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Enterprise SaaS: Why Excited Customers Still Said No

Episode 440 Published 10Β months, 1Β week ago
Description

A prospective customer wanted to hug Rami Tamir after his pitch. Six months later, she rejected the product. That early lesson in misleading enterprise SaaS validation shaped how Salto grew from a self-funded idea to 8-figure ARR with $69M in funding. Founders will hear why building enterprise software in a new category is harder than it looks.

Rami reveals why he refuses design partners after a previous startup overfitted to one customer's $500K use case, how targeting discretionary budgets let director-level buyers approve enterprise SaaS deals without procurement, and what forced the team to reprice and move upmarket when the 2023 downturn wiped out their entire enterprise go-to-market strategy.

Salto helps teams manage and automate configuration of tools like Salesforce, NetSuite, and Okta. Rami previously built and sold three startups to Cisco, Red Hat, and Oracle - but selling to large companies in a brand-new category brought challenges even serial entrepreneurship couldn't shortcut.

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • 🎯 Early enthusiasm is not enterprise SaaS validation: A prospect wanted to hug Rami after his pitch but rejected the product six months later. Vague pitches let customers fill gaps with imagination that never matches reality.
  • πŸ“‰ Design partners can overfit your enterprise go-to-market: Rami turned down a $500K design partnership because it led nowhere. At another startup, a $1M first customer couldn't be replicated for a year.
  • πŸ’° Price for discretionary budgets to shorten sales cycles: Salto priced so a director-level buyer could approve enterprise SaaS deals without procurement, enabling fast land-and-expand across teams.
  • πŸ”„ Reprice and move upmarket during downturns: When the 2023 downturn eliminated discretionary budgets, Salto raised prices and shifted ICP to larger companies - recognizing that selling to large companies requires higher deal values.
  • 🏒 Build a two-layer qualification process for events: Salto filters visitors first for persona and ICP fit, then engages qualified prospects deeper. Medium-sized industry events outperform flashy conferences.

Chapters

  • Introduction
  • What Salto does and who it's for
  • Rami's background and three previous exits
  • Revenue, traction, and funding
  • Where the enterprise SaaS idea came from
  • The "can I hug you" moment and misleading feedback
  • Getting the first 10 customers
  • The dangers of design partners
  • Growth channels - events that work
  • Why Salto offers a free tier for enterprise software
  • Targeting discretionary budgets in a new category
  • How the 2023 downturn forced a pricing shift
  • Lightning round

Resources

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