Just like people, companies go through many stages of life ๐ถ๐จโ๐๐ด
This can make it hard to compare them against each other, as they may be in different stages.
Luckily, investors have developed a cool trick called the โRule of 40โ to specifically assess a software company's performance โ regardless of what stage it's at ๐
The formula for the Rule of 40 is simple: a โstrongโ software companyโs revenue growth rate added to its profit margin should be greater than 40% ๐
๐ก profit margin is net income โ revenue, used to measure how profitable (or not) a company is
๐ก Revenue growth rate is how much a companyโs revenue grew over the last year
Try it yourself: a company grew their revenue 70% in the last year, but operated at a -20% profit margin.
Does it satisfy the Rule of 40? ๐ค
Yes, it does!
70% + (-20%) = 50%, which is greater than 40%
Investors may consider this a strong software company, assuming it can continue growing fast.
For younger, earlier-stage software companies, growth is more important than profitability.
They often invest lots of money into growth in order to grow fast, but operate with negative profit margins! ๐ฑ
But as companies mature and get big, their focus usually shifts towards profitability ๐ต
The bigger a company is, the harder it is to grow fast, so it becomes more important to have high profit margins!
For example, a company growing revenue 20% per year, but operating at a 25% profit margin would also satisfy the Rule of 40.
20% + 25% = 45%, which is greater than 40%
In short, the Rule of 40 states that a strong software company should be either growing fast, highly profitable, or a health balance of both! ๐ฅค