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3 Effective KPIs to Keep Your B2B SaaS Marketing Efforts Revenue Focussed

3 Effective KPIs for SaaS B2B Marketing

“How can I connect marketing activities directly to revenue?”, asked a marketing leader on one of the online groups I am a part of.

This individual was having a tough time justifying his ask for marketing spend. As the conversation progressed I realized this was a common challenge.

In some marketing circles, the revenue impact question is still a valid one. Especially if the organization is steeped in legacy marketing mindsets. 

However, in B2B SaaS marketing one needs to figure out the answer to that question before even starting on any marketing campaigns. There is no room for ‘winging it’ in the modern marketing era.

Without an answer to that question, it would be impossible to get a marketing budget approved in my world. The marketing team at Fusebill generates 99% of the closed-won leads on the inbound channel, and lately the outbound side as well. Our sales targets are, in fact, driven by the marketing commit on lead generation.

As a result, Fusebill’s marketing activities are laser focussed on revenue generation. This is likely the case for many B2B SaaS companies.

All the hustle porn, Facebook likes, Twitter retweets, and Linkedin video comments can amount to little or no predictable revenue without a grasp of the direct impact marketing has on revenue. 

You absolutely need to understand how marketing activities generate SaaS revenue on a daily/monthly/quarterly/yearly basis. Unless that is, your accelerating SaaS growth is product-led or the product has an amazing viral-coefficient. Zoom is an example of such a B2B SaaS product that unlocked viral growth.

However, a majority of B2B SaaS products are not in that league. 

Most B2B SaaS companies solve complex productivity problems for their customers. These solutions often involve a fairly lengthy process of educating prospects, overcoming digital transformation challenges, and working through relatively complex implementation procedures. Like implementing a CRM in an organization previously used to working with spreadsheets.

To grow and scale most B2B SaaS businesses often have to progress through multiple stages like

Supporting these stages requires the B2B SaaS marketing team to be agile, revenue-focussed, customer-oriented, and highly sales-aligned. There’s a simple spreadsheet to help with B2B GTM Conversion Tracking.

Using the spreadsheet will help monitor the progress of 3 interdependent KPIs that help the SaaS marketing team step up to the challenge.

1. X times Sales Pipeline Coverage in New MRR (Monthly Recurring Revenue)

While this number has traditionally been a sales concern, modern SaaS B2B marketing teams need to commit to adequate sales pipeline coverage as a success metric.

The metric is calculated as a multiple of the period’s sales target based on historical conversion rates.

Conventional wisdom on sales pipeline to sales quota ratio states that the number should be 3x. However, the ideal number for your B2B SaaS business is dependent on the historical sales trends that apply to your organization. 

E.g.:
Your monthly sales target is $10,000 in New MRR.
The sales team has historically converted 20% of the pipeline to customers.
So the marketing commit on sales pipeline coverage target for the month should be $50,000 in MRR. Which is 5x the New MRR sales target for the month.

Pros of the KPI:

Challenges:

“Avoid getting into the business of manufacturing trombone oil. You may become the greatest trombone-oil manufacturer in the world, but in the end, the world only consumes a few quarts of trombone oil a year!”

– Dan Burke

2. New MRR Sales Pipeline Coverage by Deal Size Cohort

Piggy-backing on the first KPI, the sales pipeline by New MRR deal size cohort will help you further optimize your B2B SaaS marketing efforts for revenue.

Digging deeper into the first KPI yields the sales pipeline coverage by New MRR value. This metric provides further insights on supporting sales revenue targets.

E.g.:
Your business goals include increasing your market share in the SMB niche. When you dive into the pipeline coverage ratio which is on target for 5x sales pipeline coverage, you discover that a few potential mid-market opportunities have skewed your number and there aren’t many SMB accounts to close and meet sales quotas.

This could be dangerous since your sales team may take longer to close the bigger deals at a lower closing ratio than what your sales pipeline coverage was accounting for.

At this point, the marketing team needs to work on better coverage of the sales pipeline commit.

TIP: When budgeting for this KPI, take into account historical sales trends of closing ratios by deal size cohorts

Pros of this KPI:

Challenges:

3. Target Cost Per Lead

I don’t think marketing heads need an in-depth explanation of this metric. 

Cost per lead= cost of marketing to acquire leads/number of leads acquired

In combination with the previous two KPIs, this metric can prevent runaway costs, help ROI, and assist with adequate budget allocation.

If all three KPIs are on target and your Net MRR is also on target, your marketing is probably well optimized and bringing in the best-fit customers your B2B SaaS requires

Net MRR = New MRR + Expansion MRR – Churn

If you are performing better than targets on all these KPIs as well as your Net MRR for more than two quarters, it may be an indicator that you should be aiming for higher KPI targets. Or that you’ve arrived and you should be scaling up faster to T2D3 growth.

Is branding dead? Is design dead? Is story telling dead?

See? I’m not immune to overused tropes. Perhaps the click-bait factor on ‘X is dead’ titles would positively drive those KPIs I mentioned. I digress.

Critics of the above KPI based approach may point out that the approach comes at the expense of branding. However, I strongly believe that it makes a strong case for result-oriented brand storytelling. After all, it is very difficult to sustainably build on the 3 KPIs without brand credibility to support it. 

The KPI approach brings together 3 overarching success factors for modern marketing:

  1. People
    Be it sales and marketing alignment, creating an environment for individual and business growth, or driving the customer experience, the common element revolves around human relationships.

    One of my biggest challenges has been to find enough people with a good grasp of revenue-focused marketing. It’s difficult to find those who can unlearn the vanity-metric-centered behavior coming from the ‘low barriers to entry on social media’ approach to marketing.

    One way to fix this is to coach and build a team that can connect the dots between marketing tasks and revenue numbers.

    This is easier said than done. Habits are difficult to unlearn. There is always a temptation to fall back on old ways.

    Incentivizing teams to focus on these KPI targets then becomes another tool in the arsenal. As someone mentioned, and I paraphrase, “Show me what I’m measured by and I’ll show you what I devote my time on”.

  2. Technology
    In my experience, technology and automation on the marketing and sales sides have only increased the need for collaboration across the teams.

    The era of the citizen developer is here. Marketing and sales teams are increasingly empowered to drive superlative customer experiences with low code/no-code.

    Due to the growth of marketing technology, the measurement of marketing efforts towards revenue is in many ways easier to track than it has ever been Although, in many ways, it is still a work in progress.

  3. Processes
    All the technology we have begins to waver without processes that sustain scalability.

    This leads back to coaching, discipline, and relationships to guide the digital transformation of marketing as a revenue center.

Which brings us full circle to the fact that these B2B SaaS marketing KPIs are about focussing the SaaS marketing org to play an effective role in sustainable and predictable recurring revenue. At its core, it’s about effectively measuring the return on storytelling and brand-building.

p.s.: Here’s a one-page digital marketing plan template to bring it all together.

How To Scale Your B2B SaaS
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