Founders often start pitches by explaining their product's technology ("supply side"). Infomercials succeed by first showing the customer's struggle ("pull") in the first 5-10 seconds. This frames the product as an immediate solution to a recognized problem, making it instantly understandable and desirable.

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When explaining your product's tech, only mention what's relevant to solving the customer's problem ("pull-down"). Founders often describe their entire architecture ("technology-up"), which introduces unnecessary concepts, confuses buyers, and makes them feel they need to understand everything to make a decision.

Most pitches fail by leading with the solution. Instead, spend the majority of your time vividly describing a triggering problem the prospect likely faces. If you nail the problem, the solution becomes self-evident and requires minimal explanation, making the prospect feel understood and more receptive.

Sales conversations often rush to demo a "better" product, assuming the buyer wants to improve. The crucial first step is to help the prospect recognize and quantify the hidden costs of their current "good enough" process, creating urgency to change before a solution is ever introduced.

Instead of a feature-focused presentation, close deals by first articulating the customer's problem, then sharing a relatable story of solving it for a similar company, and only then presenting the proposal. This sequence builds trust and makes the solution self-evident.

Resist the instinct to explain what a feature is and does. Instead, first explain *why* it was built—the specific business problem it solves and why that's relevant to the prospect. This framing turns a feature walkthrough into a personalized 'test drive'.

Pitching a solution's features is ineffective because a product's value is meaningless without the context of a problem it solves. Buyers don't care about your "titanium coating" until they understand it solves their problem of "scrubbing egg crust off the pan." Start with the pain to make them care about your solution.

Buyers often volunteer the exact details of their problem—their project, its urgency, and their frustration with current options. However, traditional sales training teaches founders to ignore these cues, interrupt the customer, and pivot to pitching their solution, thereby missing critical information.

Effective marketing focuses on pain, not promise. If you can describe a prospect's struggles with excruciating detail, they will implicitly trust that you know the solution, often before you present your offer. The pain is the pitch.

Instead of leading with features, effective tech marketing starts with deep empathy for the user's specific problem, like a clerk asking if a customer needs to hang a picture on drywall or brick. The story then positions the product as the tailored solution to that unique challenge.

A common marketing mistake is being product-centric. Instead of selling a pre-packaged product, first identify the customer's primary business challenge. Then, frame and adapt your offering as the specific solution to that problem, ensuring immediate relevance and value.

B2B Pitches Fail by Describing Technical Features Before Articulating the Customer's Problem | RiffOn