The idea that enterprise sales average 12-18 months is a misleading myth. Sales cycles follow a power law: if you're solving a C-level executive's number one priority, the deal closes in weeks. Anything else gets deprioritized and drags on for a year or more.
While incumbents sell roadmaps, startups can collapse enterprise sales cycles by demonstrating a fully functional product that is provably better *today*. Showing a live, superior solution turns a year-long procurement process into a 60-day sprint for motivated buyers.
Large, complex sales require a long sales cycle. High performers strategically initiate these "big game" hunts in the first quarter, giving them the necessary runway to close within the fiscal year. Waiting until later quarters means these deals won't contribute to the current year's results.
Cybersecurity firm Wiz achieved hyper-growth by optimizing for a rare metric: the ratio of deal size to implementation speed. By closing large, six-figure deals in weeks instead of months, they defied the typical enterprise trade-off between deal size and sales cycle length.
If a large customer drags out a pilot indefinitely, it's a sign that your solution isn't solving a visceral, high-priority pain. When the need is urgent, enterprises will "bulldoze" through internal bureaucracy to get the product into production quickly.
A compliance software company identified a powerful trigger: publicly disclosed "material weaknesses." Targeting these companies created immense urgency, as they were under regulatory pressure to act. This hyper-targeted approach led to a deal closing in three months, slashing the typical six-to-nine-month sales cycle.
The difficulty of enterprise procurement is a feature, not a bug. A champion will only expend the immense internal effort to push a deal through if your solution directly unblocks a critical, unavoidable project on their to-do list. Your vision alone is not enough to motivate them.
Author Vince Beese parallels the final sales stage with football's "red zone." Just as 74% of touchdowns are scored in the last 20 yards, 80-90% of enterprise deals are won or lost in the critical final phase. This stage demands a unique, hyper-focused approach, unlike earlier stages.
Counterintuitively, selling high-value solutions to wealthy individuals or large companies often involves less friction. Affluent buyers with significant pain points focus on the value of the solution and have the budget, simplifying the sales cycle.
Briq accelerates enterprise sales by focusing on a small, specific pain point and securing an initial payment, however small. This 'land and expand' approach, centered on tangible micro-value, builds commitment and opens the door for larger deals, collapsing sales cycles.
For large, complex deals, effective sales sequences should be designed for the long haul—sometimes a year or more—with less frequent touchpoints. This strategy prioritizes staying top-of-mind for future opportunities over the quick, intense cadences used for short-cycle sales.