Snyk achieved developer adoption but failed to monetize until they addressed the needs of the actual buyer—the security team. They had to add governance and reporting features, realizing that user love doesn't automatically translate to sales when the user and buyer are different people.
For Polly's horizontal product, the founder learned the most critical mistake was assuming every user should be a paying user. The key to success was distinguishing the vast user base from the specific buyer persona, a trivial-sounding but fundamental insight that guided their entire strategy.
Even successful PLG companies like Figma eventually burn through their early adopter market. To avoid hitting an asymptotic growth curve, they must proactively build a traditional outbound sales team to tackle the enterprise market before the PLG engine stalls. Don't wait until you need it.
StatusGator initially targeted developers but found success only after realizing IT directors were the true buyers. The mistake was focusing on users who loved the tool but lacked the authority and budget to purchase it for their company.
Snyk saw low adoption when asking developers to add checks to their build process. The breakthrough was a GitHub app that not only flagged new vulnerabilities but proactively opened pull requests with the fix. This reframed the tool from a potential blocker to an indispensable, helpful assistant.
Initially building a tool for ML teams, they discovered the true pain point was creating AI-powered workflows for business users. This insight came from observing how first customers struggled with the infrastructure *around* their tool, not the tool itself.
Buildots' growth inflection happened when they stopped selling a data platform and started selling proactive risk alerts. The pitch changed from "Here's data to help you" to "If you don't fix this now, your project will fail." This simplified the value proposition and created urgency.
A common PLG pitfall is assuming the user base will naturally springboard into enterprise deals. Often, the enterprise buyer is a different person with different problems. This oversight can cost companies years, as they have to build a second, separate sales motion from scratch.
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.
Snyk combined bottom-up adoption with top-down sales in a 'pincer movement.' They leveraged existing developer usage within an organization as a powerful entry point for their outbound sales team to engage security leaders, turning user love into a compelling conversation with the economic buyer.
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.