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What sounds like an unimportant question has important implications for your overall strategy and the success of your SaaS company.
A glance at The Martech Landscape graphic is enough to understand how competitive SaaS has become:
But if we look at how that diagram has evolved over the past 10 years, we’ll see that it’s grown from ~150 companies to today’s staggering number:
At every step, the prevailing opinion has been that the industry has become too competitive. That it’s too hard, impossible even, to break into anymore — without some killer new technology or similarly significant advantage.
Yet, every year we’ve seen new companies emerge and carve out a place for themselves without having to rely on buzzword technology like AI or Blockchain.
These companies typically achieve breakthrough success by relying on one of the following approaches:
Both approaches can support the creation of a successful SaaS business. We see it in the comparison between Intercom ($150m in ARR) and Drift (valued at $360m at their latest funding round):
So how do new SaaS companies choose which route to pursue?
They have to decide whether to go for a niche or broad audience along 2 vectors — industry and department. At ChartMogul, we think about this as a 2×2 matrix, which we call the SaaS Types Matrix.
SaaS companies start with a solution to a problem. One of the first decisions a founding team needs to make is whether their solution is aimed only at a particular industry and/or department.
This gives us 4 possible categories or types of SaaS companies:
Knowing where you stand within this matrix is essential when working on a new SaaS product. Picking the most appropriate type of SaaS to build will help you figure out a range of important product and strategy decisions:
Finding the right place on this matrix can help create a clear product vision, an essential first step to finding success in SaaS.
Finding the exact place along the matrix that will allow you to capture a competitive position takes equal parts art and science.
Here are some things you should explore to decide what type of SaaS business you should aim to build.
Understand where the market currently stands
We’ll go back to Drift because their growth provides a useful example for SaaS founders. They weren’t the first company to offer an on-site asynchronous messaging/bot functionality — Intercom was already growing very fast in that space.
, Drift established themselves as a viable competitor.
Drift’s example should help you understand why you need to think about the quadrant where you want to be.
It would be hard to capture market share with a generic support solution because Zendesk is already dominant in that category.
But you might be able to find space by narrowing down and focusing on a single niche/team (or both). This is a with their focus on ecommerce/DTC brands.
It’s easy to say you need to identify opportunities like this, but much harder to spot them.
One way to do this is by looking for opportunities to .
Going after a specific niche (or team) allows you to create a product that fulfills the needs in that niche in a much better way.
We see this with companies like Airbnb, which is at least double the size of Craigslist even after it got decimated by the pandemic.
Nail down your positioning
The positioning of new products is one of the most overlooked areas in SaaS. There’s hardly a territory where you have a combination between so much control and such an opportunity for impact early in your company’s lifetime.
It is also strongly related to the point in the previous section — defining the market in a way that would allow you to create an opportunity for yourself.
I highly recommend on the topic as a starting point.
In any case, the most important takeaway from this is that you should craft a positioning that’s concurrent with the place you’ve chosen on our framework. That would maximize your chances for success.
Make data your ally
You don’t have to make decisions out of thin air when figuring out your niche and positioning. Data can help you make better decisions about these strategic questions even in your company’s early stages.
Even basic metrics can help you navigate these decisions better, for example:
And this is just scratching the surface with what you can do with data.
In case you need a little refresher on the basics, check out our email course.
On the surface, we can easily reject the need to deal with this question at all.
Defining where you fall on the types-of-SaaS spectrum might seem like a matter of cosmetic importance.
However, as I’ve tried to outline in this article, it’s a question, which carries essential strategic considerations for your business.