09/12/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 09/12/2025 04:07
Moving from on-premises software to a SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) model is a fundamental shift in how you grow your business. A recent analysis of over 3,000 SaaS companies, as presented by Patrick Campbell (Co-Founder & CEO of Price Intelligently) at a SaaS conference, revealed eye-opening lessons for software providers embarking on the cloud journey. The core message: many SaaS providers suffer from an "acquisition addiction," focusing too heavily on winning new customers and not enough on monetizing and retaining the ones they have[1]. In the hyper-competitive SaaS market, success demands a more balanced approach.
In this article, we'll delve into why customer value and smart monetization are now just as crucial as customer acquisition in a successful SaaS growth strategy. We'll cover how the SaaS landscape has evolved, why focusing solely on new sign-ups can stunt your growth, and what strategies can help you thrive in the subscription economy.
Today's SaaS market is more crowded and customer-driven than ever. The data from thousands of companies shows that SaaS is now a buyer's market: competition is intense, and customers expect more value for less money.
Several factors contribute to this trend:
The net effect is that SaaS companies face growing pressure on pricing and margins. Customer Acquisition Costs (CAC) are rising because you have to fight through more noise to win each deal, and even once the deal is closed-won, the customer will continue to demand more for what they're paying. For software providers transitioning from on-prem to SaaS, this is a wake-up call: you can't simply port your old pricing model to the cloud era and expect the same results. You'll need to rethink how you deliver and charge for value.
With the competitive pressure on, many SaaS businesses react by doubling down on acquisition, pouring resources into marketing and sales to grab as many new customers as possible. Acquisition is of course vital (no customers = no business!) to a successful SaaS growth model, but focusing on new logos at the expense of existing customers can become an addiction. In his presentation, Patrick Campbell candidly labeled this obsession "acquisition addiction"[1]. It's a common trap: organizations fixate on top-of-funnel growth and overlook the revenue leaking out of the bottom through ineffective monetization and churn.
Why is this a problem? Two big reasons emerged from the analysis:
The "acquisition addiction" is also evident in industry content and mindset. An analysis of over 10,000 online articles on SaaS growth strategies found an overwhelming bias toward acquisition topics, with very little coverage of retention or monetization[3]. This echo chamber reinforces the idea that to grow is to acquire, acquire, acquire. It's as if the only playbook new SaaS companies follow is "spend money to get users," while downplaying strategies to increase the value of each user or keep them longer.
If acquisition has been stealing the spotlight, monetization and retention are the underappreciated heroes waiting in the wings. "Monetization" in this context means how you earn revenue from each customer - pricing strategy, package design, upsells, cross-sells, etc.
"Retention" means keeping the customers you've signed up, reducing your SaaS churn rate and maybe even expanding accounts over time. The SaaS data analysis revealed just how powerful these levers can be:
The impact of improving monetization or retention far exceeds the impact of the same improvement in acquisition. According to the data, if a company manages to improve its customer acquisition rate by 1%, its bottom-line revenue might grow ~3.3% as a result[3]. Not bad. But a 1% improvement in customer retention (i.e., slightly fewer people cancelling each month) would yield roughly 6.7% revenue growth[3] - about double the impact of the acquisition gain. Even more striking, a 1% improvement in monetization (like raising your average revenue per user by tweaking pricing or expanding usage) could boost revenue around 12-13%[3]. That's nearly 4× the impact of an equivalent acquisition bump.
These SaaS growth metrics underline a simple truth: in subscription businesses, squeezing more value from your existing customer base often beats pulling in more customers at the top. It's not that acquisition doesn't matter, you obviously need new customers to grow, but beyond a certain point, optimizing how you monetize and retain each customer drives compounding gains that new sales alone can't match.
418 senior leaders at global technology companies share their thoughts on monetization trends for 2025 and beyond. See the results >>>
In short, improvements in SaaS monetization and retention are high-leverage moves. Unfortunately, they've been historically underutilized growth levers, the "forgotten" ones, because they require cross-functional strategy (product, customer success, finance) and a keen understanding of customer needs. The good news is that this is changing, forward-thinking companies are waking up to the idea that happy, engaged customers who see value are the engine of sustainable SaaS growth. And to create happy customers, you need to deliver value and capture value in a fair exchange (i.e., smart monetization).
For software producers moving on-prem software to SaaS, this is a pivotal insight. Your new recurring revenue model must not rely solely on hunting new customers; it should cultivate the garden of existing users. This means investing in customer success, support, and product quality to keep users subscribed, and iterating on pricing and packaging so that your revenue grows along with the value you deliver.
Curious about what it takes to create a customer-centric SaaS growth strategy? Connect with our team today to start the conversation.
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