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Navan’s SaaS Metrics from its S-1 IPO Filing

Navan’s IPO was yesterday.  The NASDAQ-listed company offers a travel, payments, and expense management platform for businesses, which is a $185 billion market opportunity (TAM).  It was founded in 2015 by Ariel Cohen, the company’s CEO and Chairperson, and Illan Twig, Navan’s CTO, with its original name of TripActions.  Over the past twelve months, the company generated over $600 million in revenue from more than 10,000 customers, achieving a 32% year-over-year growth rate.

In this article, we will analyze the SaaS metrics that Navan lists in its S-1 filing and compare its approach to the way others calculate:

Background on Navan

Navan is a leader in the corporate travel management software market, enabling employees to quickly and easily book travel and finance teams to enforce policies.  Navan offers an extensive inventory of flights, hotels, trains, rental cars, and black cars for travelers to choose from.  Using the Navan app, employees can change travel dates, add luggage, switch seats, or cancel trips.  Unlike traditional travel agencies, employees can earn miles and loyalty points when booking on Navan.

Navan also offers expense reporting software that enables employees to make purchases with virtual credit cards, submit reimbursement requests, and scan supporting documentation or receipts.  Expense reimbursements are deposited in the employee’s bank account via a payroll run or a separate ACH transaction.

Prior to its IPO filing, Navan raised a total of $2.2 billion in funding across 16 different rounds, involving 25 different investors.  More than half of the capital came in the form of debt, raised over five rounds from Greenoaks, Silicon Valley Bank, Coatue, and Goldman Sachs.  Navan’s most recent equity round was a $300 million Series G in October 2022, which was a mix of equity and structured capital led by Coatue.  Early stage investors included Zeev and Lightspeed Venture Partners, who funded the Seed through Series C rounds.

Navan's saas metrics at IPO summarized with airplane window and clouds in background

How Navan Generates Revenue

Navan’s SaaS metrics are closely aligned with the company’s revenue model.  Navan monetizes each customer’s travel experience with four different revenue streams:

  • Travel Bookings – Navan’s corporate customers pay a per-trip or per-transaction fee each time an employee books an airline flight, hotel stay, rental car, or train ticket.
  • Supplier Commissions – In addition to the travel booking fee, Navan also earns fees from suppliers for each trip – airlines, hotels, and rental car agencies.  It has a revenue-sharing arrangement that includes commissions based on the dollar value of bookings.
  • Expense Management – Navan’s expense management software has a traditional subscription pricing model in which customers pay a per-user per-month fee for access to the application.
  • Payment Fees – Navan also has an arrangement with its payment partners (issuing banks and processors) in which it earns fees based on the dollar volume of spend transacted on its platform.

Unlike many SaaS companies, Navan does not report on annual recurring revenue (ARR).  This makes sense when you consider that three out of four of the company’s offerings utilize variable pricing.  Travel bookings have a per-transaction usage-based pricing model.  Supplier commissions and payments are revenue-sharing models based on the percentage of dollar value processed on the platform.  Only the expense management application has a traditional SaaS pricing model with fixed monthly fees.

airport concourse from interior with glass reflection on floor

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