Consumption-based Pricing Models
Transition guidance for CFOs
Many companies in the technology industry are moving toward “pay for what you use” consumption-based pricing models. The trend has been bolstered by several customer benefits — primarily, the model provides a clear linkage between what a customer pays and what they use or value they realize. Additionally, consumption-based pricing is a flexible model that allows customers to buy only what they need (i.e., they do not have to overprovision for “just in case” scenarios). There are many vendor benefits, too — it is easier to sell and it embodies a customer success solution orientation which drives high customer lifetime value and revenue.
Alexander Group helps corporate leaders understand the consumption-based pricing model, evaluate the potential value of integrating the model and mobilize a profitable strategy.
What Is Consumption-Based Pricing?
Consumption-based pricing is a model where the consumer pays a vendor for the exact amount of a product or service. The vendor establishes a metric and a rate for the use of its resources. The metric is a measurement that quantifies the amount of a product or service the consumer uses. The rate, which can be tiered or exact, is the price the consumer will owe per unit. The consumer’s bill increases as they use that resource.
Consumption-based pricing also goes by names such as metered billing, usage-based pricing or pay-as-you-go billing. The model has grown in popularity because it allows the consumer to control the bill while allowing the vendor to boost sales efficiency.
Examples of Consumption-Based Pricing
Organizations across industries see success in implementing a consumption model for various offerings.
One common example of consumption-based pricing occurs within utility distribution. Utility companies charge a monthly fee that multiplies a rate by the kilowatt-hours of electricity, gallons of water or therms of natural gas the customer uses.
Consumption-based pricing is also common with rental car companies that charge by the number of miles driven or telecommunications companies that charge by the amount of data used.
The model is growing in prominence, seeing adoption by software-as-a-service companies, cloud storage providers, electric vehicle charging stations and e-commerce platforms.
Advantages of Consumption-Based Pricing
Consumption-based pricing offers numerous benefits for both vendors and consumers.
Advantages for Vendors
Consumption-based pricing allows vendors to:
- Optimize pricing: Vendors gain precise data regarding the products or services with the most demand and can adjust prices accordingly.
- Analyze products and services: This model yields more consumer data vendors can use while developing products and services.
- Enhance sales processes: Vendors can optimize sales strategies by leveraging an in-depth understanding of the relationship between their services and customers.
- Incentivize upselling: A consumption-based model allows for the inclusion of additional features that encourage consumers to choose higher tiers.
- Improve budget accuracy: Vendors can use usage-based sales information to more accurately understand recurring revenue and budget accordingly.
- Boost customer satisfaction: The consumption-based model offers consumers a greater level of financial control that expands the real and perceived value they receive from their investment.
Advantages for Consumers
Consumption-based pricing boosts customer satisfaction by offering a few notable advantages:
- Cost-efficiency: Consumers pay for what they use, allowing them to increase efficiency within their budgets and find opportunities to save.
- Financial control: This model gives consumers the power to control their expenses by controlling their use.
- Plan customization: Consumers can access the services they need without feeling obligated to choose services that are less useful to them.
- Service scalability: Vendors can offer scalable plans that allow consumers to expand or reduce their resources as needs evolve.
- Incentivized conservation: Consumers grow to understand their usage and how it impacts their budget, opening opportunities to boost efficiency and practice sustainability.
Four Pricing Models
There are four predominant consumption pricing models with varying levels of customer commitment. Knowing these four models in critical to understanding the various challenges and transition requirements.
- No contract. A pure pay-as-you-go model that allows a customer to pay as they consume and requires no customer commitment. Many times, a customer can just use a credit card to start using a vendor’s solution. Companies that do not need to lock customers in with minimum commitments, particularly in the SMB space, use these types of models.
- Uncommitted contracts. These contracts have no associated dollar commitment; rather they include various contractual obligations which generally includes pricing and term length. Some companies can estimate the contract value at time of booking, however most cannot. These contracts are very common in ‘revenue share’ models (i.e., a vendor receives a share of their customer’s revenue) commonly used in FinTech, e-commerce, and digital media/ad-tech industries.
- Committed and uncommitted contracts (aka floor with upside). Contracts which include a committed dollar spend and uncommitted dollar spend. Some companies are able to estimate the uncommitted contract value upfront, however most cannot. This contract is commonly used with solutions that have both committed HW/SW solutions that requires shipping/deploying coupled with a consumption-based component.
- Committed contracts (aka pool of funds). Contracts with a committed dollar spend within a committed term length (e.g., 1 year); however, the customer pays as they use the service. In this model, unused funds are charged at the end of the contract length; however, some vendors may roll over unused funds into the next contract. Many enterprise technology solutions use committed contracts to lock customers in, provide volume discounts, provide customer with budget expectations, and enable revenue predictability.
