Lenny's Podcast: Product | Career | Growth - How to hit revenue targets in a recession | Sahil Mansuri (Bravado)
Episode Date: December 4, 2022Sahil Mansuri is the CEO of Bravado, the world’s largest online sales community. Sahil is passionate about sales, and his experience dates all the way back to 2008, working for Obama’s presidentia...l campaign. During his time at Glassdoor, Sahil was able to close some incredible accounts, including Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon. In today’s podcast, we talk about why sales is a crucial part of any business and how to continue selling successfully through a recession. We get super-specific on building a conservative plan for the near future and cover everything from where to place your best salespeople to restructuring comp plans. The episode is full of great advice about how to shift with this market, improve agility, and perhaps grow an even stronger business with happier customers. —Find the full transcript here: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/how-to-hit-revenue-targets-in-a-recession-sahil-mansuri-bravado/#transcript—Where to find Sahil Mansuri:• Twitter: https://twitter.com/svmansuri• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sahilmansuri/• Email: sahil@bravado.co—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• Twitter: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—Thank you to our wonderful sponsors for making this episode possible:• Flatfile: https://www.flatfile.com/lenny• Merge: http://merge.dev/lenny• Miro: https://miro.com/lenny—Referenced:• Bravado: https://bravado.co/• Stumbling on Happiness: https://www.amazon.com/Stumbling-Happiness-Daniel-Gilbert/dp/1400077427• All-In podcast: https://www.allinpodcast.co/• How I Built This podcast: https://www.npr.org/series/490248027/how-i-built-this• The Blacklist on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/70281312• The Newsroom on Hulu: https://www.hulu.com/series/the-newsroom-3d51e070-e77d-4294-ac83-cab80d3f94dd• The West Wing on HBO Max: https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GX5nwgQDNJZ6aoQEAAAHJ• Jeopardy!: https://www.jeopardy.com/watch• Frasier on Hulu: https://www.hulu.com/series/frasier-0cb9b63b-de82-4751-99c9-1cb12118ab9d• Slack: https://slack.com/• Zoom: https://zoom.us/• Grain: https://grain.com/—In this episode, we cover:(04:19) Sahil’s background(08:26) What is Bravado? (10:27) How to shift your sales strategy to meet the market(12:00) How to set a conservative plan that still allows you to lean in when growth is possible(19:06) Why the downturn in tech may not be over anytime soon(21:34) How Bravado gets its data from users and creates global benchmarks (23:04) Why SAAS has an outdated comp structure(33:23) Why companies are resistant to restructuring comp plans(37:18) The problem with hypergrowth in today’s market(41:18) Why it’s time to shift into a retention-based strategy(43:28) Why your best sales staff should transition to post-sales for customer retention(51:20) What are warm intros, and how can existing customers help you get new ones?(59:30) How Sahil was able to get Facebook’s account at Glassdoor(1:08:08) Why CEOs are actually salespeople(1:12:50) How to survive a downturn(1:19:44) Lightning round—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's hard to plan what you should do for all of 2023.
And I think the advice that most founders are getting from their boards is when you have
limited visibility, you have to plan in the most conservative way.
And on the one hand, of course, that's true.
Like, you have to be conservative.
But on the other hand, you don't want to be unreasonably conservative because, you know,
you don't want to be floundering from like, oh, we're screwed, to everything's better,
to we're screwed, everything's better.
And so the way I think about setting up a plan when you have limited visibility and some major headwinds
is setting up a really conservative plan and then having milestones, short-term milestones,
that unlock the ability to lean into growth and spend based on hitting those targets.
Welcome to Lenny's podcast. I'm Lenny, and my aim here is to help you get better at the craft of building and growing products.
Today, my guest is Sahil Mansuri.
Sawhill is the CEO and founder of Bravato, which has built the world's largest online sales community
of over 300,000 salespeople, and they're now building SaaS products for salespeople.
Sawhill has one of the most unique perspectives on the art and skill of sales, partly because
of the community and the company that he runs, and partly because he was a longtime salesperson
himself.
And as you'll hear in this episode, he has closed some incredible deals, including a wild story
about cold emailing Cheryl Sandberg at Facebook and what that led to.
