Stripe research shows businesses are investing for growth despite a tough economic climate
- Sixty-five percent of businesses are confident about their growth in 2023, even as 80% are bearish on the economy.
- A majority of businesses are playing offense by experimenting with new products and revenue streams.
- Many companies are taking steps to improve conversion, cut operating expenses, and automate financial tasks.
SAN FRANCISCO AND DUBLIN—Stripe, a financial infrastructure platform for businesses, today published its 2023 Insights Report, which finds that businesses have more confidence in their own growth than in the health of the broader economy.
The report is based on a survey of 2,500 business leaders from nine countries. Eighty percent expressed pessimism about the state of the economy—a finding that was consistent across business models, location, and company size. Businesses ranked inflation as their top concern, and 72% reported that their operating costs were higher than a year ago.
Against this backdrop, companies are investing in new products and revenue streams—not simply cutting costs. A majority are turning to payments tools to grow their revenue while also looking to automate financial tasks to rein in spending. Buoyed by these opportunities, 65% of survey respondents said they are confident about their growth in 2023.
“In past slowdowns, businesses that succeeded made bold bets while cutting down on waste. That’s not easy to pull off when money is tight—but the internet means many more businesses can use that playbook this time around,” said Emily Glassberg Sands, head of information at Stripe.
Businesses are spreading their bets
Some of the world’s most successful businesses, including General Electric and Amazon, launched bold new products during previous recessions while maintaining strong capital discipline. Evidence from other studies suggests the formula is replicable, and many businesses today are turning to the internet to implement it.
The 2023 Insights Report found that 61% of businesses are taking advantage of the current slowdown to experiment with new ways to grow their revenue online. Many are using tools that open up new sources of revenue without significant upfront investment.
Online payments are an underutilized lever for revenue growth
Nearly two-thirds of businesses agreed that online payments have created new ways to make money, and 71% agree that their customers’ expectations for the smoothness of the checkout experience are rising. As a result, many businesses are prioritizing payments tools that help grow sales.
“As more restaurants use OrderUp to power their dining operations, it's increasingly important that we enable a checkout experience with zero hiccups,” said Chris Gilpin, CEO of OrderUp, a restaurant point-of-sale platform on Stripe. “Flexible payment methods help OrderUp merchants maximize sales and deliver an even better customer experience.”
However, many other businesses are leaving money on the table by not taking full advantage of innovations in payments technology. Prior Stripe research revealed that three-quarters of customers are more likely to complete a purchase when one-click checkout is offered, but half of businesses in the 2023 Insights Report said they haven’t fully explored online payments to increase sales.
Companies that use Stripe Payment Element or Checkout benefit from a 7% uplift in conversion, on average, thanks to the cumulative effect of tools including automatic card verification, localized checkouts, and the integration of new payment methods.
Businesses are looking to cut opex, not capex, as they maintain plans for growth
Two-thirds of businesses said they intend to respond to inflation by reducing costs. At the same time, businesses are being selective about where they cut. Fewer than 20% of respondents plan to cut spending on core products or services, and only one-third are prioritizing hiring freezes. Instead, businesses are slashing operating expenses: 51% percent are prioritizing negotiating better rates with vendors, and 70% plan to cut the number of software providers they use.
Many see this decision as a strategic move. When asked to name the top reason they are consolidating software providers, businesses were as likely to cite faster access to data as they were to name cutting costs.
These responses are consistent with the frustration business leaders expressed about the operational burdens their companies face. Sixty percent said their finance teams were spending more time on operational work and less time on strategy than they did three years ago. In particular, businesses are moving away from building their own payments software. Half of the survey respondents who built their own payments software regret the time and cost involved, and nearly three-quarters said their in-house products led to reduced conversion or higher operating costs.
“My team has to account for millions of transactions tied to card payments, bank transfers, invoices, and more,” said Jonathan Gan, head of revenue accounting at Slack. “With tools like Stripe that free up time for big-picture work and strategy, we're more easily able to automate and accelerate financial reporting at Slack.”
The 2023 Insights Report compiled survey findings from 2,500 founders, enterprise executives, heads of payments, and CFOs at major businesses across Australia, Brazil, France, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Singapore, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Read the full report here.