Etude
Hacking Software’s Rule of 40
Hacking Software’s Rule of 40
Software companies need to balance growth and profitability to create lasting value.
Etude
Software companies need to balance growth and profitability to create lasting value.
The Rule of 40—the principle that a software company’s combined growth rate and profit margin should exceed 40%—has gained momentum as a high-level gauge of performance for software businesses in recent years, especially in the realms of venture capital and growth equity. Increasingly, software industry executives are embracing the Rule of 40 as an important metric to help measure the trade-offs of balancing growth and profitability.
Venture capitalists began to popularize the Rule of 40 in 2015 as a high-level health check for SaaS companies, but it’s broadly applicable to most software companies. The metric neatly captures the fundamental trade-off between investing in growth (including new products and customer acquisition) and short-term profitability. Analysts have differed on which measure of profitability to use—most use EBITDA, but some have proposed free cash flow, EBIT or net income as alternatives. We use EBITDA, a publicly available profitability metric that excludes the effect of taxes and accounting policies.
Venture capital investors initially came up with the Rule of 40 as a way to quickly assess the performance of small, fast-growing companies. For larger companies, beating the Rule of 40 in a single year is not exceptional. In fact, over such a short period, the top quintile of software businesses approaches a gross profit ratio of 50% (see Figure 1).
Consistently strong performance against the Rule of 40, however, is difficult to maintain. Bain & Company researched the performance of 124 publicly traded software companies to identify those that outperformed the Rule of 40 over three years and five years. We found that 40% of them outperformed the Rule of 40 in a single year (2017). But of 86 companies researched from 2013 to 2017, just 25% outperformed the Rule of 40 for three or more years, and only 16% outperformed for all five years, adjusted for mergers and acquisitions (see Figure 2).
What’s more, once a business has matured and its growth has slowed, it’s difficult to regain that growth. Among companies with growth rates higher than 10% in 2004–05, average revenue growth sank below 10% over time and has not bounced back (see Figure 3). Continuing growth at scale is also hard; only five software companies have grown to $5 billion from $1 billion in the past 20 years.
Software companies that can balance growth and profitability to outperform the Rule of 40 have valuations (measured by the ratio of enterprise value to revenue) double that of companies that fall “below the line,” and they achieve returns as much as 15% higher than the S&P 500. Companies whose growth slows and that fail to improve profitability often find themselves the target of activist investors and private equity acquirers.
Bain Partner Thierry Depeyrot explains how software companies can achieve sustained, profitable growth.
Companies can beat the Rule of 40 at all stages of their life cycle.
Consistently beating this magic number remains elusive for large, established firms. But it’s possible with the right moves.
It’s difficult to consistently and sustainably outperform. Each company faces its own unique profitability challenges across products and offerings, engineering efficiency and effectiveness, go-to-market productivity and customer life cycle management. But most successful companies display a few common patterns.
Some of the most successful software businesses gauge their performance against the Rule of 40, and many others increasingly aspire to achieve it across the various stages of their life cycles. What’s more, the rule is helpful not only at the companywide level, but as a way to assess the performance of business units or product families within an organization. Indeed, for some companies, focusing on and achieving the Rule of 40 at the unit level is an ideal way to get started, allowing them to build the goal into their business planning and performance assessments.
Thierry Depeyrot and Simon Heap are partners with Bain & Company’s Global Technology practice, and both work in the firm’s Silicon Valley office.