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To secure its first high-stakes enterprise design partners, Method Security made in-person meetings non-negotiable, even turning down opportunities that could only happen virtually. This tactic forced buyers to take them seriously and allowed the founding team to build the personal trust necessary for a large organization to bet on them.
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.
The Method Security co-founders spent nearly a decade sharing ideas and trying to poach each other for various ventures. By the time the right idea and technological moment arrived, the team was already a cohesive unit with proven chemistry, eliminating the major risk of founder breakups.
In initial meetings with enterprise prospects, Nexla's founder didn't pitch a solution. He focused entirely on validating the problem. By asking, "Do you see this problem as well?" he framed the conversation as a collaborative exploration, which disarmed prospects and led to more honest, insightful discussions.
Securing executive buy-in is its own sales stage, distinct from champion agreement. Don't just repeat the demo for the boss. Use executive-level tactics like reference calls with their peers, exec-to-exec meetings to build relationships, or roadmap presentations to sell the long-term vision and partnership.
The founder's number one piece of advice is to 'get on the plane.' In an era of digital communication, physically meeting customers is a powerful differentiator. He was shocked by how many customers said his was the only startup vendor to ever visit their office. This direct, in-person connection provides insights that competitors miss.
Effective multi-threading isn't just about engaging multiple customer stakeholders. It also means strategically deploying your own team members—like founders, product experts, or engineers—at key moments. This "team sport" approach builds buyer confidence and de-risks complex enterprise deals.
Executives are inherently skeptical of salespeople and product demos. To disarm them, frame the initial group meeting as a collaborative "problem discussion" rather than a solution pitch. The goal is to get the buying group to agree that a problem is worth solving *now*, before you ever present your solution. This shifts the dynamic from a sales pitch to a strategic conversation.
For a new channel sales engineer, success depends on building strong, foundational relationships. This requires actively ignoring the post-pandemic 'work from home' norm and getting face-to-face with partners, whether in an office, restaurant, or bar, to build trust and strategic alignment.
While getting a design partner to pay is good validation, getting them to invest in your company is the ultimate form of commitment. This aligns incentives at the deepest level, ensuring you get consistent, high-quality feedback and strategic support from top decision-makers.
To build immediate trust and demonstrate value, QED partners engage with founders by simulating a board-level conversation from the first meeting. This "pretend I'm your investor" approach showcases their expertise and builds rapport, proving their founder-friendliness rather than just promising it.