SaaSX — Execute Better. Grow Faster.

Real SaaS Sales Problems, And What To Do About Them


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Let me start by saying that I LOVE SaaS. I love using SaaS. I love helping SaaS companies. I love running my own SaaS company. And I really, really love building SaaS sales teams.

It’s an exciting time to be in SaaS, and opportunity is everywhere. 

But there are also a lot of uniquely modern sales challenges to overcome. It’s important that sales leaders acknowledge, and address these challenges head-on with their salespeople. When we train our teams for the realities of today’s selling environment, we arm them to compete and win.

It’s sales, marketing, and product

The thing is, these challenges aren’t squarely on the shoulders of sales because marketing and product share in the responsibility to overcome them. But sales is on the front line and bears the day-to-day responsibility to meet these challenges head-on.

Help your salespeople attack these challenges rather than ignore them. Because for every challenge, there’s an opportunity if you look at it from the right angle.

Four SaaS sales challenges

Challenge 1: Buyers are busy and overwhelmed.

This challenge really applies to any industry or product type, not just SaaS. Buyers are busy. They have tons on their plate. They are getting pulled in lots of different directions. They are juggling lots of varied responsibilities. They don’t always know what their priorities should be because their companies are evolving and shifting constantly. Getting and sustaining buyer attention can be a real challenge.

Opportunity: Sellers need to have empathy for this state of busyness. Empathy will help them hone their messages to the essentials, build value in all their outreach, and respect the time & attention of their buyers. Across the entire organization messages and content needs to be designed with simplicity in mind—leveraging content to cut through the clutter, and provide real value quickly. Communication, whether from marketing or sales, needs to be essential, relevant and useful.

Challenge 2: SaaS buyers can be pretty fickle. 

SaaS is “easy to try” (at least that’s the myth), and there are lots of products within any particular vertical. LOTS of products (see #3). This can cause commitment issues, and fear of making a final decision. The general perception of SaaS is either that it’s lots of work to set up and therefore buyers proceed with caution, or that it’s easy to try lots of different options. The sort of “It’s easy to try lots of things, and I can jump from one to the other before I make a commitment” thinking can lead to real buyer fickleness. They jump around and don’t dig in with any one product, skimming and trying here and there. This, of course, kills your churn numbers, and makes it hard to sustainably grow your business.

Opportunity: Here’s where the product really needs to do the heavy lifting. To reduce the fickle nature of buyers your product needs to be obviously indispensable. The key is designing products that provide value quickly and show wins for the buyer with minimal effort in an elegant way. It also needs to be easy to try and easy to buy. Easy is relative to your market and your competitors. Just remember you want to be the easiest to try and buy for your ideal customers. And then you want to instantly be able to demonstrate value in helping your customers achieve their desired outcomes.

Challenge 3: Buyers have so, so, so many choices.

The SaaS Report estimates there are 10,000 private Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) companies. There are 6,500+ marketing technology companies alone and about 800 in the sales tech landscape.
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SaaSX — Execute Better. Grow Faster.By SaaS Best Practices