This is the first in my series of posts on how any SaaS company that has a proven product-market fit, can go about increasing its revenues.

I was part of the product and growth team at BrowserStack for 2 years and have seen the company almost double the revenues each year while I was there. BrowserStack is a classic example of a SaaS startup that has followed the 3–3–2–2–2 model of growth. While my experience at BrowserStack was in the mid-to-late stage of the growth cycle, my experience at WebEngage is in the early-to-mid stage of the growth cycle.

Through these experiences, I have spent a lot of time studying growth models of SaaS startups and how they go about increasing their revenues. Most of my learnings are based on the initiatives I undertook at BrowserStack and WebEngage, the initiatives that the founders had taken before I joined the company and the projects that the other teams undertook in order to increase growth.

Overview

Growth models are best understood through funnels. Any growth analysis begins with identifying the main bottlenecks in the funnel and fixing them. Therefore, let us begin our growth series by looking at what a typical growth funnel looks like for a SaaS company.

Growth Funnel

The growth funnel comprises three steps:

In this post, I’ll only briefly cover each of these steps. In my future posts, I will get into the details of each of these steps with practical examples of the projects we undertook at BrowserStack and WebEngage to fix the bottlenecks we faced.

Step 1: Acquisition

As the title suggests, acquisition is about how you can make more people aware of your product so that they visit your website or download your app. Keep in mind that your efforts should be focused only on acquiring the personas relevant to your business. If your target market is only developers in the US, acquiring other personas would be a suboptimal use of your time and money and would not move the growth needle.

Assuming you have figured out the personas you want to target, there are many different things you can do to make your target personas aware of your product. I’ve listed a few of these below:

Step 2: Conversion

Conversions vary based on the type of lead you acquire. It can vary based on the acquisition channels (Facebook, LinkedIn, Google Organic Search, Google Paid Search etc.), location (US, Western Europe, South-East Asia etc.), time of the year etc. For the purpose of this post, I’ll only talk about conversion as a whole.

Conversion can be defined in many ways. I consider conversion to cover primarily two things:

  1. Conversion from website visitor to sign-up (or from app install to sign-up)
  2. Conversion from sign-up to a paying customer

Conversion from website visitor to sign up generally happens through your marketing website (i.e everything a customer sees on your website before he/she logs in or signs up). On the other hand, conversion from sign-up to a paying customer happens on the basis of your product as well as the marketing website. Let’s briefly cover some of the things you can do to increase conversion.

Conversion From Website Visitor to Sign-up

Following are some ways in which you can increase this type of conversion:

Conversion From Sign-up to Paying Customer

Following are some ways in which you can increase this type of conversion:

Please keep in mind that the process of conversion is never linear. There will probably be many touch-points before your visitors convert. Therefore, your strategy to increase conversion will be a mix of the items covered above.

Step 3: Retention & Expansion

In my experience, it’s easier to get existing customers to keep using your product and purchase more than it is to acquire new customers. In this step, I will cover how you can go about increasing revenues from your existing customers.

There are primarily three ways in which retention and expansion happens:

Where Do You Start?

If you are in the early stages of building your business, the one metric you need to take a serious look at is your churn rate. Even if your conversion or acquisition is not that great, what can certainly be detrimental to the future of your business is the churn rate. If you’re in the early stages and many of your customers are canceling their subscriptions, you probably haven’t achieved the product-market fit and you should not be worried about growth at this stage.

If you’ve achieved the product-market fit, in order to grow you need to figure out the main bottlenecks in your growth funnel. Once you’ve figured out these bottlenecks, you need to prioritize them and build strategies to remove each of these bottlenecks.

You can read Part 2 of the SaaS Growth Series here.