In this episode, we focus on what founders should change in how they do sales during this market
downturn, including how you should approach sales quotas, how you should rethink the way
you do comp plans for salespeople, how you do forecasting, also why you should refocus on
retention and your existing customers, how to improve your sales technique in general no matter
what role you're in.
As someone without a lot of depth in sales, I always find it fascinating to learn how to get better at sales.
And this episode has something for everyone.
With that, I bring you, Sahil Mansuri.
Hey, Ashley, head of marketing at Flatfile.
How many B2B SaaS companies would you estimate need to import CSV files from their customers?
At least 40%.
And how many of them screw that up?
And what happens when they do?
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after just one bad experience during onboarding.
So if your CSV importer doesn't work right, which is super common,
considering customer files are chopped full of unexpected data and formatting,
they'll leave.
I am 0% surprised to hear that.
I've consistently seen that improving onboarding is one of the highest leverage opportunities
for both sign-up conversion and increasing long-term retention.
Getting people to your aha moment more quickly and reliably is so incredibly important.
Totally.
It's incredible to see how our customers like Square, Spotify, and Zura,
are able to grow their businesses on top of FlatFile.
This is because flawless data onboarding acts like a catalyst to get them
and their customers where they need to go faster.
If you'd like to learn more or get started, check out Flatfile at Flatfile.com slash Lenny.
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So, Heel, welcome to the podcast.
Thanks, Lenny. Thanks for having me.
So we're going to be talking about sales and in particular what you should be adjusting in your company during these very turbulent market conditions.
But I thought first to be helpful if you just gave a little background on yourself to kind of give folks a sense of why you have such unique insights into the sales world.
So maybe just talk about a little bit of background and then what you do now, the company that you run now.
I've spent my whole career in sales.
I started out in sales when I was in college.
I worked on the Obama campaign.
we didn't call it sales, right? We called it turning out the vote or, you know, street teamwork or
field ops or phone banking, but it was sales. We were just, you know, selling the dream,
literally, the American dream as it were. And so, you know, I've been in some sort of a role
where my primary responsibility was to cold call, send emails, have conversations, objection
handle, and try to get someone to sign a contract for my entire career. And that has spanned, you know,
I started selling in September of 2008 was my first month with a quota.
So I started selling in the middle of the last financial crisis.
And in 2009, the company that I used to do sales for, which is called Meltwater,
this company, it's a pretty crazy story.
It's one of the few companies that has made it to $100 million in recurring revenue
without a drop of venture funding.
It's a Norwegian company, actually.
And if I remember correctly, don't quote me on the exact numbers here, but the company had basically gone 10 million to 30 million to 50 million to 70 million. And then in 2009, they went from 70 million to 69 million. It was the first year that they hadn't like not only increased revenue, but revenue had gone down. And in that year in 2009, I broke the company record for the most sales by any individual person. And in that year, in 2009, I broke the company record for the most sales by any individual person.
in one year in the history of the company.
And I say that not out of hubris or out of pride.
I say that because I've literally sold in a downturn.
In the middle of a recession,
I have been an account executive selling, carrying a quota,
and have been successful in doing it.
But then went on to be a sales leader
at a bunch of different places.
Probably most notably at Glass Store,
where I joined as one of the first 20-25 employees,
was responsible for enterprise sales there,
personally closed Facebook, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Ford, Visa, Bank of America, JP Morgan, Walmart, and I think it was at its peak at one point. I think Glastor had about a hundred of the Fortune 500 customers, and I'd sold about 60 of them myself. So I did a lot of, I've done a lot of selling in my career. Also a decent amount of sales management and sales leadership, but really my forte is selling. I love to sell. I love to
talk to customers. I love to train salespeople. I've been a VP of sales and CRO in a couple
different places. And then for the last five years, I've been building a community for salespeople.
That's called Bravado. And bravado is a network of about 300,000 B-to-B tech sales. That's about 50,000
VPs of sales and CROs, about 150,000 account executives, another like 40 to 50,000
SDRs, and then the rest of it are kind of customer success, sales engineers, sales op,
sales enablement, et cetera.
So it's a network that purely focuses on sales.
