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Successfully penetrating the commercial market isn't about creating a lighter version of an enterprise GTM strategy. It's a different game focused on radical simplification. The key is removing friction with self-service quoting, better distribution tooling, and clear packaging to create a repeatable, run-rate business.
SaaS companies scale revenue not by adjusting price points, but by creating distinct packages for different segments. The same core software can be sold for vastly different amounts to enterprise versus mid-market clients by packaging features, services, and support to match their perceived value and needs.
Most SaaS startups begin with SMBs for faster sales cycles. Nexla did the opposite, targeting complex enterprise problems from day one. This forced them to build a deeply capable platform that could later be simplified for smaller customers, rather than trying to scale up an SMB solution.
To effectively serve SMBs, B2B marketers must evolve their approach from collaboration ('do it with them') to automation ('do it for them'). SMB owners are not marketers and lack the time and staff to manage complex tools. The most valuable service is one that simplifies complexity and leverages technology to execute marketing tasks on their behalf, empowering them to achieve more with minimal direct involvement.
uSecure initially underestimated how resource-constrained MSPs are. Their breakthrough came when they moved beyond simple PDF guides and built a white-labeled sales prospecting tool. This tool helped partners automatically build a data-driven business case for their own clients, proving uSecure understood their challenges and driving scale.
Pendo's CPO advocates for a blended approach in enterprise B2B. The product must enable self-service and stand on its own (PLG), but a skilled sales team is crucial for navigating complex procurement, building business cases, and establishing trust with large, regulated customers.
Instead of pursuing complex, open-ended consulting projects, partners can scale more effectively by creating productized, "turnkey AI" offerings for specific business units like legal or marketing. This approach lowers the adoption barrier for customers by delivering predictable results for a defined use case, making it easier to sell into departments or smaller businesses.
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.
Building a fully self-serve product doesn't just cater to small customers. Companies like Square and Figma found that large, sophisticated users often prefer to sign up and explore advanced features on their own. This creates a powerful bottom-up adoption wedge inside large organizations, bypassing traditional top-down sales.
While conventional wisdom suggests moving upmarket for growth, Sensei chose the opposite path to scale from $40M to $100M ARR. They partnered with Pax8 to target a vast number of smaller customers downstream, leveraging the channel's reach for a "10x proposition" without the heavy investment required for enterprise sales readiness.
Despite fewer resources, smaller enterprises often succeed with ABM where large tech fails. Their success stems from faster alignment between sales and marketing, fewer layers of bureaucracy, and the agility to create and execute campaigns quickly without being bogged down by silos.