It basically describes a point of no return, past which a big shift becomes irreversible. Examples might include the sudden, rapid drop in New York City's crime rates in the 1990s or the huge spike in iPhone sales after 2009.
While their opportunities are rapidly expanding and their products – from Salesforce for CRM to Intacct for project accounting – are becoming industry standards, SaaS vendors themselves face a different kind of tipping point. The hundreds of changes made up until 2014 to converge GAAP and IFRS have resulted in a new, challenging reality for revenue recognition for SaaS companies that will soon come into effect:
"Subscription billing is the backbone of SaaS."
It is a classic tipping-point scenario. Lots of things that seem small in isolation – e.g., a tweak to a regulatory rule, a switch to a tiered service – come together and culminate in a major transformation. In the case of SaaS companies, they need to handle their increasingly complex revenue recognition requirements by updating their tools and practices.
There may be plenty of obstacles in the way of today's subscription-reliant SaaS companies, but with the right platform they can overcome them. A cloud-based solution such as Intacct enables you to go much further than Excel, QuickBooks and others and make a sustainable transition. It provides:
1. Automatic revenue recognition accounting
Like we said earlier, it can be easy to get revenue recognition and billing tangled up, especially if you sell a mix of products. With cloud accounting, you can automatically capture new details in subscription contracts and account for them under the proper rules without getting them mixed up with pricing or billing terms.
2. Sophisticated features for revenue recognition
Since the old and new revenue recognition standards are both in play until 2018, it is important to have a system that can handle them side by side. Implementing Intacct with the help of RKL gives you a solid technical foundation for the transition through advanced features such as multi-book accounting, extensive paid/billed/unbilled fields and usage-based revenue recognition.
3. Useful forecast insights
SaaS vendors need clear numbers that they can show to their boards of directors and also use to map out the futures of their businesses. A modern cloud accounting solution can provide side-by-side forecasting across revenue, billing and expense for both old and new books.
The overall ease of use of cloud software makes these features even more valuable for SaaS vendors. As they approach the tipping point of revenue recognition standards, having a platform such as Intacct and an implementation partner like RKL at their side will be crucial for adapting to the major changes.