60. In SaaS B2B, how do you handle the situation where an enterprise customer wants to buy an unlimited use, site license? Boy this is a tough one, in the early-ish days. BigCo wants to write you a six-figure check, for a site-license. Sounds great in the early days. Then, in Year 2, you see it was a so-so deal as the usage exceeds expectations. And in Year 3, as you’re more established, and the usage and value are even stronger ... it blows up on you. They end up with a way under market deal, and there’s lots of frustration on your side. I have no magic answer but let me throw out some thoughts: • Don’t sweat it too much in Years 1 and 2 as long as it’s real cash, paid up front, in the door. You have so much growth ahead of you, the customers you get in the early days will just be a tiny fraction of the total number of customers you end up with. It’s OK if the economics for your early customers aren’t optimized. In the early days, close as many good deals as you can. Don’t worry about closing so many great deals as you’re getting going. • Try to put in some sort of cap. A cap on total seats, total usage, total something. Most customers will push back at first but ultimately be OK with that as long as the cap is commensurate with the value they are paying. • Hire a Great VP of Sales. Once you do, the problem will solve itself. First, he or she will negotiate better, smarter deals than you. Second, the great ones know how to renegotiate the crummy site licenses you negotiated. Not that it’s easy, but it can be done if you’ve been a great vendor that has delivered amazing value. Customers will honor the social contract you’ve established with them, by and large, even if that means the paper contract has to change. SAASTR.COM 58

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