10 Things Maybe Not to Do In The Earlyish Days
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A lot of rules are just that — guidelines. You can blaze your own path. 1 founder, 5 founders. Bootstrapped, overfunded. There are many ways to get there.
But here’s my list of things I don’t think you should do, almost always, in SaaS/B2B:
1. Committing for less than 24 months to get to product-market fit. Less is almost never enough in SaaS. You’ll run out of money, time, commitment, and more if all the founders don’t commit to 24 months to get to product-market fit. 12 or 18 aren’t enough. And yes, this is hard. More here .
2. If you do raise capital, raising less than 125% of what you need. You always need a little more than you think. If you raise < 125% of what you think you’ll need, odds are high you’ll regret it. You almost always need a little than you raise. A little more here .
3. Starting without any real, true customer interviews. Folks don’t do enough homework in the early days. Internet research is not enough. Your gut is rarely enough. Early interviews won’t be magic — customers can’t give you perfect feedback on wireframes. But it will help you avoid a ton of obvious mistakes, of thinking things are true in a market that are only sort of true. More here .
This edition of the SaaStr Insider is sponsored in part by?A-LIGN
4. Not paying up for the best VPs. The best VPs will rarely come cheap. But a great VP will be highly accretive. A mediocre one likely won’t be. Better to pay 50% more for a great hire that will do 500% more. More here .
5. Not paying themselves — once the company can afford to. This is a subtle one, but once you have enough revenue to pay yourself, make sure you do. Otherwise, working “for free” becomes an excuse to not hit the plan, go 110%, etc. More here .?
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6. Handing off sales to their first sale hire and not be involved in sales anymore. This just never works. You will always be involved in sales. Forever. Your role in sales will just evolve.? You will likely be more of a “middler”, dropping into deals, rather than closing or creating them.? But you always have to spend a lot of time on sales.
7. Not sharing bad news. This isn’t always fatal, but it does compound on itself. Your team, your investors, they can take it. They know start-up life isn’t perfect, nor a straight line. Hiding from bad news damages your culture and erodes support. More here .
This edition of the SaaStr Insider is sponsored in part by?Conga
8. Not getting out of the office. If you are a very low-end product, yes, maybe you don’t need to meet your customers and partners. But everyone else does. Go meet them. Get on a jet. Relationships are only built in person. Not a call, or email. More here .?
9. Not paying your mentors and top advisors. You are going to need a lot of help. A lot of it. If you are lucky enough to find 1 or 2 folks that can truly be mentors — pay them. Some stock options, or whatever. But free help doesn’t last. You’ll get a lot of free help, and leverage that. But pay the folks that help you more than once or twice. Or they’ll fade away. More here .?
10. Not agreeing who is CEO. This issue fades away later, but few things will wreck a start-up more than not agreeing who is CEO. A little more here .
The Anti-Consultant for Sales-led SaaS Scaleups → Clarity, No BS, Guaranteed Results | Author of The Remarkable Effect | Client stories in About
2 年So true Jason - #7: Not sharing bad news. This isn’t always fatal, but it does compound on itself. Your team, your investors, they can take it. They know start-up life isn’t perfect, nor a straight line. Hiding from bad news damages your culture and erodes support.? I've done about 35 interviews for my upcoming book about the big lessons learned from the past pandemic, and this one is coming out super strong. "Radical transparency" is critical for a startup to move forward as a team - good and bad times. - It builds trust more than it kills trust. - It grows a vibe of 'we're in this together' - that's super powerful - It creates a sense of urgency. - you'll lead by example - and with that, other problems in the business are acknowledged faster
Director - LMS Advisory, Advising SME's on Growth, Strategic Planning, Maximising Profit & Cashflow. Financial enabler. AI/Tech enthusiast | LMS | KeepMyBooks | WihseFP |Cerebiz |
2 年Every business can benefit from following these 10 Things, whether it be early days or entering a new stage of growth or a substantial business pivot. Thanks for summarising so well!
?????? Strategic Growth Executive | ?? Startup to Scale-up Leader | ?? Turning Data Into Stories & Stories Into Growth
2 年Longtime #startup #marketer here: ALL OF THIS. And it's not just relevant for #B2B. Most all of these things are spot-on for any early stage startup or company. I wish I could ???? on the subheads à la Medium because I would.
Founder/CEO at The Expert Press Inc.
2 年I feel like if there were a breathalyzer for these screwups, I'd be cuffed in the back of the squad car.
LinkedIn Top Voice | Founder & CEO, FlowCog Canvas | CPA | Full-stack Developer | Fractional CFO | Dad 2x
2 年On a founder's role in sales (well put!): "You will always be involved in sales. Forever. Your role in sales will just evolve."