The future of vertical software; Manage time like an Amazon executive; Where to find your early adoptersā€¦Ā 

January 7, 2022

ā²ļø Our latest read is Working Backwards, which goes into extreme detail on Amazonā€™s operating model, the challenges they faced after going public, and the innovative strategies they used to get to where they are today. While the book covers a wide range of topics, its section on time management is probably the most applicable to founders of all company sizes. Their key to time management doesnā€™t involve the classic time blocking sort of tips you might think ā€“ for Amazon, time management starts with getting the most out of meetings. Every meeting, the organizer creates a narrative heavy memo (no more than six pages) which all attendees are given 20 minutes to read at the start of the session. This ensures everyone involved has all the context they need to participate, and the rest of the meeting is efficiently spent diving into the material and addressing questions.

šŸ” Itā€™s common knowledge that early adopters are key to getting your product feedback cycle rolling, but where should you look for them? In a recent episode of the Growth Stacking Show, host Dan Martell spoke with Cruise CEO Luca Stirbat (a carpooling app) about how they are approaching their search for early adopters. Cruise is an early stage company that just finished development, so getting customers to take a chance on them without existing validation had been especially hard. Cruiseā€™s value proposition is offsetting companiesā€™ carbon emissions by linking up their employees to carpool, so he suggests researching the CSR (corporate social responsibility) policies of local businesses to identify those whose values would align with their product. Moral of the story ā€“ understanding the core problem your business solves and targeting businesses who deal with it the most frequently will always be your best bet for finding your first customers.

šŸ§¾ Everyone knows most startups register as Delaware C Corps, but does anyone actually know why? If you need to ask (for a friend of course) this is a quick read that covers the different corporate structures and when each makes the most sense. The tl;dr: C Corps reign supreme because they have the advantage of no K-1s, favorable tax breaks, and familiarity amongst investors. There is really only one notable drawback ā€“ corporate income tax. At the federal level thatā€™s 21%, plus whatever your state rate is. However, unless you are using your startup to generate cash (if your goal is acquisition or IPO then you are probably reinvesting profits for growth), this wonā€™t have a major impact on you.

āš™ļø While he doesnā€™t live in the world of software, Peter Rojas, founder of the gadget blog, Gizmodo, is another proponent of niche (or vertical) markets. In a recent interview, he explained why the creation of the web was the catalyst that made niche markets available, as prior to the web the cost to publish was too expensive to target anything but the largest demographics. Rojas admits that a more niche market comes with significantly less competition, and most of the growth Gizmodo has seen came from the gadget market growing as a whole, not acquiring customers from some other publication.Ā 


šŸ”§ For a while, many venture investors avoided vertical software because they felt its comparatively small markets would not produce target VC outcomes. That has of course changed in recent years, and CRV does a nice job of outlining why. They use the example of auto repair software ā€“ with 167k auto repair shops in the US and the lower priced players charging $2.7k a year, you conservatively have a ~$440M TAM (not the $1B+ venture gets excited about). But over time these software are able to further specialize and innovate within their verticals, both creating more solutions (more things to charge for) and improving their current offerings (giving them the ability to charge more), thus growing their TAM. What CRV is most excited about in vertical software is embedded commerce. Using the same example, embedded commerce would be selling auto parts directly through auto repair software, putting your website, booking system, POS, etc. all in one place.

šŸŒ³ There is a science to conducting customer interviews, and if you donā€™t believe me, Stanford even has a course on it in their entrepreneurship program. There are a few key principles though for those who donā€™t have time for a course, starting with asking open ended questions. Open ended questions remove an opportunity to bias your interviewee and can result in answers you probably werenā€™t expecting. But that does not mean you have to stick totally to the script, itā€™s good to ask for details and clarification frequently to dig up more information. For example, if someone tells you that migrating their data to your platform was difficult, you should ask them ā€œwhat do you mean by difficultā€ to get to the root of the problem.

šŸ“¹ When Albert Kozlowski started working on Birdslate, an asynchronous video platform for teams, the idea was fresh and there were no similar tools in the market. Video was booming so he and his co-founder elected to go straight for an MVP rather than spending time to validate the idea first, which turned out to be a mistake. Despite getting lots of VC interest, customers were not biting, and the team made the tough decision to call it quits just a few months after their initial release. The story is a great reminder that even if macro trends point towards a need for your startup, the only way to truly validate an idea is countless conversations with prospective customers.

šŸ‹ļø If you are looking to start a new venture, you will find no shortage of inspirational, ā€œpump upā€ articles to get your entrepreneurial juices flowing. Unite Labs CEO, Maximilian Schulz, isnā€™t a fan of them, and takes the Elon Musk view that ā€œif you need inspiring words (to do something), donā€™t do itā€. After recently leaving Unite, he gave an honest view of his time with the business and how he battled the uncertainty which comes with operating a startup. Two interesting bits he would tell his former self: be passionate enough about the problem you are solving to work on it for the next 5 - 10 years, and to deeply understand the market you are entering so you can evaluate whether taking capital is a must, or a mistake.

šŸ’ø SaaStr founder Jason Lempkin had an interesting piece on picking the right ICP to target for your business. He believes that in startupā€™s early days (sub $1MM ARR), the customer segment split is surprisingly often 40/40/20: 40% big enterprises, 40% SMEs, and 20% micro businesses. At the $1MM ARR mark he suggests doubling down on one segment rather than being a tool for everyone (different segments require different GTM, so focus helps), and urges founders to consider the enterprise ā€“ if you are selling a solution. The distinction between a solution and tool is that a solution solves a larger pain point (for example, billing) rather than one specific problem (so in relation to billing, a dunning).

šŸ’– As we know from the 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, the best products donā€™t always win, itā€™s the ones with the best GTM that often do. A pillar of your GTM will always be a frontend sales process, which is why this week we are showing some love to Trish Bertuzziā€™s Sales Development Playbook. It focuses on top of funnel sales activities and shares best practices on conducting outbound prospecting, qualifying inbound leads, and other early process activities which generate sales pipeline. The book is split into 6 sections ranging from high level strategy and hiring to retaining employees and execution (our favorite section by far). Let us know what you think of it!

šŸš© Every fund, whether itā€™s Venture, Private Equity, or somewhere in between, has metric guidelines they look to when assessing an investment opportunity. These are not always hard thresholds, especially on the Venture side, where investors' primary concern is if there is product market fit. AirTree Venturesā€™ Andrew Yeo shared which specific metrics signal strength or red flags for them, as well the average of each metric across their portfolio. Defining what is ā€œmarketā€ net churn is always a fun debate, and Airtreeā€™s view is that anything below -.05% per month is terrific while -0.5% to .05% is good. 1-2% net revenue churn per month is where they start to get spooked.

šŸ—£ļø If you asked a few of your friends at other companies how their business reinforces its culture, we bet you would get a variety of answers. But one way many do (whether they know it or not) is by using basic cues, or rich words that convey meaning while imposing simplicity. The linked article covers the cues Bain & Co. employees learn in their early days at the company. A great example of one is ā€œZero Defectā€, which is not just a noun and verb for them ā€“ itā€™s a mindset. They are taught that their work should be Zero Defect, as one small error in a model could totally alter the companyā€™s recommendation to their client. That paranoia prompts them to ā€œZD'' all of their work to make sure it is perfect. The result is a high quality product and brand image of detailed, thorough work.

šŸø A typical weekly 1 on 1 is only 30 minutes because letā€™s face it, itā€™s hard to spend significant time on what may not seem like a revenue generating activity. But that doesnā€™t provide a lot of time for you or your report to context switch out of whatever you last meeting was. VP of Engineering coach Don Neufeld compares context switching to your computerā€™s cache ā€“ the more data you have in common between the tasks you are switching between, the easier it is to context switch. This is why he suggests task batching and putting all of your 1 on 1s together to make sure the context switch occurring is minimal. You may not want to spend that much time on 1 on 1s without a break, but like Mark Twain we would suggest eating your frog first thing in the morning.

