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B2B SaaS Sales: 15 Pilots to Land a First Enterprise Deal

Episode 425 Published 1Β year, 1Β month ago
Description

Barb Hyman walked into a startup expecting to scale it - then discovered the product didn't work and she had six weeks of runway. She fired the entire team, rebuilt from scratch, and grew Sapia.ai to near 8-figure ARR. In this episode, you'll learn the B2B SaaS sales approach that relies on referrals over marketing, anchor logos over volume, and published research over pitch decks.

Barb reveals how she ran 15 pilots with Qantas Airlines before converting to an enterprise SaaS deal, why the US expansion failed after 18 months of spray-and-pray selling to enterprise buyers, and how handwritten Christmas cards and a gift register built a referral engine that now drives most of Sapia's enterprise sales pipeline.

Sapia.ai has 45 employees, $21M+ in funding, and NRR of 110-115% - proof that B2B SaaS sales fueled by customer obsession can outperform traditional marketing and demand gen.

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • 🏒 B2B SaaS sales need anchor logos first: Barb targeted trusted brands like Qantas and Woolworths because their logos gave Sapia instant credibility, making the next 10 enterprise deals easier to close.
  • πŸ“‰ Enterprise sales expansion fails without vertical focus: Sapia's US expansion used spray-and-pray sales across sectors. After 18 months, Barb pulled out and succeeded in the UK by narrowing to proven verticals.
  • 🀝 Referrals outperform marketing in B2B SaaS sales: Barb built a referral engine through handwritten Christmas cards, personalized gifts, and overinvesting in customer experience. Most pipeline now comes from unsolicited referrals.
  • 🎯 Only sell where your product is essential: Smaller customers where Sapia was "nice to have" churned fast. Barb shifted to only selling to enterprise companies where AI hiring was core to operations.
  • 🧠 Published research builds enterprise SaaS credibility: Sapia published 3-4 peer-reviewed ML papers per year. It took four years to see returns, but the credentialing now separates them in procurement.

Chapters

  • What Sapia.ai does and near 8-figure ARR metrics
  • Joining a broken startup and discovering the truth
  • Firing the team and rebuilding from scratch
  • B2B SaaS sales through empathy over pitch decks
  • Publishing research to build credibility
  • Landing Qantas after 15 pilots over several years
  • Overinvesting in customer service as a growth engine
  • Failed US expansion and the spray-and-pray mistake
  • UK expansion by narrowing focus to proven verticals
  • Lightning round

Resources

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