![]() Gross and Net Magic Number calculations can be multiplied by a company’s gross margin percentage to account for the payback required to fully break even.1 Cybersecurity, Data Management & Infrastructure FEBRUARY 201 ELITE 80 THE HOTTEST PRIVATELY HELD SECURITY, AND COMPANIES Erik Suppiger (415) Patrick Walravens (415) Michael Berg (415) FOR DISCLOSURE AND FOOTNOTE INFORMATION, REFER TO JMP FACTS AND DISCLOSURES SECTION.Ģ TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary. There are four “flavors” of Net Magic Number (gross and net, each with or without a gross margin adjustment. Based on a comparative analysis with a broader set of companies included in the 2021 KeyBanc Capital Markets SaaS Survey, in which our portfolio’s metrics consistently outperformed industry-wide average. Using EBITDA for a business that is self-hosted would also not be a good fit (since the company has to factor in PPE, financing debt, or lease expenses). Deferred revenue/payment terms are important and usually more positive than EBITDA, especially in software companies. While either FCF or EBITDA margin can be used in the Rule of 40 calculation, we typically prefer to use FCF for software companies. Based on a comparative analysis with a broader set of companies included in the OpenView 2020 Expansion SaaS Benchmarks report, in which our portfolio’s Net Dollar Retention metrics consistently outperformed industry-wide average. Sometimes, especially when looking at inconsistent periods, we will use the average of BOP and EOP in the denominator. We typically use annualized-quarterly net retention to better capture quarter-over-quarter changes, which is particularly important when companies are smaller in scale and greater variation in net retention (%) is driven by a smaller denominator. There are multiple ways to calculate net retention, including annual net retention, annualized quarterly retention, and customer cohort analysis. We classified the remaining 34 companies as “other emerging leaders”. Best-in-class companies have achieved scale (reached a minimum of $100M ARR) and growth (after reaching $50M ARR, the company maintains above median YoY ARR growth) or efficiency (after reaching $50M ARR, the company maintains above median Rule of 40). Of the 50 companies we included in our analysis, 16 companies qualified as “best-in-class” based on the following criteria. This analysis is based on 50 of the ~75 enterprise software investments ICONIQ Growth has made to date, based on quarterly data through 1Q 2021. ![]() Had ICONIQ Strategic Partners funds existed at the time of investment, this investment would have been offered and allocated to ICONIQ Strategic Partners funds. ICONIQ advised funds invested in SurveyMonkey prior to the existence of ICONIQ Strategic Partners funds. This includes current or former ICONIQ Growth portfolio companies that have been included on the Forbes Cloud 100 list from 2016–2021. Notably, over 60% of the Enterprise SaaS companies in our dataset meet and exceed the Rule of 40, compared to ~30% of global private SaaS companies⁶. Rule of 40 for the best-in-class companies we examined averages 72% after reaching $25M ARR, driven higher in early stages due to high ARR growth. When analyzed in concert with growth and retention, we believe Rule of 40 provides great insight in a company’s efficiency.ĭue to the inherent volatility of ARR growth and FCF margin at early stages of growth, we typically only begin to place real weight against Rule of 40 for companies with at least ~$25M ARR, and believe it is most applicable to companies with >$50M ARR. Simply put, Rule of 40 says that growth and profitability should be considered in tandem: a company growing at 40% should target at least breaking even. “Rule of 40” is the principle that a high-performing SaaS company’s combined YoY growth rate and FCF margin should generally meet or exceed 40%. Rule of 40 (%) = ARR Growth (YoY, %) + FCF Margin (%)⁵
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |