visit
Once you , you have to put your entire company focus on it.
It doesn’t mean you need to drop your customers outside that segment, but there’s definitely a re-prioritization that needs to occur.
You want to as quickly as possible. The more customers trust that your company is an expert in the field, the more likely they are to buy from you.
To do this, you need to become one of them.
Prospects should be your friends.
Get to know them, spend time with them. You need to want to be with them, show that you care and demonstrate that you’re building for the long run.
Being an outsider is only acceptable in the early days.
For a technology company targeting the energy industry like , this meant immersing themselves in Houston, the “Silicon Valley of the Energy industry”.
and his co-founders did a lot of half-day Lunch and learns, they surrounded themselves with retired oil and gas SME veterans, did a lot of quick show and tell pilots and spent time where the customers were.
If you’re serious about , you have to be part of the community.
For a company like , selling a video analytics platform to marketers, this meant understanding where marketers spent their time.
They managed to hone in on a niche marketing segment after trying to sell to artists, compliance departments in organizations, the medical device industry and telecom companies.
Once , it became obvious that they needed to better understand their segment.
Wistia co-founder mentioned in an interview how they approached customers telling them they were thinking about sharing their blog posts on Hacker News, a startup news site.
The reaction they got was: “I’ve never heard of this website.” After asking more questions, they figured out that their customers typically read more industry publications and major newspapers, not tech blogs.
That helped them realize that they weren’t going to be able to reach prospects without digging deeper.
They had to figure out where their customers spent time, what books they read, what blogs they checked out, what movies they went to — everything about their micro-target.
From there, the decision-maker had to become these prospect customers when writing copy, deciding what videos to make, what features to build.
Your beachhead has to be clear both internally and externally.
Defining what you’re not is a good way of reminding your whole team of your mission.
Take the time with your team to define your bad fits and your anti-personas. Make sure everyone understands what a bad lead looks like.
Working with the wrong clients does not help your reputation, your blood pressure, your work-life balance, or your business’s overall success.
One of the most important things in a startup is the decision-making process. If it’s clear on the inside who your startup is for, it limits the scope of discussions and enables your people to make quick customer decisions.
One of the better examples of internal alignment I’ve seen is , a Swedish data visualization company that went from an un-focused horizontal model to targeting a vertical in the chemical and biology space.
Once that decision was made, president repositioned the entire company around that vertical. His team was even informed not to take calls from prospects in other segments or customer groups.
Eventually, when Spotfire gained a dominant share of the chemical and biology segment, they revisited the messages from prospects outside their vertical.
After careful analysis, they expanded in the energy sector, which led them to open a sales office in Houston. Them as well.
As a founder, you have to be able to tell the difference between ‘never’, and ‘not now’.
Focus helps you attract the right opportunities, allows you to spend your marketing dollars in the right places, makes your sales targets less overwhelming, and makes your marketing more effective (Read: ).
The more distinctly you cater to a particular customer segment, the more important it is that you emphasize the targeted population’s needs or preferences in your website copy and graphics.
To properly target your niche market, you must craft your product messaging in a way that attracts the attention of your beachhead.
This can be:
All of these elements will evolve over time as you make your way through the adoption curve.
Plan to tighten the messaging as you capture a bigger share of the market.
Businesses want to work with vendors that are in it for the long haul. Long-term commitment helps reduce their risk.
You have to commit and focus to create real growth velocity. Company focus is a big part of it!
Enjoyed this story? 👏 Clap and get other people to discover it!
The Lean B2B Course 🎥 includes 5 hours of High-Quality Video Lessons, Worksheets and Templates expanding on the .
I publish articles on B2B customer development every week :
Originally published at .