šŸŽļø At a certain scale, companies can start to lose the scrappy, ā€œdo whatever it takes to win'' mentality which catapulted them to where they are today. Carta CEO Henry Ward noticed changes within his business in early 2020 which signaled they were slowing down, so he penned a memo to his team explaining why Carta needs to be a Bias to Action and a Bias to Yes company, as those were two of their early competitive advantages. There are 5 ideas covered in the memo which he felt would help them reach those goals, including being high-velocity (which does not equal high haste), iterative, non-bureaucratic, and unafraid to try new things. Itā€™s a great reminder to not lose sight of what made you successful in the first place.

šŸ§™ While we all hate selling when we are the ones being sold to, itā€™s undeniable that the power of persuasion is key to our own success. Copywriting pro Jason McBride put together an entertaining write up on what makes sales copy successful, looking at 3 of the most charismatic professions: politicians, con artists, and magicians. His secret to powerful sales copy is not the writing itself, but to preach to the nearly converted. Instead of writing to your general target market, he urges marketers to write to the reader who is already looking for a solution so you avoid wasting time on the skeptics. He also explains that effective sales copy needs to show empathy in order to prove that you understand and ā€œare one of themā€, before giving them the facts they need to justify their choice.

ā˜Žļø B2B SaaS demand generation is a hard game, so teams are willing to try every and all avenues to find what brings in quality leads. Cold calling exec decision makers is one tactic that often pops up, but in 2021 can we finally call telemarketing dead? The Bridge Group, Sales Hacker, and Modern Sales Pros partnered to create a survey on todayā€™s sales methods to answer the question, and hereā€™s what they found ā€“ only roughly 50% of execs still used office phones (no surprise) and 60% had a negative reaction to someone calling their mobile, even if the number was in their email signature. 21% still noted that a phone call was the best way to grab their attention, so there is a minority that will always appreciate a dial, but we expect that number will continue to dwindle.

šŸ”« As you startup continues to scale, you will likely need help managing all of the different revenue generating operations in your company. But before you jump the gun and hire a Chief Revenue Officer, you should always ask yourself the questions, why do I need one now? There are alternatives to consider, such as creating an internal working group with the sole purpose of addressing revenue challenges by departments. Pulling internal talent from the Sales and Finance team and designating them as revenue operations can be a good first step to address the need, and give you a better sense of where you really need help.


šŸ‹ļø A good analogy for the difference between an account manager and a customer success manager (CSM) is the difference between a bartender and a personal trainer ā€“ the first are reactive while the second are proactive. See, the lifecycle of a CSM typically starts as a proactive, scrappy generalist who manages the support process, but that can quickly evolve into a ā€œdo everythingā€ role, in which they handle all tasks from onboarding to technical support. One way to avoid this overload for your CSMs is to adopt the mentality that all employees are responsible for customer success and project progression. Adding new KPIs to your arsenal such as time to value (TTV) and setting a shorter time as a company-wide goal will build alignment. Then, you can look at the trends at TTV and your ticket volume to inform how and when to scale the team.

āš¾ There is plenty of talk about the benefits of employing a product led growth (PLG) strategy, but much less on how to actually implement one. Shimon Tolts, CEO of Datree.io shared the specific steps they took to adopt the model, which led them from 0 to 150 companies in a 3 month span. They started by making their product easier to access, removing their ā€œbook a demoā€ button in favor of a ā€œquick startā€ self service option. They then made sure to show value right off the bat. Datree prevents Kubernetes misconfigurations from reaching production, so when a user creates an account, Datree immediately runs a process to identify these misconfigurations, demonstrating why they are worth the price tag. Lastly, they continue to drive new users to their tool by going all in on hands on product tutorials, pushed by industry influencers. The commonality is that all these efforts ā€“ putting product at the focus on their GTM, and let their hard work do the talking.

šŸŒ  Perhaps an unpopular opinion (with founders at least), but they rarely start out as good leaders. Itā€™s no fault of their own, it just usually takes time for them to acclimate to the task of leading others while also getting their day to day needs accomplished. The curve can be steep ā€“ the atmosphere surrounding software is of course quick in nature and constantly evolving, so the time it takes to evolve into leadership is often not given to the founder. That said, startups which take a more moderate approach to growth typically allow time for founders to find their way and grow in leadership, opposed to fast growth companies where the founder has to learn quickly.

šŸ§» Storytelling is one of the hardest tasks for first founders because they often donā€™t have the data or work experience to build their story. Liran Belenzon shared a great story of how he got creative when faced with that exact problem. He needed to raise a bit of capital when pursuing his first venture, but their product was not at a point where it would have won customers over, which they needed to get investors excited. To show traction, he had a freelance designer build a paper prototype which demonstrated how the fully built tool would function to customers. The idea on its own was enough to sign up 200 prospect for their MVP, which was instrumental in showing traction to investors in the fundraising process.

šŸŽ¼ Businessesā€™ software stacks are getting crowded. On average, companies have 37 different software vendors at one time, and we bet itā€™s even higher for SaaS companies. The question is, do all of these tools really improve workflow and productivity, or are we overloaded? OMERS Ventures thinks poor communications between tools is the biggest issue with our ever increasing software stack, and a new breed of data orchestration software, which help these products seamlessly integrate with other apps, is the likely solution. API-first players like Zapier, Plaid, and Stripe have already made significant progress in addressing the needs of SMB and mid-market companies, but public APIs and API solution providers have a ways to go, as they struggle to match the speed of smaller, agile businesses.

ā˜ļø VCs look for immediate and extreme growth in their investments, so the profitability of the companies they work with is the least of their concerns. But striving for sky high growth can be costly, and not just in dollars. Dumping loads of capital into marketing makes it nearly impossible to identify your real cost to acquire customers (CAC), and if your CAC remains high over time, you run the risk of never being able to build a sustainable model. There are, however, some notable software businesses who have taken the road less traveled, achieving profitability while also growing to an impressive scale. Both profitable and high burn companies can generate great returns for investors, we would just argue that the profitable ones also create good outcomes for founders!

šŸŖ“ Getting content right is time consuming, but if you want to maximize the channel, thereā€™s no way around dedicating real resources to it. When looking at content ROI, you measure the cost to produce your content and the resulting engagement and conversions over time. It can take a while to generate returns from one piece, so an efficient way to improve your ROI is in the short term is by content splintering ā€“ creating similar content focused on the original topic with tweaks that make it unique, and publishing it across separate channels. Aside from being a money and time saver, splintering enables companies to test new channels because few resources are needed to adapt your existing content to whatever new channel or platform you are testing.

šŸ‘“ The Wall Street Journalā€™s legendary ā€œTale of Two Young Men'' letter tells the story of two men with similar backgrounds who work at the same manufacturing business. 25 years down the line one man is in the same role and the other is president of the business, the only difference being that the president educated himself by reading the WSJ. That story, which resulted in over $2B in subscriptions during a ~30 year period, follows a clear ā€œtwo pathā€ storytelling framework which can be applied to pretty much any SaaS business. While it has lost some of its novelty through gained popularity, itā€™s a good framework to use in messaging where you are looking to demonstrate how you beat the competition without boasting.


šŸŒ¾ Most B2B SaaS companies start with a low touch sales model before building an SDR team and moving upmarket because low touch also generally means lower cost. Marc Thomas from PoweredbySearch went against the grain and started with a direct sales model before moving down market to build a B2B SaaS demand gen flywheel. He shared a template for building that model which stemmed from his learnings, from positioning to website structuring, and also has a separate piece with some additional notes on the principles discussed in the model which is a good supplementary read if you enjoy the first!

āš–ļø Early stage SaaS investor Kenn So penned a great essay on why investors continue to bid up startups prices, even though they would admit they are overvalued. It starts with a simple supply and demand equation. With only Ā¼ of the number startups being created today as there was in 2010 (see below), and a 380% increase in the amount of VC raised since that same year, there is high investor demand for a small supply of investable startups (you have to deploy to stay in business, after all). And while the amount of startups exiting has decreased 5% over that period, the amount of money exits are generating has grown significantly, justifying VCs to bid further. One notable difference from the early 2000s to today ā€“ 80% of startups are burning cash at the point of IPO, while not growing much faster than the more capital efficient cohorts of earlier years, a pretty eye opening stat.

šŸŒŽ TAM (total addressable market), SAM (serviceable available market), and SOM (serviceable obtainable market) are the typical tiers used to demonstrate what a companyā€™s market could be. But none of them focus on the near future of your company ā€“ TAMā€™s are generally represented as $1b+, which isnā€™t going happen in the short term. Thatā€™s why Fairbanks Venture Advisors suggests early stage founders think about their Launch Available Market, or LAM, to map out and show investors who your initial targets are going to be. LAM is calculated by estimating conversion rates of your acquisition activities (or using the real rates if you have the data) then applying your ARPU, and other bottom-up approach assumptions that show you are accounting for all variables.

šŸ² We are going to stick with the topic of consumption based pricing (and food emojis) with this piece from our friends at Chargify, which shows how the pricing model isnā€™t just good for your NDR ā€“ it can actually be a driver of product adoption. First, it lets users try out your product with a lower cost upfront, so your conversion rates should go up givven that the pricing model is more customer-friendly than inflexible flat rates. It also should reduce churn because your customers only pay for exactly what they need and seamlessly upgrade as they increase usage, units, or whatever variable you base your pricing on. This is much smoother than forcing customers to increase a maxed out subscription mid month (a useless point of friction).

šŸ„£ At Gainsightā€™s Pulse 2021 conference, SaaS advisor and consultant Dave Kellog took the stage to share net dollar retention (NDR) benchmarks and evolving trends in software metrics. Median NDR for private companies is up to 104% and the public SaaS median is 111% ā€“ both growing numbers due to NDRā€™s increasing impact on valuation (churn is a dead metric) and more companies adopting usage models which are ideal for growing contract value over time. He is also covers issues with the life time value (LTV) metric stemming from low or negative churn rates ā€“ for example, a 3 year old company with very little churn could show a 20 year LTV, when in reality there isnā€™t enough data to prove that. The full slides are available here.

šŸ’­ ā€œWrite poorly and they notice the style; write well and they notice the ideaā€. That message on the importance of clear writing is taught to all Amazon employees, along with the idea to not write to impress others, but to express ideas. This list from Ex- AWS product manager, Danny Sheridan, covers 5 tips from Amazonā€™s Doc Bar Raisers (employees who participate in the final round of new hire interviews) on how to write clearly. One suggestion is to write in rhythm ā€“ varying word count and sentence length to hold the reader's attention ā€“ in particular is an easy change to make that can drastically improve your writing today.

šŸ„¤ One of the often misunderstood aspects of term sheets is liquidation preferences. These preferences give VCs the right to receive the funds they have invested before any common shareholders, such as founders, if a liquidation event occurs. That doesnā€™t just mean in the case of bankruptcy or winding down your company ā€“ any sort of transaction in which there is a change of control is considered a liquidation event. This read covers the differences between non-participating prefs (VCs get a multiple of the funds they invested OR a percentage of the stake they have in the company, assuming the shares convert to equity), participating prefs (VCs get both a multiple of their investment and a percentage of the investment made), and other key terms to know.

šŸ§› When trying to hire top talent, itā€™s very unlikely that you are going to be able to outpay the likes of Facebook, Amazon, Google etc.. But that doesnā€™t mean you canā€™t steal some all stars from the jaws of FAANG, it just means that you need to be more creative on how you present the opportunity to work at your startup. The area which big tech companies will never be able to compete with more agile startups is impact ā€“ rather being a cog in a massive machine, they can be on the ground floor of building a team where their footprint will be seen. Of course, that pitch will fall short on those who are looking for a more stable option and big company perks. But, if done right, it should at least make them think twice...

šŸ† For pre-revenue startups, your initial outbound strategy is used to get product feedback rather than actually close deals ā€“ you have to make sure potential customers are actually picking up what you're putting down before executing on your initial thesis. Liam Mulcah (Director of Sales @ Unusual Ventures) has an unconventional way of segmenting potential customers, breaking them down into 3 buckets (startups, challengers, and champions) which can help you understand what they are prioritizing at their current stage, and hopefully enable you to better sell to them. He includes an example of a 14 day, 7 touchpoint outreach sequence which some of their companies have used for both LinkedIn and Email, as well as a sales outreach calculator so you can play with levers to see what sort of metrics you need to hit your goals.

šŸ“ˆ Public SaaS company multiples continued to roar in Q2 2021 (at the lower end you are seeing 4-5x revenue multiples for ~10% annual growers, which feels beyond generous!), but the question we are all wondering is what impact that has on the private sector. SaaS Capitalā€™s data shows that while there has been an uptick in private company multiples, the premiums are being mostly seen in growth stage businesses who are up ~50%+ year over year. Our thought: buyers are likely looking for more growth from small startups than the bigger players because they just donā€™t have the scale (and stability) of public entities, which presents more risk.


šŸƒ People often refer to raising venture capital as ā€œjumping on the VC treadmillā€ because once you get on it, itā€™s very hard to get off. Astronomical growth targets require founders to spend all of the funds they raise quickly, putting them in an all out sprint to gain traction so they can raise their next round. David Sacksā€™ recent post on venture backed SaaS Org Charts gives a flavor of just how fast these companies need to scale their teams to have a shot at hitting those growth goals, explaining that Series A startups typically have at least 1m in ARR with roughly 40-50 employees, while Series B companies are looking to have at least 5m in ARR and 100-125 employees. That massive jump in headcount puts businesses in a scary position, because if they donā€™t raise that next round, there are significant cuts required to reach profitability, and ultimately, survive.

šŸŽ¶ Tools like Gong and Chorus.ai get most of the love when it comes to sales enablement, but conversational intelligence is just one small piece of the sales enablement puzzle. Ben Cotton does a good job of breaking down the different categories within the space, as well as some of the top vendors which might not have heard of. Sales coaching software, which provides more detail on recommendations and which reps might be best suited for different parts of the sales process, is an area in particular which we think has a lot of potential.

šŸ§¶ Bessemer Venture Partners hosted a B2B SaaS pricing roundtable last month with some notable industry experts: Lekha Doshi (LinkedIn), Akshat Gupta (Airtable), and Ross Biestman (ServiceTitan). They called out some common pricing mistakes, the first being indecisiveness with your model. Lots of groups set up with a ā€œjust for now planā€ and never end up revisiting, as ā€œnothing is as permanent as a temporary fixā€. This is especially true with pricing, where it can become incredibly difficult to untangle your model as you become more reliant on those processes. Another frequent mistake is not defining specific goals around pricing. You need to create a few hypotheses where changing a variable will result in better take up from the market, then run with it!

šŸ¦ Drift is known for its early product lead growth strategy, in which their usersā€™ chat boxes were the leading source of customer acquisition for the business. It created a great flywheel effect ā€“ new customers meant more Drift branded chat boxes on their websites, with each websiteā€™s visitors being subjected to the brand, creating new sets of customers. But recently, they have gracefully pivoted more towards the enterprise, with their average sales price tripling from Q4 2020 to Q1 2021. Elias Torres, the co-founder of Drift, explains that the desire for better retention rates and a higher ARPU prompted the shift, as well as the specifics of how they made the switch.

šŸ”” The Bell Curve marketing agency, (who also the Demand Curve marketing group), have written loads of websites in their day, and knows what kind of content it takes to convert visitors into customers. In a recent TechCrunch feature, they highlight a few ways you can improve the conversion rate on your homepage by crafting a sharp header and designing with intention. They provide a pretty cool framework to uncover your value proposition which you can use as a header ā€“ you start by describing a bad alternative people resort to when they donā€™t have your product, then follow up with a sentence describing why your product is better than that bad alternative. Lastly, you turn it into an action statement. Using AirBnb as an example, their bad alternative is ā€œstuck in sterile hotels, donā€™t experience the real cultureā€, with ā€œstay in localsā€™ homesā€ as the good one. Making that an action statement looks like ā€œexperience new cities like a localā€. Voila.

