There’s a meme, a CommonThink, among certain segments that Outbound Sales is Bad, or at least, a Little Unseemly.  And maybe a lot bit Old School.

That we’re in a new world of sales, a new Product-Led world, where leads come in, prospects can try and learn before they even talk to a human, and then sometimes, a sales rep thoughtfully answers questions, models business process change, and helps them decide how and why, and if, to buy.

Screen Shot 2014-05-21 at 5.23.42 PM

And that’s true.  We are in that world.  Inside sales is terrific, self-serve can be great.  Warm leads are great.  AI can help.  Live trials of easy-to-use-and-deploy web services really have changed the game.

And yet …

The reality is, by revenue, this isn’t the way the majority of the world buys enterprise software.  The majority of the world gets exposed to a vendor — vs. searching on Google or ChatGPT for one.  

And the majority of enterprise buyers don’t spin up an active trial on their own.  They don’t just opt into a funnel.  The majority of the world, by revenue, wants to lean back and get a one-on-one demo.  And maybe even, buys without ever really even using the product much, or at all.

And the higher you sell up in an organization, the less free trialin’ is going.  SVPs only do so many free trials, trust me, having been a VP in the Fortune 500.  If you wanted my budget in the F500, dude, you had to sell to me.

And it turns out, somewhere between 1 times out of 10, and 9 times out of 10 (depending on the product, the market dynamics, etc.) … the best way to Sell High is to do Outbound Sales.

You want to get to an SVP, a CIO, a VP of XYZ?  You gotta get to ’em.  Call ’em.  Email ’em.  Market to them, as well, of course — but that alone may not be enough.  Net net, outbound works here.

And in general, the higher the ACV, the larger the deal size, the better outbound works.  The unit economics come together easier.  You can pay people a solid commission, with a relatively low hit rate … if they close six-figure deals.

Here’s my only point, net net:  in the early days, focus on what works, and double down on it.  If you have leads, smother them with sales and success love.  And if you have leads, thus, focus on in-bound primarily in the early days.  If you have no leads, you may have to start with outbound anyway. 😉

Down the road though, you’ll need and want both.  Few web services, if any, have enough leads, and enough high enough in the org chart, to meet their entire plan.  And even if you do, who wouldn’t want to grow 10% or 20% faster?  Everyone would.  So even if you are mainly an inbound machine, you’ll want to add outbound later to grow faster.  [This is Aaron Ross’ original point in, and even before, Predictable Revenue — Outbound Sales can be a layer, as it is / was at Salesforce].

Whatever the ratio is, be flexible, and understand, you probably want to figure out your optimal inbound/outbound ratio.

Because usually, it takes both.

(note: an updated SaaStr Classic post)

Related Posts

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This