The traditional sales discovery question "How do they buy?" focused on the procurement process and economic buyers. In a Product-Led Growth (PLG) motion, the crucial question is about the *usage journey*. Sales must analyze user behavior signals within the product—like downloads or manual views—to understand when and how to engage effectively.
In contrast to a lengthy, traditional enterprise sales cycle, a PLG motion with a small startup customer can be radically compressed. For example, at Datadog, the entire process—from identifying needs to agreeing on success criteria with the CTO and securing a commitment to buy—was often condensed into a single phone call, demonstrating extreme sales cycle efficiency.
In a PLG model, initial sales outreach should be purely helpful. The pivot to commercial conversations about SLAs, hosting, or premium features should be triggered only when user signals indicate they have reached a testing or pre-production stage. This aligns the sale with the user's critical moment of need, replacing the traditional focus on meeting an economic buyer first.
Leaders often misapply successful playbooks from past roles. Instead of force-fitting, they should deconstruct the sales motion from first principles: who is the user, what's already working, and how do they *really* buy in this specific context? This ensures the playbook fits the new company's unique dynamics, especially in a PLG environment.