šŸ© Product management careers get treated differently than engineering, design, and most other tech careers in that there isnā€™t a point where you can comfortably stay an individual contributor ā€“ the idea is to move up in your rank, or move out. There seems to be a much lesser focus on the PRODUCT part than MANAGEMENT in product management, which is why Ken Norton (previously Director of Product for Google), argues that we need to fight forĀ  a dual product management career path. What he means by this is a role where you manage the product resources for a project rather than a full division, because the reality is that not all people are suited to (or even interested in) being leadership. This non-management role can be key to innovation for big companies as well, because it enables the employee to be an individualistic thinker and avoid the sometimes cumbersome process and structure you find in big coā€™s.

šŸš˜ The subscription economy was already in full swing before COVID kicked it into overdrive, putting customer retention at the forefront of many peopleā€™s minds. It makes Retention Point, by Robert Skrob, a timely read, as it hammers the idea home that maintaining your existing customers and promoting their growth should always take a front seat to new customer acquisition. He poses some interesting points, like the idea that many companies try to deliver too much value upfront, which can hurt more than help with adoption. Having a limited set of resources available to them that are specific to their goals (asking what those are upon signup helps) will keep them on the tracks and prevent them from getting overwhelmed.

šŸœ We consistently beat the drum for pricing as one of the biggest levers your company has to pull around revenue, but itā€™s rare to find good writing on the specific tactics you can experiment with. Stripeā€™s Growth lead Julian Lehr laid out more than a few pricing strategies which are worth noodling over, starting with the basic idea that founders can likely charge more than they think. He also covers some great examples of ā€œthe illusion of choiceā€, in which companies provide one pricing package that clearly makes the most sense for the user ā€“ as well as themselves ā€“ which the visitor is funneled towards. This usually includes some social validation (like highlighting the price point as the most popular choice) and a direct comparison to other plans to show how much users are saving.Ā 


šŸ›£ļø The startup journey can be a long and lonely road, which is why itā€™s no surprise that many people elect to work with a co-founder. This is a person who you will be spending the majority of your day with for a (hopefully!) very long time, so conflict is inevitable and natural in many cases. That said, you should still rigorously vet your potential co-founders and ask the tough questions early on to make sure you are really compatible. This list from Philip Camilleri outlines some of the important areas you can dig into, such as how they handle conflict resolution, decision making, stress, and financial goals. A surprising number of co-founders kick these conversations down the road, but you will do yourself a favor by understanding where they land on these points upfront.

āœļø It doesnā€™t always take a 400 page marketing book to improve your game, sometimes a simple thought can help you reset and make you think twice about what you are doing, or what you could potentially do! This was a fun list of one sentence marketing tips which we liked, and hopefully can have provide a jolt of inspiration for you or your team. Some of our favorites included ā€œyou can buy exposure, but you canā€™t buy attentionā€ (big ad budgets arenā€™t enough!) and ā€œthe more your marketing sounds like marketing, the worse it will performā€. Using simple language and writing as you actually speak always wins.

šŸ©ŗ ARX (one of the first electronic signature businesses) isnā€™t a classic success story ā€“ only four years after being acquired for 100m, their buyer, Cylink, was ready to pull the plug on them. ARXā€™s team rallied to buy the business back, using a hefty amount of debt which they were able to pay off in a few years, setting them up for a fresh start. Boaz Lantsman, who joined their team after ARX regained control, explained how they turned the business around by conquering one niche at a time. The niche that really set them off was clinical trials, a category which a few of their existing customers already fell into. Realizing that electronic signatures could save clinics significant dollars, they poured half their budget into that target market. The end result ā€“ another nearly 100m acquisition, this time from DocuSign.

šŸ„ In David Bradford and Carole Robinā€™s Connect, the two Stanford professors cover what they call ā€œexceptional relationshipsā€, in which you feel free to be your sincere self around another person. Itā€™s an interesting topic relative to business because in most cases, we are more guarded with work relationships than personal ones. To gain more sincere relationships, they suggest trying the 15% rule, where you attempt to share 15% more than you feel is ā€œsafeā€ with others. That tiny bit of additional sharing can help you be seen as more human, and sets a norm that encourages your team to do the same. They also share the importance of quality feedback to relationships, and caution to not get caught serving ā€œfeedback sandwichesā€. These not so tasty morsels start with positive feedback, followed by the real feedback you wanted to give, and end on another positive note as to not be too harsh. The book is a culmination of their interpersonal communications grad teachings, and serves as a much quicker (and less expensive) course!

šŸ“¹ B2B buyers are typically 57% along the way to a buying decision before they talk with sales (via CEB Global), so your website might actually play a bigger role in selling than your team. Hubspot highlighted some good B2B product sites for your inspiration, and explained why they do a good job of selling. Cringey video edits aside, there are some helpful nuggets of wisdom ā€“ we liked the suggestion of only using 5 colors and 3 typefaces / font sizes on your site to prevent visitors from getting overwhelmed, as well as only using graphics in areas where you need to encourage visitors to complete a task or function (i.e. they need real purpose). They also give praise to sites which use their homepage to filter buyers by persona, then lead to verticalized landing pages with use case specific content. Verticalized segmentation is not newsworthy, but very intentionally guiding visitors right from the start of your site can be incredibly impactful and is rarely implemented.

šŸ§ƒ Account based marketing (ABM) is a targeted effort in that it aims at a select group of high priority accounts rather than casting a wide net which catches leads of all shapes and sizes, many of which wonā€™t be good fits. But thereā€™s an even more specific approach you can be using for ABM ā€“ a tiered approach. It divides ABM targets into three categories: Strategic, Lite, and Programmatic, then outlines the specific tasks you should use based on the targetā€™s tier. For example, it could be worth your while to roll out the red carpet for strategic accounts and create personalized ads specific to their business, but for a programmatic account that seems like a good customer but has limited upside, the juice might not be worth the squeeze.

šŸ¦™ As we have delved into before, there is risk in both over measuring and under measuring your business ā€“ you donā€™t want to get too granular and lose sight of your north star goal, but you of course donā€™t want to under report and misunderstand the variables which are impacting your business. This same problem exists with investors and the data they require their investments to provide them. Alpaca VCā€™s approach seems like a good middle ground, establishing 4-5 OKRs (objectives and key results) at their point of investment, which are separate but aligned with what the company already tracks. They then revisit these OKRs at the end of every quarter and rank performance on a 1 - 5 scale, writing out a summary of what led the company to hit or miss goals. It feels like the right level of involvement for groups who are not working with you in day to day operations but are invested in your success.

šŸ’ƒ Inbound acquisition interest can be both incredibly exciting and distracting for founders. It often prompts an internal debate of whether you should do the song and dance to figure out if itā€™s the right time to exit, or if you should just keep your head down and scale as you have been. Storm Ventures had some great advice on how to deal with inbound, and the differences in interest from public companies, PE funds, or private strategics. Even if selling isnā€™t something you are considering in the near future, itā€™s generally worth taking these calls because at some point, you likely will be. Plus, having conversations early will show you what about your business excites buyers (so you can double down there) and also provides invaluable experience in dealing with groups similar to (or who could even end up being) your buyer.

šŸŽļø We are all for short podcasts that can be knocked out on the drive to work, so Stephen Cumminsā€™s 14 Minutes of SaaS has been one of our recent favorites. In his latest episode, he talks with Trustpilot CEO Peter MĆ¼hlmann, who discusses how your market is most important to success, followed by your team and your actual product. He also argues that most startups take 10 years to succeed, rather than the overnight success story we often hear of the hyper-growers. It can take 2-3 years to even figure out if you are right about your product and that it truly works as intended, so he urges founders to be more patient with their idea. In a world where we are encouraged to pivot quickly and ā€œmove fast and break thingsā€, that can be a difficult balance to strike.

šŸŽ¤ Whether you are a CEO pitching to potential investors or an employee presenting a project to your team, your ability to persuade is almost as important as the content you are sharing. We liked Jessica Stillmanā€™s frameworks for giving 10 - 20 - 30 presentations, which provides a quick guide for powerful, persuasive presentations. The high level format is to use no more than 10 slides, take no more than 20 minutes to present (TED talks are all 20 minutes for a reason!), and use a 30 point font to ensure you are just highlighting the ideas on your slides rather than spelling them all out word for word. While your actual idea will ultimately be what makes or breaks the presentation, this format should put you in a good position to succeed.

