Raaz Herzberg views her persistent imposter syndrome not as a weakness, but as a core driver. It keeps her paranoid and prevents complacency, ensuring she is always thoroughly prepared for any task. Instead of fighting it, she embraces it as a source of motivation.
In a domain dominated by fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD), Wiz intentionally avoids it. They believe customers connect better with empowerment and humor. Instead of scaring clients about potential breaches, they frame their product as a tool that enables teams to build securely and confidently, fostering a healthier partnership.
Instead of vanity usage metrics, Wiz focuses on a core customer outcome: helping customers resolve all critical risks. They gamified this by creating the 'Zero Criticals Club.' This metric proves the product is driving real organizational change, a key indicator of value and stickiness that is hard to replace.
Coming from product, Wiz's CMO sees marketing as liberatingly low-risk. A bad product feature creates permanent technical debt and maintenance costs. In contrast, a failed marketing campaign can be stopped instantly with no lasting negative impact, which encourages creative and unconventional experiments.
Instead of chasing quantifiable but often misleading metrics like MQLs or pipeline attribution, focus on qualitative feedback from sales. Successful brand marketing means the sales team enters 'warm rooms' where customers are already familiar with and receptive to the company, eliminating the need to start from zero.
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.
The world of Fortune 500 executives is a small, interconnected community. Rather than casting a wide marketing net, focus all energy on securing one key 'lighthouse' customer. Over-deliver value for them, even if the deal isn't profitable. Their endorsement and introductions to peers are more effective than any marketing channel.
Wiz's product team, trained at Microsoft, avoids building features that only solve for today's customer but break with tomorrow's enterprise giant. This 'infinite scale' mindset isn't about slowing down; it's about making conscious architectural choices that prevent time-consuming and costly refactoring later on.
A custom AI system named Marilyn, built by the CMO and one engineer, has become the central nervous system for Wiz's GTM team. It answers complex questions on competition, product docs, and strategy, even translating content for global teams. This demonstrates the immense ROI of building custom internal AI tools.