And much akin to your business, I suppose, Mary's community, learning, upskilling, recruiting,
as this one place that a salesperson can go
in order to beat the odds,
be successful in their career,
find a great job,
or hit and crush quota in their role.
Awesome.
And I think that gives a clear picture of why you have such unique insights.
I don't know if there's anyone that has such broad access
to so many salespeople and what they're doing,
what they're thinking about.
The core part of the bravada product,
just to make it even clear,
is like a community where people ask questions,
help each other through sales.
issues, things like that, right? Yeah. So if you're familiar with Stack Overflow and what that
network and community means to engineering, Bravado has a product that's affectionately known as
the War Room, which does the same thing. And so you have 50,000 companies, sales teams that are on
Bravado, and we get a real-time pulse of which companies are hitting quota, which ones are
missing quota, which sales reps are closing deals with which organizations, which, which
industries are doing better or worse. And so we do get a really interesting perspective within the
world of B2B tech sales, to be clear, a really interesting perspective on what's happening
in terms of companies and revenue and forecast and quota, which gives us a, you know,
hopefully an opportunity to serve those members and the general tech community at large in terms
of how they can beat the odds, especially as we're back to kind of that 2008 crunch that
we saw that in as well.
Awesome. And just to put this out there, I'm a very small investor in Bravado.
I'm just a fan of these kinds of companies, community-led SaaS tooling.
And I was just really impressed with the way you're building and the way you're approaching it.
And I'm also, I don't have a lot of depth in sales.
And so I loved this opportunity to learn about how sales works by participating.
So thank you for letting me join the journey of bravado.
It's a really unique company and I'm excited to see where it all goes.
So with this podcast, we were planning to talk about sales.
and like initially it was going to be how to get better at sales, how to be a better salesperson.
But you had this great suggestion that we instead focus more specifically on what founders should change in the coming year, knowing the conditions of the market and how things are turbulent and how people are spending less and things like that.
So we're going to talk about five things that you can do right now to change the way your sales process works starting now for the next year.
And the idea is once you listen to this conversation, you can go and do these things immediately.
with your team. So that sound good? Yeah, it sounds great. I mean, I think, you know,
inherent in this conversation will be things that you can do to be better at sales. But I think
the way in which you sell has to be different based on market condition, you know, and so
if we had done this podcast eight months ago or 18 months ago or 28 months ago or 28 months ago,
I think we would have had one set of conversations. We would have talked about, you know,
growing top line revenue. We would have talked about how to get your first 20 customers. We would have
talked about how to build and scale a sales team. We would have talked about like setting quotas and
whatnot. And I think that today the market has shifted because we know that the cost of capital has
gone up. We know that funding is dried up. And we know that investors today are only interested in
companies that have strong unit economics and have high retention rates. And, you know, cold prospecting
goes down in favor of cross-selling and upselling your existing customer base because it's hard
to break into new accounts when companies have budget freezes and hiring freezes and layoffs
and everyone is watching it really closely the capital outflow from their business. And so your
stale strategy has to fundamentally change in order to meet the moment and meet the market to where
it is. Great context setting. And you touched on a few other things we're going to talk about. So I'm excited to
get into it. The first topic I wanted to chat about is forecasting and quotas. You have some
advice on how founders should be thinking about adjusting their forecast plans and their quotas for next year.
Can you talk about that? Yeah. So let's start with some data and then we'll talk about why this matters.
So on bravado, as I mentioned, we have 300,000 members, but only about 200,000 of them, so about 65% of
the network, it uses a product called the seller portfolio. And the seller portfolio is a real-time
tracker of how you and your sales team are performing relative to quota. You can kind of think of it like
Mintz.com, but instead of being for personal finance, it's for sales. And based on that, we're able
to get a real-time perspective on which companies in specific and then overall which industries and
which sectors are at or above or below quota. And so I'll share some stats with you. So in Q3 of this year,
so I guess as of last month.
In Q3 of this year,
63% of sales reps missed quota.
63%.
That's up from 54% in Q2
and 46% in Q1.
So you've basically got 30% more
of the sales team missing quota today
than you did literally just six months ago.
If you broaden that out to a team-wide structure,
76% of companies missed their Q3 target.
76% of companies missed their Q3 target.
That's up from 59% in Q2 and 51% in Q1.
So you actually have 33% more companies that are missing target.
And at this point, it's gone from being like,
oh, like the occasional company is struggling
to pretty much every tech company is struggling.
We would predict, based on the data that we're seeing,
that over 80% of companies will miss their Q4 goals.
In a world in which the vast majority of sales reps are missing quota,
and the even larger vast majority of companies are missing quota,
and their forecast that, you know, on the one hand,
explains where you're seeing this Russian layoffs.
On the other hand, though, it raises the question of,
what do I do for next year?
On the one hand, you don't want to bring down targets too significantly because it's going to raise a lot of red flags in terms of spend and burn and probably mean a lot of really painful decision.
On the other hand, it's really hard to have visibility into what the market's going to look like six months.
I mean, heck, even like six weeks from now, you know, things are changing on a real-time basis.
Something interesting that we saw is that because we have quarterly tracking, but we also have monthly tracking.
So something interesting we saw is that from November until March of last year, companies were
basically blowing out their quota, sales reps were blowing out their quota.
All of a sudden, everything came to a screeching halt in April.
And April, May, and June were really tough times.
And you saw that outwardly in the market in terms of layoffs and hiring freezes and such.
But we saw it on a real-time basis in terms of like percentage to quota and like companies
missing their target.
What was interesting is that a bunch of companies then revised down their forecast for
the rest of the year. But then companies started beating those forecasts in July, August, September.
And so for a moment there, it actually looked like we might be out of the worst of it. And, you know,
then came that obviously much maligned double-dip recession, which, you know, then in October,
November, all of a sudden, everyone just started missing. You know, many of your listeners,
I would imagine work at BC back SaaS companies so they can, you know, in the comments or whatnot,
speak about whether they, this is also true for them. But I would imagine that for the most of
companies, going into the middle to end of September, they probably felt pretty good. They actually
thought, like, oh, maybe, you know, we can actually squeak by in Q3, maybe we can revise up
forecasting Q4, maybe we can hire into next year, and we can go back to growing the way we were
for the previous, you know, 10 years. And then October was just a bloodbath. On companies that do
monthly quotas.
85% of sales reps missed quota in October for their monthly number.
And I think it's going to be even higher in November based on what we're seeing.
And so again, I share all this information with you to kind of set the stage on like
what's happening real time in the market.
And so given that like September felt good, but today we're totally screwed, it's hard
to plan what you should do for all of 2023.
And I think the advice that most founders are getting from their boards is when you have limited visibility, you have to plan in the most conservative way.
And on the one hand, of course, that's true.
Like, you have to be conservative.
But on the other hand, you don't want to be unreasonably conservative because, you know, you don't want to be floundering from like, oh, we're screwed to everything's better to we're screwed, everything's better.
And so the way I think about setting up a plan when you have limited visibility and some major headwinds
is setting up a really conservative plan and then having milestones, short-term milestones,
that unlock the ability to lean into growth and spend based on hitting those targets.
And so here's an example.
Let's say that you did that $10 million in revenue this year.
And next year you have no idea what that's going to look like.
Maybe you say, okay, let's plan like we're going to be,
down to 9 million. We're going to lose 10% of revenue next year,
despite our best efforts, because the market's going to be really tough. But if in Q1,
you know, so that would mean that in Q1, you need to hit 2.5 million in revenue. And let's say
in Q1, if we hit 2.5, then we should revise up our targets for the rest of the year,
and we can unlock this additional budget to kind of spend off of. If we hit the low two,
we should revise down our number. And so kind of being comfortable with
regularly re-forecasting.
Forecasting, you can't just like forecast a quarter out every time.
Obviously, that's a tough way to run a business.
So you got to forecast a year, but then set milestones, checkpoints,
and kind of make predetermined decisions that allow you to avoid the bias of then
walking into Q1 and being like, oh, we've missed in Q1, but no, no, we're really going to hit
it in Q2.