It is very common for companies to use multiple pricing models for different products, segments, and/or use cases. For example, technology companies like AWS, GCP and Snowflake offer no contracts for customers interested in using their self-service option or beta-testing the solution. However, to receive volume discounts, they ask customers to commit to a dollar spend.
Challenges and Shifts
While there is a growing trend toward consumption-based pricing, implementing these new models presents several key challenges:
- Revenue cannibalization. Many companies want to migrate their subscription or perpetual business to consumption pricing models; however, it doesn’t always result in incremental business. In fact, it could lead to reduced business as customers buy what they need and no longer overprovision for “just in case” scenarios. Financial plans must accommodate this reality.
- New coverage models. The shift to consumption-based pricing impacts the customer engagement model significantly; it requires companies to focus on driving continual consumption. In essence, the adoption, expansion and renewal motions all happen simultaneously and fluidly within the customer journey. Consequently, companies must revisit their Account Executives (AE) and Customer Success Managers (CSM) job responsibilities, how they execute their jobs, and how they are deployed.
- Less predictable revenue. Many companies, depending on the offering, are not always able to predict their customer’s usage. Thus, almost axiomatically, the model exacerbates the challenge of accurately forecasting revenue, as well as setting accurate quotas. This is true even when there are minimum commitment contracts or committed pool of fund contracts due to the lack of understanding usage uptake.
- New tracking systems and processes. Consumption-based pricing models are more complicated to track and report on. Companies need to be able to track granular usage data and model usage patterns to support their invoicing, internal sales crediting and forecasting.
- Pay for performance compensation plan. It is challenging to structure simple sales compensation plans that pay for the point of persuasion as there are multiple persuasion points –landing or activating a customer and then driving ongoing consumption. It is noteworthy that some solutions organically grow on their own without any AE or CSM involvement. The most challenging part of a transition is to focus and reward an AE to drive ongoing consumption when they are accustomed to selling committed contracts with little to no involvement in the ongoing adoption of the solution.
Migrating to Consumption-based Pricing Models
Migrate to a consumption pricing model represents a major shift in a company’s go-to-market model. To address the challenges listed above, companies must revisit and update their product/pricing strategy, their go-to-customer strategy & coverage model, their sales compensation and quota program, and lastly their reporting/systems, and tools. This is no small task. Companies must activate the entire c-suite and multiple task forces to manage multiple workstreams that include several dependencies.
Transition Guidance
To successfully transition to the new consumption-based pricing model, companies should consider the following go-to-market components split across planning & investments, sales strategy, sales compensation, and reporting, systems and tools.
Planning and Investments
- Be holistic and develop a comprehensive change management and readiness plan that recognizes the key dependencies and challenges involved.
- Recognize that migrating pricing models may increase costs in comparison to revenue in the short term. Test different performance scenarios for impact to key financial metrics (e.g., impact on recognized revenue and costs, E/R, SG&A etc.).
- Consider the investment in tools, resources, and training to enable sellers and service people to properly execute their job in with consumption-based offerings.
Sales Strategy and Coverage
- Determine which segments/customers are a fit for a specific consumption offering and pricing. Additionally, consider product preference and whether to lead with consumption ahead of subscription or vice versa.
- Prepare sample use case examples that demonstrate to a customer the potential outcomes (e.g., total cost of ownership, impact on cash flow, etc.) and a comparison to traditional pricing.
- Determine the impact on all customer-facing jobs, with special emphasis on Sales, Services, Customer Success and Support. How will incumbents in each job need to change their day-to-day activities and what impact will this have on requisite skills and competencies? Job and behavior changes may increase or decrease the number of required incumbents per job.
Sales Compensation
- Align the sales compensation plan to the seller’s role and tie the incentive as close as possible to the multiple persuasion event(s). Pay for closing a contract or signing up a new customer with no contract – use contract value (e.g., ACV, TCV), estimated contract value, or contract/activation signing bonus. Pay for consumption revenue if the seller is responsible for and can influence usage. Lastly, avoid “annuity” payments (i.e., ongoing recurring revenue that does not require any seller persuasion), particularly if the seller does not influence the ongoing consumption.
- Ensure the sales compensation plan aligns to the company’s consumption pricing goals. Re-evaluate paying dollar for dollar for consumption vs. subscription/term licenses as it will generally favor subscription/term over consumption.
Reporting, Systems and Tools
- Develop the key metrics, management dashboard, and heuristics that will be needed to manage a consumption business.
- Ensure the primary Sales and Services tools (e.g., CRM, CPQ, SPM, Customer Success, etc.), are equipped to deal with consumption pricing requirements).
Higher Valuations
Many technology companies are interested in migrating their cloud subscription, term subscription, perpetual software licenses, and even hardware sales to consumption-based pricing models to reap its benefits. However, this pricing model does not make sense for all companies or solutions. It is best used when companies can accurately and easily break down their service offering into small, digestible chunks. Before moving to a consumption-based pricing model, companies should fully understand the benefits, challenges, and GTM model changes required to make this major transformation.
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