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To attract enterprise buyers, Linear evolved its messaging from product features that appeal to individual contributors (e.g., keyboard shortcuts) to business value that resonates with CTOs (e.g., organization-wide efficiency gains). This shift is critical for any company moving upmarket.

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In enterprise sales, the user and buyer are different people. While the user needs a problem solved, the buyer needs a business outcome that advances their career. Product managers must identify and build for the metric that makes their buyer look good—like cost savings or productivity gains—to secure the sale and ensure product success.

Executives don't care about tactical benefits like 'five fewer clicks'. A crucial skill for modern sellers is to extrapolate that tactical user-level gain into a strategic business outcome. You must translate efficiency into revenue, connecting the dots from a daily task to the company's bottom line.

A product's value has two components: its technical capabilities and the business outcomes it enables. The most effective salespeople are those who can seamlessly translate technical features and use cases into tangible business impact, speaking the language of both IT and executive buyers.

Customers don't buy features, software, or services; they buy change. Your focus should be on selling the results and the transformed future state your solution provides. This shifts the conversation from a commodity to a high-value outcome.

In a market where every vendor claims to be "AI-powered," differentiation comes from focusing on outcomes. AI should be messaged as a force multiplier that improves existing workflows, enhances efficiency, and provides intelligence, not as a standalone product.

Competitors' brochures all look the same. The real differentiator is articulating the customer's journey from a previous state to an improved one. Frame your value proposition around their growth, efficiency, and success.

Most positioning frameworks jump from features (e.g., "dashboard") to benefits (e.g., "save time"). Add a crucial "capability" layer that answers "What do I actually *do* with the product?" to clarify the use case and connect features to outcomes.

Many companies fall into the trap of talking only about their product's features. Overcome this 'Me, Me, Me Syndrome' by reframing your message to focus on what users can achieve with your product, translating features into tangible value and capabilities.

Customers don't buy features like "16 gigabytes"; they buy the benefit, like "1000 songs in your pocket." Stop listing the technical components of your offer. Instead, articulate the tangible outcome and transformation your customer will experience.

To create transformational enterprise solutions, focus on the core problems of the key buyers, not just the feature requests of technical users. For healthcare payers, this meant solving strategic issues like care management and risk management, which led to stickier, higher-value products than simply delivering another tool.

Selling Upmarket Requires Shifting From Feature to Value-Based Messaging | RiffOn