Forget Funnels: Why SaaS Brands Are Betting Big on Community

Marketing

Let’s be honest: marketing is having a midlife crisis.

You’ve pumped money into ads—only to watch your CAC creep higher than your runway. You’ve doubled down on SEO—only to compete with AI-generated content mills. You’ve built email sequences, funnels, and even tried the occasional meme on LinkedIn.

But here’s the thing: none of it sticks.

Not like it used to.

So what’s the play when traditional channels are noisy, expensive, and increasingly ignored?

You stop pushing.
You start connecting.

Welcome to Community-Led Marketing (CLM)—where your growth isn’t just powered by content or paid reach… it is powered by people.

What the Hell Is Community-Led Marketing (CLM)?

Community-Led Marketing is not a Slack group with three polls and a lonely welcome bot.

It’s a strategic growth model where your customers, prospects, and partners build relationships with each other—and your brand becomes the reason they came together in the first place.

You’re not just collecting leads.
You’re building belonging.

In CLM, the community becomes:

  • A channel for trust
  • A feedback loop for product
  • A source of referrals and retention
  • A competitive moat that money can’t buy

And the kicker? Most SaaS brands are still ignoring it.

Why Now? The Community-Led Moment

Let’s break down the shift:

1. CAC is on Fire

Paid acquisition costs are climbing. According to Paddle (formerly ProfitWell), CAC is up 60% over the past five years. That’s not inflation—it’s insanity.

Community, on the other hand, offers organic, compounding reach.

2. Trust is at an All-Time Low

Only 3% of people trust marketers, and fewer trust salespeople. Yet, 83% of consumers trust recommendations from people they know (Nielsen).

Where do those conversations happen now? In communities.

#TCCRecommends: How to Build Customer Trust in B2B?

3. Third-Party Cookies are Crumbling

The old targeting tricks are gone. Retargeting is unreliable. 

Community offers a rich source of first-party data and direct relationships with your ICP.

The Business Case for CLM (Yes, it Drives Revenue)

You might be thinking: this all sounds nice, but where’s the ROI?

Good question. Let’s get into it:

1. It Lowers CAC

Communities generate organic referrals, word-of-mouth momentum, and higher-intent leads. Fewer dollars spent. Better-qualified conversations.

#TCCRecommends: How to Optimize Your SaaS Customer Acquisition Cost?

2. It Improves Retention

According to Bettermode’s 2023 report, 18% of companies say over 30% of their revenue is influenced by their branded community.

Why? Because customers who engage with others around your product stick around longer—and use more of what you offer.

3. It Creates Customer-Led Growth

Community turns users into advocates. Think: micro-influencers, product champions, peer educators. 

All of them drive awareness and loyalty.

What a Real SaaS Community Looks Like

Spoiler: it’s not just a forum where support tickets go to die.

A high-impact B2B community has:

1. A Clear Purpose

Why does this community exist beyond your product?

It could be:

  • Leveling up careers (think: RevOps professionals)
  • Solving shared challenges (think: founders scaling from Series A to B)
  • Exploring trends (think: AI-powered marketing)

2. The Right People

Not just users—but contributors, champions, and curious lurkers.

Pro tip: Invite your ideal customers in early. Build around their goals, not just your KPIs.

3. Rituals and Culture

Weekly AMAs. Monthly meetups. Running jokes. Shared language. Memes about customer onboarding. 

That’s the heartbeat of a real community.

4. The Right Platform

Don’t just default to Slack. Evaluate:

  • Circle or Heartbeat (for owned experiences)
  • Discord (for more casual SaaS/user spaces)
  • LinkedIn Groups (if your audience is already there)

The 3C Framework: My Community-Led Playbook for SaaS Teams

Here’s the model I use with clients—from seed-stage startups to $20M ARR SaaS players:

1. Connect

This is where you define:

  • Who the community is for
  • What value they’ll get
  • Why it matters now

You need a hook stronger than “join our customer hub.” Try:
“Where SaaS marketers swap wins, war stories, and workflows.”

2. Contribute

Build contribution systems:

  • Weekly discussion prompts
  • Monthly virtual events
  • Private beta groups for feedback

Reward participation. Spotlight champions. Create roles for moderators or evangelists.

3. Convert

Now, tie it back to business:

  • Track Community-Qualified Leads (CQLs)
  • Identify behaviors that signal buying intent
  • Use soft CTAs inside the community to guide users toward your offer

Conversion in community-led marketing is about alignment, not pressure. 

You’re not closing—you’re co-creating.

Build, Buy, or Borrow? Choose Your Community-led Marketing Strategy

There’s more than one way to get in the game. Here are your options:

1. Build

Start from scratch. Great if you want total ownership—but it’s a long game. Be ready to invest time, trust, and consistent energy.

2. Buy

Acquire or sponsor existing communities. Think: HubSpot acquiring The Hustle. You tap into attention and trust—instantly.

3. Borrow

Join communities your ICP already loves. Show up in RevGenius, Pavilion, or niche LinkedIn groups. Share insights, not pitches. Earn your space.

Not every SaaS company needs to host a community—but every brand can participate in one.

Making Community Work for Revenue (This Isn’t Just Kumbaya Stuff)

Yes, we’re here for connection—but let’s not forget the bottom line.

1. Community-Qualified Leads (CQLs)

These are people who:

  • Join multiple discussions
  • Show interest in your product category
  • Attend events or give feedback

They’re warmer than cold leads. And they convert faster—because they already trust you.

2. Track These Metrics:

  • % of engaged members
  • Referral volume
  • Time-to-value for new users who join the community
  • Retention rates of community vs. non-community users

Here are some other marketing KPIs to track. 

3. Suggested Tech Stack:

  • Circle or Slack for hosting
  • Common Room, Threado, or Bettermode for analytics
  • Notion or Airtable for playbooks and community ops

Don’t over-engineer—just start measuring what matters.

Mistakes I’ve Seen (and Helped Fix) in Community-led Marketing

As a fractional CMO, I’ve been in the trenches. Here’s what I see too often:

  • “We’ll just launch a forum and people will come.”
    Spoiler: They won’t. You need seeding, structure, and serious value.
  • “Let’s scale this fast.”
    Communities grow by depth first, width later. Focus on 10 active contributors before dreaming of 10,000 members.
  • “Let’s treat it like another acquisition channel.”
    Community isn’t about blasting offers. It’s about building trust. The leads come later—and they’re better.

The best communities feel like belonging. Not a funnel.

Want to Build a Brand—or Just Broadcast One?

Let’s zoom out.

You can keep playing the marketing game as usual—competing on budget, shouting louder, chasing keywords.

Or…

You can build something people want to be part of.

That’s what community-led marketing offers:

  • Lower CAC
  • Better retention
  • More authentic advocacy

And a brand that’s not just seen, but felt