āš”ļø While the big playerā€™s in your space can seem insurmountable, remember that there are advantages to being smaller, leaner, and scrappier. The Goliaths are generally comfortable in their position, and donā€™t want to take unnecessary risks that could alter their cushy state. This gives way for smaller up and comers to be more disruptive, and try things that more established groups wouldnā€™t even consider doing while also having the ability to iterate quickly (big ships move slow). That said, you may not want to come at the competition with a full on assault, as that can spur them to be more proactive in blocking your path. So angling for a slightly different market may be a safer place to start.

šŸ•¹ļø If you use the CRM, Pipedrive, you are familiar with the fun animations that pop up whenever a deal is moved to ā€œClosed/Wonā€. For the last decade, that sort of gamification has been one of the most popular strategies to drive user adoption. But we now have better ways to measure the success of gamification than we did 10 years ago, and the data shows how it can actually cause more damage than good. The linked article shares a story of a sales team which used a basketball themed game that awarded closed deals with ā€œlayupsā€. Those who bought into the game performed well, but those who didnā€™t actually declined in output. The key was that these employees felt the game was being forced upon them, so when considering gamification in your product, make sure you arenā€™t enforcing actions to the extent that it brings users out of the game.

šŸ¤‘ We have a SaaS unicorn stampede on our hands this year, with 22 new ones popping up in February 2021 alone (Tiger Global is almost comically a lead investor in 20% of the 22...). So how is that even possible? Well, the SaaS marketā€™s explosion has led to more $100m ARR+ companies growing at or above 30%, which seems to just about get you to a $1b valuation. And the math continues to work out for VCs ā€“ the average public SaaS company is worth $27b, and even companies with sub 30b market caps are worth ~10b on average. That means investors can get in at $1b valuations and still see 10x returns from later stage investments. Expect to see more investors ā€œplaying the long gameā€ by investing in these larger, more mature businesses.

šŸ§¬ Operating software products is closer to a science than an art. Today, companies track and analyze their product data meticulously, with a proven book of formulas to guide their decision making. In Jacco Van Der Koojā€™s The SaaS Sales Method, he explains why SaaS sales should be no different, and offers some literal blueprints for scaling out your sales function. There is a great outline of the SaaS methodologyĀ  Van Der Kooj covers in the book on his sales consulting site, Winning by Design, for those looking for a quicker read.

šŸ§ The Product Coalition group had an interesting write up on why you should separate problems and solutions in your roadmaps. It sounds a bit counterintuitive, but meshing problems with solutions right off the bat assumes the next feature you build will solve your current problem. In reality, the best way to solve your problem might not be a new feature ā€“ it could be a change to an existing one or even deleting one altogether. Building a problem focused roadmap, where each of your teams works on a specific problem (manifested in the form on an OKR), and dedicating significant time to uncover and validate the problems which exist, is their suggested solution.

šŸ­ The Net Promoter Score (NPS) method for measuring customer satisfaction certainly has its flaws, but itā€™s hard to argue that a high NPS isnā€™t reflective of a well engineered product and support team. Entytle, a CRM for industrial OEMs, shared some tips on how they were able to get their score up to a 61 (stellar in NPS terms) during the middle of a pandemic. They emphasize delivering value quickly, which can be pretty hard for enterprise products with longer implementation times such as themselves. Their team cleverly battles this by giving users easy wins during onboarding, like teasers showing what a fully ramped up user looks like to build excitement, and keeping initial onboarding sessions light so they don't overwhelm.

šŸŒ”ļø Powerful business narratives donā€™t just make the listener excited, they make you think. Eric Feng, Facebookā€™s VP of Commerce Innovations, shared how the best business stories can be broken down into 3 parts: framing (describing the business in a natural, almost obvious way), proximity (why the founder has a unique relationship with the problem they solve), and relatability (making it relevant). A great example he points to is home automation tool Nest. Their mission was to ā€reinvent unloved home products to create simple, beautiful, thoughtful thingsā€, a fantastic message because the framing makes their solution seem inevitable. Turns out it was, considering they got acquired by Google for 3.2b.

šŸ¦„ Thereā€™s been lots of analysis around what VC backed unicorns have in common, but not enough on startups that took venture but failed to take off. After all, you need a control group to help put those unicorn numbers in context. Thatā€™s what Ali Tamaseb (a partner at DCVC) spent the last couple years doing, gathering over 30k data points to see what truly separated big winners from the rest of the pack. He debunks some myths with his analysis, including that unicorns need to be led by technical founders (50.5% of unicorn founders were non-technical, similar to the control group) as well as the idea that unicorns should target whitespace opportunities (85% of unicorns had competition from Day 1).


šŸŽ¢ Leadership is always encouraged to just slow down and think strategically, making it sound like there is a one size fits all method to problem solving. But different approaches will work best based on the information available to you ā€“ author Fred Perlard runs through four key ones and when to use them in his How to Be Strategic. The final method he covers, the Rollercoaster approach, is probably most interesting to the scaling startups crowd as itā€™s built for problem solving when there is no clear answer to start and little data available. Sound like a familiar situation to anyone?

šŸ›« In case there was still a debate, ā€œbuild it and they will comeā€ is simply a fallacy, itā€™s sales which fuels businesses to gain their first customers, take off, and grow. It took Cofebeā€™s founder James Williams little time to realize the importance of being able to sell, but a while to figure out how to build a systematic, methodical approach to doing it. He shares great advice around combatting customer expectations of lower prices by strengthening your offeringā€™s positioning, as well as the value in a paid mentor when it comes to selling.

ā„ļø While recent IPO success Snowflake could never have got to where they are today without their data warehousing architect founders, it was CEO Frank Slootman who guided them through their periods of most rapid growth. When it comes to hiring, Slootman feels that ā€œaverage is worse than badā€, meaning that bad hires are a lesser issue for companies because they are obvious to identify and move on from. Average hires, however, who are just there to check the boxes are more deadly because they can fly under the radar and drag others down. This philosophy is reflected in their bonus policy, in which managers must use a bell shaped distribution model, rewarding top performers highly while underperformers miss out.

šŸ¦¶ Partnerships with big players in your sector can be a great growth catalyst ā€“ you ideally gain access to a larger customer list that fits your target audience perfectly without any upfront cost. But just because the potential benefits of partnership are fantastic doesnā€™t mean that you should do whatever it takes to land a deal with one of the big guys. Operators often make drastic compromises to get their foot in the door, whether itā€™s a burdensome product integration, alteration to their messaging, or another operational change. It can be hard to see that when the other side is more established and are seen as the experts in the room, but remember that doesnā€™t mean that their view is necessarily right!

šŸ„” Investors and acquirers are showing an increasing openness to software consumption based revenues, as many of them view it no different than vanilla ARR as long as it comes with a positive net retention rate (NRR). A great example of a high consumption revenue winner is Bill.com ā€“ they have 50% standard software revenues and 50% based on the fees processed through their platform. Their ridiculous 121% NRR proves that the consumption revenues are not just recurring, but that they increase over time (itā€™s even more impressive that they do it serving SMBs). This is to say, donā€™t let the idea of ā€œnon-SaaSā€ recurring revenues scare you from testing a partially consumption model where you win when your customers win.


šŸ¤– The world of recruitment has evolved significantly in the past 10 years, making many of the popular reads on hiring fairly dated. Katrina Collierā€™s The Robot Proof Recruiter is a more modern take on hiring, focusing on how to utilize AI, robotics, and chatbots in order to attract and recruit the right people. Collier is quick to note that social media and digital strategies are still only a part of the full recruitment cycle, and shares how you can supplement these techniques with more personal, authentic methods that show candidates how your company goes above and beyond.


šŸÆ Billing platform Chargebee studied ~6,500 SaaS businesses to see what trends they could identify, and came away with some helpful findings. Most interesting was that companies who localized their pricing cosmetically (automatically converting currency to a visitorā€™s country) grew 40% faster than companies that did not, and those who localized by market (actually setting the price point relative to a specific market) grew twice as fast. They note that pricing localization should not be a priority until you hit $5m ARR, but at that scale it warrants the time to identify your top 10 markets and see what leverage your pricing can provide.

