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Had to do something painful today..
I turned down a deal with a prospect who is excited and ready to buy our product.
Why?
They have a specific need we can't meet without one-off product development work that doesn't fit into our vision and roadmap.
Sure, we could have built it.
And it might not have even taken that long.
But the reality is that their need doesn't fit into the value prop we're pursuing for our ideal customers.
Over the past twenty years I've seen this story play out, time and again. It always ends the same way.
Push to get it done.
Win the deal.
Unintended side effects.
Sunk costs.
Both parties throw good money (and time) after bad.
Then, as the late, great theologian Jimmy Buffett sings, it becomes "...a permanent reminder of a temporary feeling."
Instead, we recommended a couple of competitors who can serve their needs today, and offered our team to consult with them along the way.
(as Prof G says, "if this sounds like virtue signaling, trust your instincts...")
A few things gave me the confidence to make this decision:
1/ Our balance sheet
Churnkey (.co) is a lean, profitable SaaS company with a straightforward cap table. We are pursuing growth as hard as anyone else, but we're not beholden to outside influences pushing us to grow at all costs.
As a result, we think and act on a long-term time horizon (this is 1/3 of the reason I joined the company).
2/ Opportunity cost
To serve this need we would have sacrificed a portion of our product vision and value for a short-term dopamine hit.
Narrow thinking and short-term loss aversion would cause us to fall behind on serving other customers who fit our ICP (ideal customer profile) today.
3/ There's always tomorrow, and what goes around comes around
We'll be able to serve this customer even better when the time is right for both of us. I believe we built credibility in the process.
In business, and more specifically in SaaS, time is long and the world is small. People remember when you do the right thing, even if it stings in the short run.
At the end of the day, people put a lot on the line to do business with a SaaS company. They make decisions that can make or break portions of their career. Especially when it comes to mission-critical subscription revenue systems like the ones we work with.
So long, growth at all cost era.
Here's to the era of playing to win the long game.
What are the best long-term decisions you've seen your leadership team make in recent months?
#saas #sales #customersuccess #marketing

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