Average Contract Value is (“ACV”) is a vanity metric that is a byproduct of your business model, not a driver of it. Driving ACV shouldn’t be a primary goal. Here is why:
The world’s biggest and best software companies tend to have smaller ACV’s. Below are the last 81 SaaS companies to go public and their estimated ACV’s when they went public. To do the analysis, we looked at each Company’s IPO financials and compared their annual revenue to the number of customers at IPO. Upon going public/exiting, the median ACV was $55k and median customer count was 4300.
Increases in ACV aren’t free. Usually in order to increase ACV, it means some other metric of importance gets worse, for instance the sales cycle gets longer, the close ratio comes down, and the number of leads needed to complete a sale increase. In order to achieve higher ACV’s, you have to focus on larger clients which inevitably means more layers of management for approval, more time required to identify the decision maker, more layers of bureaucracy to fight through, etc.
ACV is a metric that should be monitored and you should note the trend so you can identify your ideal customer, but don’t change the way you sell or how you price in order to artificially increase it. While metrics like ACV are valuable, the real metrics you should be focused on are revenue, cash efficiency, and retention.
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