šŸ¤” Product-led growth (PLG) puts product at the forefront of landing new users and getting them to use your product, but the truth is the path to users adopting is never just between your product and them. We like to look for advice, whether it is from our colleagues, friends, or random Quora thread, which is why the idea of community-led growth resonated with us. It acts as a multiplier on top of PLG by facilitating interactions amongst your users, which provides value beyond the product itself. The linked article from Corinne Marie Riley covers the main channels you should be looking at for (dare we say) CLG, as well as a Playbook on how to get started.

šŸ‡ŖšŸ‡ŗ With more companies open to remote work in todayā€™s world, is a European HQ still worth pursuing? The team at B2B venture firm Front Line would tell you it absolutely does. You need to be where your customers are, so while it might not make sense for early stage companies with primarily US users, itā€™s essential if you ever plan on expanding internationally. They share a fun cheat sheet covering the 5 most popular EU tech hubs (London, Dublin, Amsterdam, Paris, and Berlin) and their relative strengths and weaknesses (talent, taxes, real estate, etc). On the road to IPO, about 30% of your revenue should come from the EU, so for those who think big, itā€™s worth playing with the idea as you grow.


šŸæ It took popup startup WisePops 5 arduous years to get to $1m ARR, which they impressively did as a side hustle and without an in-house development team. That encouraged founder Benjamin Cahen to make the leap of building their own dev team, ultimately propelling them to $2m ARR in just half the time. Of course itā€™s never as simple as just adding new faces to the team to grow revenue, as hiring for small bootstrapped startups is tough. They added 6 employees during that period and let 4 go ā€“ costly when you consider the effort it takes to hire. Hunting for experts who werenā€™t even on the market and inviting them to team sessions pre-hire was how they landed their best talent, as it gave candidates a real sense of the team and workplace dynamics.

šŸ“Š If you work in SaaS you have probably come across ChartMogul at some point, most likely when looking up the right way to calculate net retention or another SaaS metric. Thatā€™s because they invested heavily in content since their inception 5 years ago, becoming a go-to thought leader in the space without spending a dime. Their CEO Nick Franklin shared how that content strategy got things going when they lacked funds for other activities, and other growth tips for bootstrapped businesses. He also delves into a dilemma many serving the SMB face ā€“ churn from customers going out of business. For Nick, slowly moving upmarket where more upsell potential lies is 100% of his current focus.

šŸ¦– Strategic pricing can give you an edge in competitive markets, but at some point undercutting becomes predatory ā€“ companies who are able to bite the bullet on initial losses can price at big discounts, forcing others out of the market. Once the competition is gone, they go right back to original pricing. You rarely see SaaS businesses affected by this dynamic because the cost to service software is so low, but you do see many companies racing to the bottom in an attempt to win on price alone. Our take ā€“ buyers who prioritize pricing above all else are the most fickle, and pricing based on the value your product offers will lead to more enduring customers.

šŸ”” When founders start to build their sales team, the biggest hurdle is often not knowing how to properly incentive reps. David Sacks broke down some simple math on how you can set your team up, along with the key elements per position and standard rates of you will find today. It has a great chart of the average base salary and quota by territory (for example, SMB vs mid-market or Enterprise) and what expected OTE should look like. It also answers some of the heavily debated sales structure questions, like if reps should get credit for expansions (he suggests giving expansion credit during the customerā€™s first year) and renewals (should also get credit here, at a much lower rate).


šŸ¤ A great piece of networking advice is to be human to everyone you meet. Itā€™s the mantra First Round Capital partner Chris Falic has used to build relationships over time, and has led him to investments in Warby Parker, HotelTonight, and Roblox. He went into the specific strategies he uses to employ this idea of being human in a recent blog, boiling things down to 7 rules for making memorable connections. One interesting rule ā€“ what Falic calls the Blue-sky brainstorm. If you canā€™t offer specifically what a connection is looking for, try brainstorming with them as it shows a real effort to try to help out.

āš”ļø A VC firm will often invest in similar companies to increase their chances of landing the big winner in the space. From a founderā€™s perspective, that can be pretty nerve racking. Having two or more companies in the same market enables VCs to share confidential info across companies, decide who they like best, and potentially sabotage the weaker link. The satirical Let Me Know How I Can Be Helpful crew (great Twitter follow if you arenā€™t already) shared how investing in competitors created a conflict of interest for Sequoia, and led to them giving one of the two 21m for free.

šŸ§˜ If you ever find the work to do list pilling up and are looking for ways to rein things in, we highly suggest Cal Newportā€™s Deep Work. The truth is distractions are inevitable, so training your mind to ignore distractions as opposed to cutting them off at the source is a more realistic approach to improving your focus. The book shares 4 rules for shifting your mind and habits to support that skill, most of which rely on creating routines and rituals that provide structure to your work environment. Training your focus is like training for any sport ā€“ it takes practice ā€“ so trusting the process is as important as anything else.

šŸ’“ Tracking SaaS metrics without knowing how to communicate the story they tell is what we like to call measurement without meaning. This read from Kimchi Hill offers a storytelling framework that starts with questions that will help shape the story around your business, and then offers a list associated metrics for you to track which will answer them. As you can tell, we are big on storytelling, but there are plenty of other popular frameworks like HEART and AARRR that focus less on narrative while providing structure to your metric tracking. Skip right to the bottom of that one unless you want a general metrics overview first.

šŸŽ One of the few positives of COVID was that more people got restless enough to go out and run. This provided some gustry tailwinds for run tracking app Strava, growing the app 2m users/month and leading them to a 1.5b valuation in late 2020. Of course that success wasnā€™t built overnight, their mobile growth strategy put them in position to capitalize when the world turned upside down. There some are valuable lessons for B2B folks in how they tested new app monetization strategies, namely, if changes anger your existing paid users, be ready to pull the cord quickly.

āœ… Letā€™s talk about the 40% rule, and before you stop us, we donā€™t mean the profitability vs. growth ratio rule you are probably thinking of. This one is around gauging PMF (product market fit), and is tested by asking users how they would feel if they could no longer use your product. If 40% or more of customers would be very disappointed, your value proposition checks the box. The linked read covers some other interesting ways of gauging fit and includes a concise 5 step model aimed at helping you find it. Quote of the piece: ā€œlife is too short to build something nobody wantsā€.

āŒ› Youā€™d think leadership with equity in a business would want as short of a vesting period as possible (4 years is standard), but some founders are taking a contrarian stance by voluntarily signing up for 8 year periods. Why? Well, you could argue that shorter vesting schedules harm a founder's interest. Given that startups generally take roughly 8 years to exit (see below), a vesting period which fits that schedule would do a better job of keeping everyone aligned. Many of the folks pushing this idea are second time entrepreneurs jaded by previous founder fallout, so donā€™t shoot the messenger!

šŸ‘‚ Driftā€™s Tricia Gellman and InVisionsā€™s Brian Kardon recounted the biggest mistakes they made in their early CMO days on the SaaS Revolution Show. Both pointed to a lack of alignment with their stakeholders on where marketing should be focused as the #1 mistake, which is pretty ironic given that marketing is all about being a great listener to your audience! Another mishap was not moving quickly enough. You want to be able to make a noticeable impact in your company within your first 90 days, so Kardon suggests starting to look for new hires (if you are adding to your team) the day you sign. They also pointed out some simple improvements like more detailed reporting which can serve as quick wins.

āš¾ You are an SDR battling for a prospect's attention, hoping to grab just a few seconds of their spare time to pitch your product. So how do you reach them? We came across a fun thread on Sales Hacker weighing the two obvious choices ā€“ phone or email. The final answer isā€¦ Well, it depends. For more transactional, lower ARPU products, an email first followed by a call (if they donā€™t respond) lays the groundwork by sharing key info upfront, and gives high interest prospects a chance to identify themselves before you expend too much energy . For higher value enterprise tools, a call right off the bat which demonstrates that you have done your homework and took the time to specifically dial them is well worth the output.

šŸ’µ B2B SaaS coā€™s have much more complex billing scenarios than your basic subscription box startup, which is why they require sophisticated tools to manage their payments. Pure product capability is of course the number one factor in the decision but fees (both as a percentage of revenue billed and per transaction) can end up being a huge variable as they vary greatly from vendor to vendor. Subscription analytics tool Baremetrics offered a list of potential picks along with their key features and fees so you can cut right to the chase. The larger your business and revenue flowing through your payments solution, the more appealing a flat rate with low variability will be.

