While 4Q2006 was not the typically
strong quarter for cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service
companies, 1Q2007 was the typically
soft first quarter for software
supplier. Customer growth slowed
across the board. Company performance
was down as well. Three companies
had significant product activity.
The others were quiet. Call
it a seasonal adjustment. Call
it the first quarter software
supplier blues. Here are the
highlights of 1Q2007 for the
companies and products that
we cover:
- ATG had good customer growth,
no product activity and excellent
financial performance.
- eGain had improved customer
growth, some product activity,
and significant slippage in
financial performance.
- InQuira had flat customer growth,
no product announcements, and
mixed financial performance.
- InStranet had improved customer
growth, minor product activity,
and good financial performance.
- KANA slipped in customer growth,
introduced a new version of
its customer service suite,
and had mixed financial performance.
- KNOVA had flat customer growth,
made a minor product announcement,
introduced a major new product
version, and had flat financial
performance. The biggest news
about KNOVA was its acquisition
by M2M Holdings. It will become
a private company in 1Q 2007.
- RightNow had flat customer
growth, no product activity,
and mixed financial performance
in 4Q 2006.
CROSS-CHANNEL, CROSS-LIFECYCLE
CUSTOMER SERVICE: 1Q2007
Product and Company Viability
Factors
This report is the ninth of
our quarterly update reports
on the products and companies
in our practice on cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer support.
These updates
focus on the current state
of product and
company viability factors,
factors that are important
in your evaluation, comparison,
and selection of customer service
products. We examine customer
growth, product activity, and
company performance. We also
examine key product and company
events. We want to see continuing
improvements in products, and
we want to see continuing company
growth of the suppliers. We
don’t want to change
our evaluation based on a quarter’s
news, but we do want to raise
a red flag when that news deviates
from a positive trend, or to
wave a green flag when that
news is particularly good.
For key product and company
events, we identify those occurrences
that could have a significant
impact on cross-channel, cross-lifecycle
customer service technologies,
applications, and the market
landscape.
Note that we also offer a
large body of research evaluating
and comparing the products
against a framework of customer
requirements. If you need to
or want to know our take on
how the products stack up against
each other and/or against your
requirements, take a look at
our research on http://www.psgroup.com/research_cccsv.aspx.
This quarter, we plan to complete
our evaluation of InQuira 8
and RightNow CRM 8.
A Seasonally Soft 1Q2007
First quarter
is typically the slowest quarter
of the
year for software suppliers.
In fourth quarters customers
make year-end decisions and
spend whatever is left in their
budgets, working to a “use
it or lose it” reality.
In first quarters, customers
implement that software and
begin the budgeting process
for the coming year. They can’t
purchase against budgets that
haven’t been approved.
Cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service
software
suppliers had a typically
and seasonally
soft 1Q2007. Customer growth
slowed and company performance
slipped for all the companies
that we cover. InStranet,
KANA, and RightNow made significant
product news. ATG, eGain,
InQuira,
and KNOVA were very quiet
in products. We’ll
award no stars this quarter.
The Impact of SaaS
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS)
licensing had a significant
impact on company performance
for ATG, eGain, KANA, and RightNow
in 1Q2007. These companies
all emphasize SaaS or On-Demand
licensing of their products.
KANA is the newest in SaaS
as KANA On-Demand was announced
on January 22. RightNow has
always offered SaaS licensing
but began last quarter to offer
only SaaS licensing. ATG and
eGain began to emphasize SaaS
licensing last year.
As a company
moves from perpetual licensing
- where
customers
pay a relatively large, one-time
licensing fee - to SaaS - where
customers pay a relatively
small, monthly license fee
- financial performance slips
in the short-term before it
shows improvements in the long-term.
Revenue and license revenue
aren’t boosted by today’s
big perpetual license fee payments.
Net income also takes a hit,
as companies’ cost bases
remain steady. Long-term, companies
have consistent, predictable
revenue streams that grow in
proportion to customer growth.
They can adjust their cost
bases to produce profits.
SaaS is also
very good for customers. Small,
monthly software
fees are easier to justify
than those seven figure perpetual
license fees. SaaS licensing,
especially SaaS licensing with
hosted implementation, also
gives customers freedom. They
don’t get as invested
in a product and in pervasive
implementations. Suppliers
have to continue to earn their
customers’ business.
