We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
While consumer products can win on ease of use, enterprises primarily evaluate products based on their ability to increase profit or lower costs. Ease of use must be framed as a secondary benefit that drives those primary goals, such as saving employee time.
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.
While preventing a single multi-million dollar mistake is a product's biggest value, it's easier to sell based on quantifiable time savings. The justification "this costs one-fourth of a new hire" is a straightforward business case for a budget holder, making the sale simpler.
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.
SMB owners are not asking for technologies like AI by name. They are asking for outcomes and efficiency. B2B marketers should position advanced features not as 'AI' or 'video tools,' but as embedded, invisible solutions that make a marketing hour more impactful. The goal is to provide tools that a business owner can naturally use to get a return, without needing to become a technology expert.
Salespeople often project their own ROI calculations onto prospects. Instead, they must ask customers how they measure the effectiveness of past investments. This uncovers what truly matters to them, whether it's net profit, gross revenue, time saved, or even peace of mind.
A critical mistake in enterprise product management is to treat the user and the buyer as the same person. The daily user (e.g., an SRE) cares about features and usability, while the economic buyer (e.g., a CIO) cares about ROI and strategic value. A successful product must deliver distinct value to both, and the PM must treat them as separate personas.
Go-to-market executives are wired to think in currency. To be heard and get buy-in, product managers must translate concepts like tech debt or user joy into revenue, cost savings, or other financial metrics.
Professionals use sophisticated consumer apps like Nest and Ring at home, creating a powerful psychological contrast with their clunky work software. Startups can win by delivering a consumer-grade experience, which makes the product feel modern and intuitively superior to legacy enterprise tools.
Enterprise buyers purchase tools like Slack because employees love using them, not based on clear ROI. This presents a major adoption hurdle for non-viral, single-player products like enterprise search, which must find creative ways to generate widespread user adoption and love.
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.