FluffyCoconut
FluffyCoconut

SaaS: Why are people so attracted to it? (mini rant)

Last 3 years of startups have been all about SaaS. I just don't get it. So far, it was about solving real problems at scale. First with consumer websites (google etc), then software, then shopping & delivery (amazon swiggy zomato fk etc etc)

And now, it's all SaaS:

  • Imma build a startup to help white businessmen in America do better billing
  • Imma build a 360 degree feedback tool specifically for Norwegian miners
  • Imma build a SaaS software to help HR people note down who isn't dressed properly
  • Imma build a software to help hillbillies in the US better manage their trucking company

Like how are smart people in India taking up entrepreneurship to build these ideas that are dull and feel like the end of life? How does anybody become excited by this?

is it just money? what am I missing?

6mo ago
28Kviews
Find out if you are being paid fairly.Download Grapevine
SwirlyPickle
SwirlyPickle

Money and scalability. I personally hate it

FluffyCoconut
FluffyCoconut

Finally somebody from B2B SaaS with a real opinion! What made you hate it tho?

SwirlyPickle
SwirlyPickle

Possibly my work profile and the day to day I do. I'm responsible for adoption and consumption and I feel like I'm not learning anything? I probably wouldn't have this opinion if I was in tech tho tbh

DancingUnicorn
DancingUnicorn

tl;dr - easy to hit revenues faster and get paying clients, like all IT services companies.

Saas is 70-80% like service industry. Similar common demand products, same clients (what an Infosys does), except it packages each 'client project' to market better and let client get the solution bit faster.

Demand for services at low cost is huge worldwide. Tech salaries are lowest in the world, and hence easy to build solutions in India and sell in US, Europe with sales offices there like how all the WITCH are the biggest tech listed companies in India. Most saas startups you see will be in CRM, marketing, sales, ITSM, Data Ops, Infra segments and there will always be some segment of client company (maturity, size, industry wise and all) who have unmet needs. Founders have to work finindg them, shape their offering and start making money soon. Unlike consumer products which are super hard to monetize.

P.S. Saas companies are still service companies as the last letter says. They will still have solutions engineering fleet, deployed to onboaed their 'Saas product' to each client.

FluffyCoconut
FluffyCoconut

very well put, agree with you so much There are things attractive about SaaS as a model

Just that it lacks.. soul

BouncyBagel
BouncyBagel

Agreed. Also, why founders are focusing on niche and probably random problems is also because the low hanging fruits have already been taken, and enough money is being pumped in by giants to solve those problems. The real differentiator is for a founder to find a relatively unorganised sector and add meaningful value to it through SaaS, while creating a sustainable revenue stream. That's a skill that new founders don't have. But yeah, if everyone had it, all startups would be successful and making money would be easy.

GroovyWaffle
GroovyWaffle

Answer is simple: It’s easier to build. There is an established playbook (written by david sacks) which means VCs have relatively more certainty, margins are higher, lean team can get high early revenue, accepted multiples are bigger, and overall it is a clearer path to money and riches.
Just look at snowflake’s revenue multiple.

SparklyDumpling
SparklyDumpling

Hey man i am trying to build something for India. Softwares that have been built by global companies from their India employees and for which they charge millions of dollars.
If you are also interested in building something for India, then let's connect. I will flag that there is no money yet, just a guarantee that it will solve real problems.

SqueakyBagel
SqueakyBagel
EY6mo

Let’s connect

SparklyDumpling
SparklyDumpling

Sure.. Feel could you dm?

PeppyDonut
PeppyDonut

Because they’re just ponzi schemes to save taxes and move money. Most of these saas startups have common VCs or advisors or co-founders share common ex-employers.

Here’s an example: A saas startup cofounded by an ex Adobe employee will have adobe as one of their clients. Now, there exists 10 similar saas startups out there and they all have Adobe as their client.

Why does Adobe need 10 different saas products while one does the job? Because of multiple products and departments.

All these deals are done by internal employees who are friends with cofounders. They’re just ripping off the big tech and generating recurring revenue.

PeppyDonut
PeppyDonut

++ Founders get direct entry to silicon valley and better work life balance and citizenship in the long run.

ZippyPotato
ZippyPotato

Very interesting insight this

Are you sure this is happening? Or is this a hunch?

Discover more
Curated from across
Indian Startups
by SqueakyPickleGoogle

Gloomy future for 99% of Indian startups

When will founders learn that it is almost impossible to make a profitable consumer oriented startup in India.

India is NOT USA. In India, people are not easily going to pay for your service.

It is just a matter of time before most of...

Indian Startups
by GroovyBobaStealth

SaaS v/s Social network

Hey startup founders, who've been there and done that. Is ConsumerTech dead with all the giant social networks already taking a users' screen time? A recent YC video (tarpit idea) suggested that B2B SaaS is good, B2C is shit.

I feel if...