1Q2007 Performance
In Table A, we summarize the
1Q2007 performance of the cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service
suppliers that we track. Results
shown are relative to 4Q2006.
Summary of 1Q2007 Results
in Customer Service
Please download the formatted
PDF to view the table at http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=826.
Table A. 1Q2007 results of
the leading suppliers of cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service
are summarized in this table.
Suppliers and Products
Just a reminder, we offer
up-to-date research on these
leading cross-channel, cross-lifecycle
product offerings and their
suppliers:
ATG Self-Service, Commerce
eGain Service
InQuira 8
InStranet Contact Centers In-Line
KANA Service Solutions
KNOVA Application Suite
RightNow CRM
ATG
A Soft 1Q2007
ATG had a seasonably soft
1Q2007. Customer growth slowed.
There was no product activity.
Company performance slipped
across all financial metrics
due both to seasonality and
to a business model shift from
perpetual licensing to Software-as-a-Service
licensing.
Customer Accounts
ATG acquired
nine new customer accounts
during 1Q2007, and
ATG’s eStara business
unit, which offers click-to-chat
and click-to-call functionality
through Software-as-a-Service
(Saas) licensing, acquired
35 new customer accounts
in 1Q2007.
ATG customer
growth dropped considerably
from 18 new
customer accounts in 4Q2006.
Looks like
ATG got the old first quarter
software supplier blues.
Unfortunately, we don’t
have historical customer
growth numbers for
eStara. Off a base of about
850 customer accounts, ATG
had very modest customer
growth during 1Q2007. Add
in eStara,
and customer growth looks
much better.
eStara, which ATG acquired
in 3Q2006, has always offered
its products as SaaS. After
offering only perpetual licenses
since its founding, ATG began
to emphasize SaaS licensing
early in 2006. To date, ATG
has 73 SaaS customers. The
firm has gotten good traction
with its On-Demand products.
Products
ATG made no product announcements
during 4Q2006 and has made
none to date in 1Q2007. Going
forward into 2Q2007, the firm
remains quiet in products.
Company
Bob Burke, ATG’s President
and CEO, stated, “ATG
had a great first quarter marked
by strong revenue growth and
cash flow from operations…We
are very pleased with our fast
start to 2007 and expect to
carry this momentum into the
second quarter and remainder
of the year.” The numbers,
shown in Table B aren’t
quite as good as Burke describes.
ATG Financials
Please download the formatted
PDF to view the table at
http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=826.
Table B. ATG’s
high-level financial results
for the past
five quarters are shown in
this table.
Compared with 4Q2006, revenue
was down almost 10 percent
and license revenue fell by
almost 40 percent. The top
line slippage led to more significant
slippage on the bottom line
as GAAP income swung to a loss
and non-GAAP income fell almost
as steeply.
Two factors contributed
to the drop in performance
and
they’re factors that
explain the performance of
other companies covered in
this report: eGain, KANA,
and RightNow. The first factor
is seasonality. First quarters
are usually soft for software
suppliers. For ATG, that
softness
showed up in customer growth
and license revenue. The
second factor is a business
model
shift from perpetual licenses
to SaaS licenses. Customers
who sign perpetual licenses
pay the entire license fee
at one time.
Customers who
sign SaaS licenses pay a monthly
fee,
which is
much smaller than the perpetual
license fee. Perpetual licenses
give suppliers lots of money
now. SaaS licenses give them
a steady revenue stream.
Both customers and suppliers
benefit
from the SaaS model, but
there’s
some breakage to suppliers
in shifting to SaaS. That
breakage is lower quarterly
revenue,
license revenue, and income.
We believe that ATG has the
corporate mass, the customer
base, and the level of SaaS
traction to make the transition
smoothly.
ATG IS
HIRING. Looking at the Careers section
of its
Web site, we found 41 open
positions, up significantly
from 29 in 4Q2006. The openings
are spread pretty evenly
across R&D, marketing,
sales, customer service,
professional
services, and general and
administrative. ATG currently
has about 380
employees. 41 openings mean
more than 10 percent growth
in staff.
Our Take on ATG
We believe that ATG is positioned
for growth in 2007. The firm
will rebound from the soft
1Q2007 because the shift to
SaaS licensing is getting good
traction, eStara has made and
is making significant business
contribution, the ecommerce
focus is yielding good results,
and ATG is staffing to support
growth.
This report continues...
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report at: http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=826.