EPISODE · Dec 3, 2014 · 50 MIN
SaaS Pricing Fix: How Charging More Doubled Revenue
from The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders · host Omer Khan
Rick Perreault thought cheaper SaaS pricing would attract more customers. Instead, Unbounce's $10 and $25 plans were costing $150 per acquisition while those customers churned after just four months. The SaaS pricing model was bleeding money. Rick reveals how Unbounce went from zero to $7.2 million in annual revenue by killing its cheapest pricing strategy tiers, raising average revenue per customer from $30 to $80, and using content marketing instead of a sales team to grow to 7,500 paying customers. 🔑 Key Lessons 💰 Fix SaaS pricing by measuring cohort economics, not volume: Unbounce saw dozens of $25 plan trials daily, but cohort analysis revealed those customers churned after four months, paying $100 total against $150 in acquisition costs. 📉 Cheap plans create hidden support costs: Low-tier customers demanded six support calls before onboarding. Eliminating those subscription pricing tiers freed the team for proactive customer success. 🎯 Validate before building: Rick spent under $200 on Facebook ads targeting marketers by job title and collected 42 survey responses from strangers, proving universal pain before writing any code. 🚀 Use content marketing to build a category: Unbounce published 100 blog posts on landing pages and A/B testing before launch, creating an audience for a product category no one was searching for. 💰 Higher SaaS pricing attracts better customers: When Unbounce dropped sub-$50 plans, average revenue per customer rose from $30 to $80 and churn fell because professional marketers valued the tool more. 📉 Avoid enterprise distractions when built for self-serve: Unbounce wasted cycles on custom feature requests from big brands. Nine times out of ten, those companies signed up for the standard pricing model anyway. Chapters Introduction Who is Rick Perreault outside of work What Unbounce does and the pain it solves Rick's career before starting Unbounce Deciding to quit consulting and build a product Using Facebook ads for customer development What Rick asked potential customers in surveys Why being non-technical forced better validation Pitching the idea to future co-founders Building the first version with six co-founders Bootstrapping with credit cards and lines of credit First four paying customers in 2010 Biggest mistake: trying to be everything to everybody The $25 plan SaaS pricing disaster and cohort analysis How charging more doubled revenue Content marketing as primary growth channel Why paid advertising never worked for Unbounce Managing decisions with six co-founders Unbounce today: $620K MRR and 7,500 customers Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/25 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email
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SaaS Pricing Fix: How Charging More Doubled Revenue
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