Doppel's first enterprise customers came from referrals via their existing crypto clients. Founders from the crypto space, who previously worked at larger tech or finance companies, made introductions to their former colleagues, creating a warm path into new verticals.

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In a noisy, low-trust market, referrals are the fastest way to build credibility. Don't just ask passively; actively build a tight-knit circle of customers and peers where you mutually act as 'Yelp reviews' for each other to generate business.

Doppel initially sold to trust & safety and legal teams. However, they realized cybersecurity teams were the "power users" who derived the most value, evangelized the product, and were willing to spend more. This insight drove their successful pivot to the cybersecurity market.

The world of Fortune 500 executives is a small, interconnected community. Rather than casting a wide marketing net, focus all energy on securing one key 'lighthouse' customer. Over-deliver value for them, even if the deal isn't profitable. Their endorsement and introductions to peers are more effective than any marketing channel.

Building a social media audience is poor advice for SaaS founders. An audience offers passive reach (retweets), while a network of deep, two-way relationships provides true leverage (customer introductions, key hires, strategic advice). Time is better spent cultivating a network than chasing followers.

At the $1-10M ARR stage, avoid junior reps or VPs from large companies. The ideal first hire can "cosplay a founder"—they sell the vision, craft creative deals, and build trust without a playbook. Consider former founders or deep product experts, even with no formal sales experience.

Instead of constantly chasing new leads, businesses can find immense growth by deepening existing relationships. A tech company ignored a referral partner for two years, but two follow-up meetings later generated $11.2 million, demonstrating the untapped potential within current networks.

Founders whose startups were acquired by large enterprises can become your most powerful internal champions. They understand the startup mentality, know how to navigate internal politics and procurement, and are often motivated to bring in better technology. Actively seek them out.

Directly approaching large organizations is often ineffective. Instead, emulate Slack's growth model by getting individual employees to use and love the product. This creates internal champions who advocate for wider organizational adoption, pulling the product in rather than pushing it from the outside.

If referrals are your main acquisition channel, shift your focus from selling to the end-user to serving the referrer. Create a dedicated "customer journey" for your referral partners, equipping them with the right framing and tools to pre-sell your service at your desired price point.

Doppel secured its first $5k/month contract before having a product. The key was finding a forward-thinking early adopter and offering a month-to-month agreement. This de-risked the decision for the buyer, incentivizing them to pay for development to begin.