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Wiz achieved an incredibly fast sales cycle because its product consolidated all four key purchasing personas—pain-haver, authority, user, and budget holder—into one individual, the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO). This eliminated internal friction and enabled near-instantaneous deal closures.
The idea that enterprise sales average 12-18 months is a misleading myth. Sales cycles follow a power law: if you're solving a C-level executive's number one priority, the deal closes in weeks. Anything else gets deprioritized and drags on for a year or more.
Security products are naturally sold top-down. CISOs need central governance over a fragmented tool landscape, and the product's value is subjective and hard to measure (like insurance). This environment favors a high-touch, relationship-based sales motion, making pure bottom-up adoption difficult to monetize.
Doppel initially sold to trust & safety and legal teams. However, they realized cybersecurity teams were the "power users" who derived the most value, evangelized the product, and were willing to spend more. This insight drove their successful pivot to the cybersecurity market.
Cybersecurity firm Wiz achieved hyper-growth by optimizing for a rare metric: the ratio of deal size to implementation speed. By closing large, six-figure deals in weeks instead of months, they defied the typical enterprise trade-off between deal size and sales cycle length.
To overcome internal assumptions that only the "head of payroll" mattered, the marketing team analyzed past wins. The data showed that 17 different job roles were involved in the customer's buying process, providing definitive proof to justify broadening their account targeting.
The key to accelerating from $1M to $10M in revenue was evolving the sales narrative. They moved from discussing technical details with CTOs to explaining business impact, like compliance and audit readiness, to non-technical buyers like Chief Compliance Officers and CFOs.
While historically a difficult approach, top-down CEO sales is currently highly effective for AI companies. Boards are pressuring CEOs to be "AI forward," which creates immediate budget and a willingness to buy, even before a clear ROI is established. This makes selling to the C-suite a viable go-to-market strategy.
Wiz's early growth was fueled by strong customer pull, not a sales push. They achieved this by solving a massive problem (cloud security) with a product that delivered tangible value in just 15 minutes. This incredibly short time-to-value for an enterprise product made early sales organic and rapid.
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.
Enterprise word-of-mouth isn't driven by long-term ROI, but by immediate, impressive value. Products like Wiz and Axonius became popular because customers could spend very little effort and see an immense amount of value almost instantly, compelling them to tell their peers.