We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Don't wait until your product is built to start selling. By scheduling a high volume of meetings (e.g., 3-4 per day per founder), you can use those conversations not to sell, but to discover true customer pull, refine messaging, and define your product based on real-time feedback.
To get unbiased feedback, don't mention your product. Instead, ask prospects about their #1 challenge. If they organically bring up the problem your product solves, you've found a real pain point and strong market pull.
Founders struggling with pipeline often try to sell their product in cold outreach, which fails. The initial goal is not conversion, but learning. Instead, sell the conversation itself by positioning yourself as an interesting person to talk to. This dramatically increases meeting rates.
To get meetings with busy leaders before her product was ready, founder Janice Omadeke explicitly stated, "I am too early for you to purchase this." This non-threatening approach lowered their guard, reframing the conversation from a sales pitch to a collaborative session focused on learning their problems.
Structure discovery into two distinct conversations for maximum effect. The first meeting should focus exclusively on uncovering the customer's blocked goals (demand), without mentioning a product. Use the second meeting to validate if a high-level solution sketch (supply) gets ripped out of your hands.
Use a ruthlessly simple, repeatable process for zero-to-one sales: 1) Craft a 'pull hypothesis,' 2) Schedule five conversations, 3) Execute the conversations to discover demand, not to sell, and 4) Analyze the results to refine your hypothesis for the next sprint. This forces focus and rapid iteration.
Rushing to market without validation is a recipe for failure. Instead, engage potential buyers and proposition leads as 'critical friends' in focus groups. Use their feedback to build a white paper, refine messaging, and create a product they actually need, even if it takes a year.
In the pre-product-market fit stage (the first ~20 deals), the sales leader's primary role is not just closing revenue, but acting as a product manager. They must be in every meeting to gather objections, find pockets of value, and translate raw market feedback into actionable insights for the engineering team.
A pre-product CRO conducts thousands of market conversations to validate demand and guide the product roadmap. This de-risks development by ensuring you build a product that customers will actually buy, a task more suited to a sales expert than a founder.
Pre-PMF founders get stuck in a frustrating loop: their outreach hypothesis is wrong because they haven't sold anything, but they can't get conversations to fix the hypothesis because it's wrong. This circular trap prevents progress until the founder breaks the cycle by changing their approach to simply getting meetings, not validating an idea.
Harvey's CEO found his product decisions were worse when he isolated himself to work on strategy. He realized his best product insights come from being deeply involved in sales calls 24/7. The direct feedback loop from talking to customers is more valuable for roadmap planning than any internal brainstorming session.