šŸ§  The hardest part of creating a startup isnā€™t building a product, itā€™s getting people to actually care about it. Go-to-market is how we make people care, but that strategy is largely informed by how your product is built, making the two interconnected. Merci Victoria Graceā€™s (Former Director of Product at Slack) guide to building a sellable product explains this dynamic and why success boils down to how your product makes people feel. For example, creating ā€œDay 0 Valueā€ which immediately gives users the feeling theyā€™ve mastered a new workflow triggers a powerful dopamine rush that leaves them wanting more. This and similar product emotional experiences makes users willing to suffer through areas of friction in your app, and turns them into long standing customers.

šŸ‘ On Patrick O'Shaughnessy's Invest Like the Best, former AmpPush CEO Jesse Pujji dropped in to give a high level explainer on performance marketing and where most companies get it wrong. Making big Facebook or Google ad buys without an understanding of your funnel is the most common culprit of wasted dollars, but he also points to CEOs deferring marketing activities towards others as a key mistake. Thereā€™s really no one who can explain why their product is a winner better than the CEO, so as a rule of thumb, Pujii suggests CEOs spend half as much time on product as they do on developing unique marketing strategy. A lack of patience can also be the killer ā€“ it should take 90 days with more than 50% of a CEOā€™s time and focus to really get a channel nailed down, a big commitment which is worth the effort.

šŸ„¶ Many marketers feared their budgets, and even their jobs, were at risk during the thick of the pandemic, as itā€™s no secret that companies often look to cut marketing expenses first. And while itā€™s true that budgets were chopped significantly (44% of CMOs lessened spend), ā…” of markets felt that the importance of their role actually increased during these spending freezes. With less money to play with, ensuring that your businessesā€™ dollars go further was critical, and marketers were undoubtedly the best equipped to make that happen. As tough as times as they were, we think it actually aided in changing the narrative around marketing as a somewhat less important department.Ā 

šŸ–±ļø Thereā€™s a counterintuitive trend occurring in Google search as weā€™re seeing an increase in the number of searches along with a decrease in total clicks. More specifically, Sparktoro highlighted that 65% of Google searches in 2020 didnā€™t result in a click at all! There are a couple prime suspects. One: Googleā€™s improving answer box could be using top results to address questions pre-click (good for users, bad for all brands who arenā€™t the #1 result). Two: the pandemic pushed more users from desktop to mobile, which is 30% more likely to produce no click searches. Flighty, short attention mobile users makes sense to us, and puts more power in Googleā€™s hands as top of the page placements become the only worthwhile spots on SERPs.

šŸ‘Ÿ What can B2B SaaS learn from the world of NFTs and sneakers? More than you think. Product drops where creators announce they will offer a limited amount of products at a specific time can build crazy hype. NBA Top Shot announced they were doing a new drop in a few hours and literally had to push the time because of the overflow of traffic to their site. Contests and raffles are another go to for NFTs and sneakers that are worth looking at ā€“ ask users to complete a few actions such as liking a post or referring a friend and gain a chance to win big. These tactics might feel outside of the standard software playbook, but one of the best ways to stand out in B2B SaaS is to not be boring!

šŸ¤¬ We listened to Gong.ioā€™s Mike McEuen (Senior Marketing Manager) chat about the companyā€™s most successful marketing tactics on the SaaS Marketing Superstars pod. Theyā€™ve seemingly been everywhere since early 2019, and it started with carving out a voice on LinkedIn via organic posts, which remains one of their top traffic sources today. Unlike Facebook, which pretty much requires businesses to buy ads for exposure, LinkedIn offers great visibility that can lead to ultra efficient customer acquisition. Visibility of course relies on well crafted content, which McEuen thinks Gong did by taking a hard, counterintuitive stance on sales. For example, they posted data showing that cursing on calls actually led to more deals closed.

šŸŒæ Every once in a while itā€™s helpful to take a step back from your ā€œin the weedsā€ marketing tactics and evaluate your holistic approach to make sure you are addressing all of the core channels you need to be. Alex Kracov, the VP of Marketing over at Lattice, published a 2021 B2B SaaS marketing guide which can serve as a refresher on all of those areas you should be considering. It includes loads of resources to help with everything from early marketing activities like positioning, all the way down to more complex B2B demand generation frameworks and paid growth strategy. Highly recommended.

šŸ“± Another area of marketing we see growing in B2B SaaS is SMS. Text might feel invasive for business use cases, but the simple truth is that 98% of text messages are read while only 18% of marketing emails are opened, so if a potential customer is open to giving you their cell, you should utilize it! The linked article above includes helpful templates which demonstrate how SMS can be used for demo requests, support, and feature launches, but we would start slow and only text for sales needs so you donā€™t overwhelm customers. In terms of what to use, Podium is the leader in B2B text messaging software, and for the more technically inclined, you can use a combination of Segment and Twilio to set up SMS on your own.

šŸ›ļø Referral marketing programs are most commonly associated with B2C products in retail and finance, but we wholeheartedly believe they are B2B SaaS workable as well. Even if you are skeptical, the potential benefits greatly outweigh the cost of testing. You wonā€™t just be lowering your CAC by having existing customers bring in cost effective leads, you should also end up increasing your retention numbers as customers referred by other customers have a 37% higher retention rate. With B2B SaaS products, cash credits are an awkward incentive as you are selling to a business, not an individual, so a free month of subscription or discount on the buyerā€™s next bill is usually the way to go.

šŸ“¦ When we talk about stickiness itā€™s usually around customer retention, but weā€™re going to take a step back here and take a look at how to make your ideas stick. In Chip and Dan Heathā€™s Made to Stick, the two brothers cover the 6 qualities which your ideas must have to stay top of mind, which they cleverly built to spell out success (which, in itself, makes their idea sticky!).

šŸ“Š When creating or even just rebuilding your companyā€™s financial model, thereā€™s little reason for you to start from scratch. There are dozens of resources around SaaS modeling which can serve as a great starting point. StĆ©phan Nasserā€™s review of his top 12 choices, which compares each based on 5 key criteria, should be the first stop of your modeling journey. We personally are big fans of Taylor Davidsonā€™s SaaS Financial Model and SaaS: Enterprise, SME & Users by Alexander Jarvis (both covered in the article).

āš¾ If youā€™re a founder or CEO, youā€™ve probably provided VCs/PEs with details on your business to help them evaluate the opportunity of investment. But you never get to see what happens to that data, or how it is pitched amongst their investment committee. So itā€™s pretty cool that Bessemer publishes their investment memos, sharing some inside baseball on their most successful deals like Shopify, LinkedIn, and Twitch. The risks outlined in each are particularly interesting, as you can see how they were able to overcome those challenges after the fact. Itā€™s best for you as a company to highlight those risks ahead of time, and provide ammo to combat concerns.

šŸ”‹ Annual software reports are often repetitive (did you hear that software is eating the world?!), but the latest from Battery Ventures didnā€™t disappoint. The tl;dr is the general market consensus of what a good SaaS business looks like (for ex. 120%+ net retention or 80%+ gross margin) is falling apart, as there has been an expansion of playbooks which prove that you can be a stellar SaaS co without attaining ā€œbluechipā€ metrics. So how do you evaluate businesses if those mentioned benchmarks arenā€™t always the best indicator of success? By digging deep into cohorts economics ā€“ the linked sheet from Batter is a helpful template to get you started.

šŸŽ’ Education can be a difficult vertical to sell into ā€“ the sales cycles are long with multiple decision makers involved, and your product better be squeaky clean to get past IT. GoGuardian founder Advait Shinde recounts how he faced these obstacles on The SaaS Podcast, receiving countless rejections for his classroom management software in their first years of the business. He and his cofounderā€™s young age and lack of experience didnā€™t help their case, but he kept a positive mindset and was persistent with his prospects, who slowly but surely started to come around. Fast forward to today, and theyā€™re used by 18 million studies and above 50m in ARR. Of course there are many reasons why Shinde was able to succeed, but as youā€™ll hear in the pod, he credits persistence above all else.

