Episode Details
Back to EpisodesEnterprise SaaS: 6 Months With No Code, Then Revenue
Description
Thor Olof Philogene spent six months validating Stravito's enterprise SaaS opportunity with nothing but slide decks - no code, no product, no revenue. Then he entered a competitive bid against legacy vendors and had to build the product while proving it every two weeks.
In this episode, Thor reveals how Stravito landed Fortune 2000 customers like Comcast, Electrolux, and McDonald's as a tiny startup. You will learn why founder-led enterprise sales gave them an unfair advantage, how paid proof-of-concepts replaced free trials, and the costly mistake of scaling into new sub-segments before proving product-market fit in each one. This is a masterclass in selling to enterprise as an early-stage B2B SaaS sales team.
What You Will Learn
- How to validate an enterprise SaaS opportunity before writing a single line of code
- Why paid proof-of-concepts with biweekly checkpoints outperform free trials
- How founder-led selling to enterprise creates an unfair advantage
- Why focusing on one FMCG sub-segment for two years built the reference customers needed to expand
π Key Lessons
- π’ Validate enterprise SaaS demand before writing code: Stravito interviewed 10 companies including Coca-Cola and Johnson & Johnson for six months using slide deck concepts only.
- π€ Founder-led enterprise sales lets you sell the vision: Thor drove sales personally for two years, credibly pitching the product's future while feeding feedback directly into the roadmap.
- π― Focus enterprise SaaS on one sub-segment before expanding: Stravito doubled down on FMCG companies for two years, building vertical expertise and case studies that converted better than broad targeting.
- π° Charge for proof-of-concepts from day one: Stravito used paid PoCs with biweekly elimination checkpoints instead of free trials, validating willingness to pay under real customer pressure.
- π Scaling into new segments prematurely wastes enterprise SaaS resources: Thor spent a year expanding beyond FMCG before proving product-market fit in each vertical.
Chapters
- Introduction
- Favorite quote and the importance of great people
- What Stravito does and the $90B market research market
- Why TechCrunch called Stravito the Netflix of knowledge management
- Revenue and fundraising - $23M raised, multiple seven figures ARR
- Origin story - from iZettle to founding Stravito
- Validating the problem by interviewing 10 enterprise companies
- Narrowing focus to Fortune 2000 market research teams
- Leveraging co-founder networks for warm introductions
- Building the MVP with slide-level concept validation
- Six months of iteration before writing any code
- Competing against legacy vendors in enterprise sales
- Winning paid proof-of-concepts as a tiny startup
- Five months of biweekly checkpoints to win the first contract
- Founder-led sales and selling the vision
- Overcoming enterprise objections about startup risk
- Sub-segment strategy and FMCG focus
- Sub-segment-specific campaigns and content marketing
- Simplifying referral programs for 5x growth
- The cost of scaling sub-segments before product-market fit
- Why throwing money at online ads rarely works
- Adding services alongside enterprise SaaS
- Lightning round
Resources
- Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/320
- Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email