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Re: Oceanfreedom post# 76990

Saturday, 04/13/2019 7:50:30 PM

Saturday, April 13, 2019 7:50:30 PM

Post# of 90375
Thanks, Oceanfreedom, with all respect but I don't think that we will have to take 10% or just a part of the total revenues because when we look at the definition of recurring revenues, it says the folowing:

Recurring revenue is revenue that is likely to reoccur on a regular basis such as monthly or annually. The following are common examples.

Rent
Rental income such as a property rental based on a contract that may span a year or more.

Leasing
Equipment and vehicle leasing.

Advertising
Certain types of advertising contract such as billboard leasing.

Service Contracts
Services that require a contractual obligation such as a consulting contract.

Service Subscriptions
Services that freely allow customers to cancel at any time but nonetheless represent recurring revenue as cancellations are relatively low. For example, a streaming media service that allows customers to cancel at any time may see cancellations of less than 1% a month.

Product Subscriptions
Product subscriptions such as an ecommerce site that offers recurring purchases. For example, a business might order basic office supplies on a recurring basis to simplify reordering.

Content Subscriptions
Content subscriptions such as an online newspaper that requires a membership.

Support Contracts
In some cases, a product is sold on a non-recurring basis with support services that are recurring. For example, software that has both an upfront cost and an annual support fee.

Vendor Lock-in
Customers who become dependent on your products or services such that they find it very difficult to switch. For example, a cloud computing platform may allow customers to stop using the service instantly. However, many customers will offer predictable revenue streams as they become dependent on the technologies offered by the vendor such as platforms and APIs.

Razor & Blades
A product that requires regular consumables such as printers & ink.
Customer Loyalty
Loyal customers who make predictable purchases might be considered recurring revenue. For example, a restaurant that buys its bread from your bread shop each morning.

Notes
The term recurring revenue implies a high certainty that revenue will reoccur with predictable frequency such as daily, weekly, monthly or yearly. As such, regular purchases with an uncertain pattern aren't usually considered recurring.