ā˜• When it comes to raising capital from SaaS lenders, growth is the metric which founders and CEOs tend to think will have the greatest impact on their success. And while thatā€™s not totally off, the truth is that not all growth is weighed equally ā€“ lenders and investors will be specifically zeroing in on your growth efficiency to understand your ability to pay back their capital invested. In the linked article, Espresso Capital explains how to calculate key growth efficiency metrics, what they can tell you about your business, and the important role they play in financing.

šŸ‘” Most bootstrapped SaaS companies donā€™t have board meetings because the board only consists of its founder! But we still think thereā€™s value in holding boards even if you arenā€™t forced to ā€“ itā€™ll help you summarize and digest your quarterly progress as well as polish your board skills, which you and your company may benefit from down the line. This simple board meeting structure is a great one to follow for those looking to dip their toes into water. It tackles key KPIs like growth, runway, and retention up front when your team will be most engaged, and keeps your total meeting time to a concise 2 hours or less.

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Tomasz Tunguz
Hiring
Strategy
Why Fast Learning Curves are So Important to Startups

šŸ’„ Revenue growth can pick up quickly, and if you arenā€™t prepared with a plan to scale your team, that growth can halt just as fast as it started. Tomasz Tunguz makes a case for planning at least six-months out when it comes to hiring. Using a hypothetical dev department, he shows how important it is to evenly distribute workload between department heads, managers, and employees. You should also plan how different job functions will evolve with your company. But the real key to successfully scaling your team is knowing the type of people you want to hire during this stage. Software is a unique industry, people who are hungry to learn and adaptable to the quick (and sometimes seismic shifts) we face will do best..

Grizzle
Marketing
Case Study
How Headspace Built a Content Marketing Strategy That Generates Over 410,000 Monthly Organic Visitors

šŸ§˜ Last year, Headspace generated over 400,00 organic site visitors each month, and it wasnā€™t just because everyone seriously needed a way to chill out. They did an incredible job with their content marketing strategy, which Grizzle recently took some time to decode. Their home page shows exactly what they do best ā€“ focus on the customer. Rather than mentioning what they do, it breaks down their content silos to meet their personas' needs, for example, specifically targeting visitors who want to sleep better or be less anxious. Itā€™s also clear they subscribe to the 10x approach, diving deep into the science behind their meditation methods and creating highly educational content not geared towards selling.

The SaaS Revolution Show
Strategy
Listens
Case Study
Moving your company upmarket with LB Harvey, Front

šŸ§— The SaaS Revolution podcast recently had LB Harvey, CRO at Front, on to discuss how to bring a company upmarket. One point she made which is worth repeating is that when you move to a larger customer segment in the B2B world, you are not going to win over customers because you are cool or have cutting-edge UX/technology. Midsize and enterprise clients truly only care about how your solution will help transform their business, so aligning your customer, sales, and marketing teams to develop in-depth use cases is much more important when making that move upmarket.

Omar Nasser
Product
Strategy
How an Early Stage Startup Can Operationalize Its Way to Product-Market Fit

šŸ„¼ We donā€™t want to be the guys who suck all the fun out of the room, but weā€™d caution any founder against releasing their latest technical invention without extensive thought. Startup success is determined by how well you can create and iterate products that solve your customersā€™ needs. When you begin to validate your product, you should create a hypothesis rooted in your marketā€™s past behaviors. More than showing where the big wins are, using a scientific approach to product iteration and validation helps you identify points of failure before they become a time and money suck.

Intercom
Growth
Strategy
10 technical strategies to avoid when scaling your startup (and 5 to embrace)

šŸš“ Most of the time, when we think about scaling, we prioritize marketing, sales, and customer success. Equally as important is your product's technical side - network bandwidth, features, and security are all important pieces of your product that need to evolve as you scale. Intercom recently broke down some of their best advice for scaling. There are a few obvious ā€œdonā€™ts,ā€ like avoiding technical debt and not over-optimizing. Given some of the recent headlines and as more companies rely on SaaS products, thereā€™s a strong case to be made for building security from the start. For one, itā€™s easier to be proactive than reactive. Secondly, as you scale, you could be looking at moving into new customer segments - and if those segments include enterprise customers, youā€™ll need to provide proof of your security safeguards.

Built In
Customers
Growth
Welcome To The Era Of Customer Led Growth

šŸ‘‚ Weā€™ve seen several companies move away from the lead funnel acquisitions framework to a more customer-centric flywheel. Embracing this mindset shift means that your customer goals (not company) should be at the core of your growth engine. Hereā€™s where customer-led growth (CLG) comes into play; as the name suggests, the strategy entails taking a deep dive into customer experiences and actions to see where your growth levers are. In other words, your customers tell you their needs, and you interpret their feedback into the product. While slightly different from the product-led growth theory, if they are combined the two strategies can be very powerful. Ā One word of caution - be selective about the feedback you incorporate; segmentation is vital here.

Get Latka
Growth
Retention
16 Steps Outreach.io Took To Build a $1.1 Billion SaaS Company

šŸ§™We are always down for a good case study on how companies were built. So itā€™s no surprise that this write-up on how Outreach was able to break billion-dollar status caught our attention. There are a plethora of unconventional strategies to put in your playbook, but spoiler alert- none of them center on marketing or sales wizardry. Instead, they set a rather unusual B2B North Star Metric, and prioritized monthly active users above all other metrics. The team became razor-focused on making their users daily users and created a job role with the specific goal of getting 70% of new licenses to daily uses. Driving home the product's value and specifically focusing on adoption versus customer success. The effort was wildly successful- the company boasts a 140% annual net revenue retention rate.

Etienne Garbugli
Product
Strategy
Solving Product

šŸ’£ Weā€™re about to drop a truth bomb on you: the disconnect between your product and your customer is a problem you will never really solve. There is some good news though, this disconnect provides huge growth opportunities. Solving Product, by Etienne Garbugli, offers advice on identifying the service gaps between your product and your audience. The book aims to help product managers proactively identify gaps between the products they create and what customers are actually looking for. We were pretty impressed with how actionable the book is, providing a different perspective of how product people can decode customer feedback and hone-in on what they are actually asking for.

Lindsay Jopson
Product
Development
Your Product Backlog Has an Event Horizon That You Should Be Terrified Of

šŸš§ Stagnant product backlogs are a consistent problem amongst software companies. Thereā€™s really two things to balance ā€“ deciding what products to prioritize and then completing the actual work to deliver them on time. We think this take on backlog management could be worth testing because it similarly splits your backlog into two separate sections, the assumed backlog (reserved for features and updates that you have been ideated) and the realized backlog (the actual work that needs to be done by engineering to complete the assumed backlog). Itā€™s not rocket science, but should cut down on misalignment between those tasked with coming up with features and those who will build it.

SaaStr
Metrics
Finance
Knowing ā€” and Sharing ā€” Your Zero Cash Date

šŸ’° We know the your list of SaaS metrics to measure can feel endless, but one we think is worth adding to your management dashboard is Zero Cash Date (ZCD). Itā€™s exactly what it sounds like; the day you will run out of cash based on your existing burn rate. The time span from your date of measurement to ZDC will probably change every one or two months based on how your revenue and expenses vary, so when you see that number shortening, itā€™s a good reminder to cut back on inessential activities which could be driving expenses up.

From the Blog

Scaleworks Acquires Nextopia, Leader in Real-time E-commerce Recommendations and Personalization

Weā€™re excited to announce that Scaleworks has made its second acquisition from Fund II. Joining the family is a leader in e-commerce search technology, with specific expertise in real-time recommendation and personalization, Nextopia.

News

Scaleworks Acquires SearchSpring, Leader in E-commerce Search

Scaleworks is excited to announce today that weā€™ve acquired SearchSpring, a company that provides access to advanced searching for online retailers' websites. This acquisition is the first for Fund II, which we announced this past February.

Business

This is Scaleworks Debt Fund, a revenue based lender to B2B SaaS companies

As an avid follower of innovation (in all industries) and having worked and studied Finance for the last twenty years, the rise of challengers to the finance and banking industry is met with open arms.

Finance