To accelerate adoption, sell to industrial clients the way they already buy. Instead of a large upfront CapEx sale, Calcetra offers a 'Heat as a Service' model. This allows customers to pay per unit of heat ($/MMBtu), mirroring how they purchase natural gas and removing the financial friction of adopting new infrastructure.

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Calcetra's core value proposition for heavy industry is not just decarbonization, but cost savings. Their thermal battery charges using cheap renewable electricity during off-peak hours and discharges high-temperature heat when needed, making clean energy more economical than traditional fossil fuels.

Clay deliberately chose usage-based over seat-based pricing because their ideal customer is a technical builder (GTM Ops, Growth Marketer), not an individual salesperson. This model aligns value with the systems these builders create for the entire team, rather than charging for every end-user who benefits from the output.

For mission-critical industries where downtime costs millions, a 'rip-and-replace' sales approach is a non-starter. Calcetra plans to first run its thermal battery alongside a customer's existing gas burners. This proves reliability and builds trust before asking for a full transition, significantly lowering the barrier to adoption.

Instead of pitching a future product, identify an enterprise champion's urgent, blocked project. Deliver the solution manually as a service first (e.g., a PDF report). This validates demand, generates revenue, and is a common path in enterprise software.

Constantly delivering custom solutions is inefficient and destroys profitability. Instead, define a standardized, repeatable service package that can be sold and delivered consistently, maintaining high margins and simplifying operations.

Lacking market comparables, Nexla priced its initial enterprise deals by first understanding the customer's internal cost to solve the same problem. They then proposed a price that was a clear fraction—like one-fifth or one-tenth—of that internal cost, making the ROI immediately obvious and justifiable for the buyer.

Enterprises are comfortable buying services. Sell a service engagement first, powered by your technology on the back end, to get your foot in the door. This builds trust and bypasses procurement hurdles associated with new software. Later, you can transition them to a SaaS product model.

For tools requiring a new workflow, like Factory's AI agents, seat-based pricing creates friction. A usage-based model lowers the initial adoption barrier, allowing developers to try it once. This 'first try' is critical, as data shows an 85% retention rate after just one use.

Move beyond selling features by offering a "Business Process as a Service" (BPaaS) solution. This involves contracting directly on the business outcomes clients care about, such as cost savings or revenue optimization. This model delivers an end-to-end capability and aligns your success directly with your customer's, creating a powerful value proposition.

Creating a new product category is slow. The fastest path to revenue is building a superior solution that replaces an existing, budgeted expense. By positioning against the cost of an in-house team or a legacy service, the purchase becomes a simple replacement decision, not a new investment.