As your business scales, you’ll want to make sure you keep a close eye on your LTV:CAC ratio. If you notice your ratio drops, take it as a warning sign that something in your business model is not going as planned. It could be that your pricing or packaging is wrong, or maybe the needs of your customer base have changed.
You can get the insights you need to scale your SaaS business by exploring your LTV:CAC ratio. Let's start by taking a deeper look at the impact of your pricing, expenses, and sales approach from the perspective of both metrics:
CACs are driven by the cost and effectiveness of your marketing and sales efforts. So, minimizing these costs by maximizing the effectiveness of your promotional tactics is ideal. The more you can increase your acquisitions, conversions, and referrals, the better.
LTV is a direct result of your customer’s loyalty and is driven both by the quality of your relationship with them and the accuracy of your monetization strategy.
Increasing your LTV by maintaining a relationship with your customers and continually iterating your product’s pricing and packaging strategy will help offset any necessary CACs.
Recuperating your CACs is a major turning point in the early stages of your business’s growth. The sooner you reach CAC payback, the faster your company can scale.
The illustration in the first graph below shows common interactions of CAC and LTV — from customer acquisition to customer churn. This is the trajectory you hoped to accomplish when you first launched your SaaS product into the marketplace.
But, in all likelihood, things will not play out quite as you had intended. When that is the case or if you’re simply just looking to maximize your hypergrowth potential, here are two of the most impactful adjustments you can make:
You won’t benefit from a customer acquisition until their subscription revenue exceeds their cost of acquisition. Reaching CAC payback quicker will ensure you start making a profit as soon as possible, which will help increase LTV as long as your churn rate stays consistent.
You can do this in one of two ways:
Increasing your revenue will help you reach the breakeven point faster. Here are a few ideas for making that happen:
Lowering your acquisition costs will lower your payback target and get you on the path to profits faster. Here are some ideas for cutting costs:
Another way to change the trajectory of your LTV:CAC ratio is to encourage your existing customers to spend more with you. Exploring upselling and cross-selling opportunities are great ways to continue to meet your customers’ needs and positively influence your bottom line.
Scaling your SaaS company is more than keeping your CAC low and your LTV high. It’s also building lasting relationships with your prospects and your customers to reduce churn.
If you’re approaching hypergrowth, which metric are you focusing on? How are you ensuring your SaaS business model is a successful one and supercharged for growth? Have we missed any important considerations?