SaaS Exit: From $0.28 Stock to an $8.3 Billion Sale episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 28, 2018 · 1H 3M

SaaS Exit: From $0.28 Stock to an $8.3 Billion Sale

from The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders · host Omer Khan

Mike Hilton co-founded Concur in an apartment in 1993, selling a $69 Windows product. Twenty-one years later, they achieved a SaaS exit to SAP for $8.3 billion. But between those two points, their stock crashed from $60 to $0.28, their market cap dropped from $1 billion to $8 million, and everyone left them for dead. The path to selling a SaaS business required betting everything on cloud. Concur gave on-premise customers a sunset window and migrated 100% to SaaS, going from $50M in license revenue to $1 billion in pure recurring revenue. A Wall Street Journal review by Walt Mossberg on launch day drove 2,000 copies in two days - the startup acquisition story began with that single review. Mike Hilton is now chief product officer at Accolade. Concur reinvented itself five times across 21 years - Windows shrink-wrap, client-server, intranet, hosted SaaS, and mobile - without ever changing its core mission of automating expense reports. The SaaS exit for $8.3 billion proved that persistence and reinvention can outlast any crash. 🔑 Key Lessons 🧠 Irrational belief sustains the journey to a SaaS exit: The three Concur co-founders maintained almost irrational belief when their stock hit $0.28 and less than 1% of companies in their position ever survive. 📉 Radical transparency builds trust during a near-death SaaS exit crisis: Concur invited all employees to earnings calls and held open Q&A sessions, building trust that lasted through 14 more years of growth. 🔄 Reinvent the delivery model without changing the core mission: Concur transformed five times across 21 years, from Windows shrink-wrap to pure SaaS, but never changed its mission of making expense reporting less painful. 💰 Bet the entire company on SaaS to build toward selling a SaaS business: Concur migrated 100% to cloud, going from $50M in license revenue to $1 billion in pure SaaS revenue before the $8.3B exit. 🚀 Enter SaaS through a new market segment to avoid cannibalization: Concur launched its first cloud product for mid-market through an ADP partnership in 1999, testing the model without threatening the on-premise business. Chapters Introduction Mike's favorite quote - be the change you wish to see Background - Apple, MacWrite, ACT for Windows Founding Concur in 1993 from an apartment Self-funding with ACT royalties First product - $69 Windows shrink-wrap Getting early customers through Walt Mossberg review 2,000 copies sold in two days Pivot from B2C to B2B within the first year Client-server product using email for workflow Intranet browser product - 100,000 users live in one day First SaaS product in 1998 - hosted mid-market through ADP Going public in December 1998 The crash - stock from $60 to $0.28 How they survived - obsessing over profitability Betting the entire company on the SaaS exit model Convincing enterprise customers to move to cloud Mindset during near-death - irrational belief The last 14 years - $1B SaaS revenue and $8.3B SaaS exit Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/180 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Mike Hilton co-founded Concur in an apartment in 1993, selling a $69 Windows product. Twenty-one years later, they achieved a SaaS exit to SAP for $8.3 billion. But between those two points, their stock crashed from $60 to $0.28, their market cap dropped from $1 billion to $8 million, and everyone left them for dead. The path to selling a SaaS business required betting everything on cloud. Concur gave on-premise customers a sunset window and migrated 100% to SaaS, going from $50M in license revenue to $1 billion in pure recurring revenue. A Wall Street Journal review by Walt Mossberg on launch day drove 2,000 copies in two days - the startup acquisition story began with that single review. Mike Hilton is now chief product officer at Accolade. Concur reinvented itself five times across 21 years - Windows shrink-wrap, client-server, intranet, hosted SaaS, and mobile - without ever changing its core mission of automating expense reports. The SaaS exit for $8.3 billion proved that persistence and reinvention can outlast any crash. 🔑 Key Lessons 🧠 Irrational belief sustains the journey to a SaaS exit: The three Concur co-founders maintained almost irrational belief when their stock hit $0.28 and less than 1% of companies in their position ever survive. 📉 Radical transparency builds trust during a near-death SaaS exit crisis: Concur invited all employees to earnings calls and held open Q&A sessions, building trust that lasted through 14 more years of growth. 🔄 Reinvent the delivery model without changing the core mission: Concur transformed five times across 21 years, from Windows shrink-wrap to pure SaaS, but never changed its mission of making expense reporting less painful. 💰 Bet the entire company on SaaS to build toward selling a SaaS business: Concur migrated 100% to cloud, going from $50M in license revenue to $1 billion in pure SaaS revenue before the $8.3B exit. 🚀 Enter SaaS through a new market segment to avoid cannibalization: Concur launched its first cloud product for mid-market through an ADP partnership in 1999, testing the model without threatening the on-premise business. Chapters Introduction Mike's favorite quote - be the change you wish to see Background - Apple, MacWrite, ACT for Windows Founding Concur in 1993 from an apartment Self-funding with ACT royalties First product - $69 Windows shrink-wrap Getting early customers through Walt Mossberg review 2,000 copies sold in two days Pivot from B2C to B2B within the first year Client-server product using email for workflow Intranet browser product - 100,000 users live in one day First SaaS product in 1998 - hosted mid-market through ADP Going public in December 1998 The crash - stock from $60 to $0.28 How they survived - obsessing over profitability Betting the entire company on the SaaS exit model Convincing enterprise customers to move to cloud Mindset during near-death - irrational belief The last 14 years - $1B SaaS revenue and $8.3B SaaS exit Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/180 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

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SaaS Exit: From $0.28 Stock to an $8.3 Billion Sale

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Mike Hilton co-founded Concur in an apartment in 1993, selling a $69 Windows product. Twenty-one years later, they achieved a SaaS exit to SAP for $8.3 billion. But between those two points, their stock crashed from $60 to $0.28, their market cap...

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