You got to set the targets up front because as founders, we tend to have a bias.
towards optimism. That's generally how founders operate. And in today's market, that's more of a
disadvantage than an advantage. And so my suggestion is to really think about forecasting conservatively,
setting up checkpoints and milestones around what future success may or may not look like. And if you
hit those goals, then decelerating or accelerating into it, depending upon what you get there,
and coming to an agreement with your board, with your sales team, with your sales leadership,
in advance so that there's no debate about what to do when you actually get.
That is awesome advice.
As a PM, it makes me think a little bit about moving to an agile sprint sort of system
versus this long-term waterfall-oriented planning process.
Have you seen this need happen in the past?
Is this like the first time we need to plan to wreak forecast throughout the year?
Or have you been through periods where this is just the way people operate when times are
super uncertain?
First of all, I think the vast majority of CEOs and sales leaders haven't been through a period
of dramatic uncertainty in their careers, right? I mean, there are obviously people who have
been in business for more than 15 years and who have been through other downturns, but unless you
were a sales leader, a CEO, an executive in 2008, which I would imagine that like not very many
people were, or certainly not everyone was, then you haven't seen anything like this. People
try to analogize it to COVID, but I think that that's actually a very many people.
not a good analog for this. The reason why is because COVID was an external factor versus this
is actually an internal issue, which is to say that there are actually industries that are doing
much better these days except for tech. Like tech is getting crushed, right? Like in COVID,
everyone is getting crushed. And so it didn't matter if you owned a yoga studio or a gas pump or a
whatever, a hotel or like there was nothing that was working well unless I guess you owned like Amazon
on fresh or something.
There are very few businesses that were doing better as a result of COVID.
But there's a bunch of companies that aren't doing that bad.
I mean, you know, if you listen to other podcasts, you've probably seen that, like,
tech is the one that is getting the most hammered in this, although I think the last two
weeks crypto is caught up pretty quickly.
But it's really kind of tech, right?
And so when you see a slowdown in tech that is disproportionate, you have to assume
that it may last for a much longer period of time.
than you imagine. And I think that given the lack of visibility and the amount of volatility,
I think it is a unique situation for most companies, for most leaders. And I think that the only
response to which is to try to get really comfortable with being wrong and adding new data in
in order to make decisions regularly without the fear of coming across as not knowing what you're
doing. Things seem to have been crazy for a long time. It's interesting that this is the first year where
you're finding that companies have to do this. Before we get to the next topic, I wanted to come back
to the stats that you had real quick. Can you talk again about how you get those stats? Is this like
a salesperson plugs into their system somehow in exchange for getting access to the benchmarking?
How does that work? That's very cool. Yeah, exactly. That's right. It's a gift to get bottle. And so the
way it works is that you enter your stats and in doing so, you get global benchmarks of how
you're doing versus other reps or other companies. And so there's a premium for being accurate
here because otherwise you don't actually get a real sense of how you're doing versus others.
And so there's an incentive structure that's built in to be really precise. And then that
information feeds into our kind of global leaderboard where we are able to slice and dice and say,
okay, of companies that are headquartered in San Francisco, here's how your company is doing,
of sales reps that sell to CMOs, here's how you're doing.
Reps who carried a quota of between 500,700K this quarter,
here's how you rank.
And so we do global benchmarking for sales reps and sales teams,
and we share that information for free
to anyone who is willing to participate in the ecosystem.
That is very cool.
I had no idea that was something you did.
How do folks join that if they want to join up?
Simple.
Everything's available for free.
Just come to bravado.com.
and we have something called a seller portfolio.
You can go ahead and build one of those
and enter the information,
and then you'll start to receive the stats
in the Commode each quarter.
Sweet. Okay.
Second topic, comp plans.
You have some advice for how teams
should think about comp plans for their sales people.
What's your advice?
So comp plans are,
or compensation plans,
for sales are very different
than they are for most other profession.
So in most professions,
yours and product management,
you have a base salary
that encompasses the fact,
majority of your cash compensation. You then often have bonuses that are either based on company
or sometimes personal milestone, which are often paid out end of quarter end of year, and then
you'll have an equity grant that you vest over the course of time. And that's not how it works in
sales. So the way it works in sales is that you have what's known as a base and then what's known as
an OTE. An OTE or on-target earnings is how much you make if you hit quota. And the most
common ratio that you see in SaaS is what's known as a 50-50 split. So let's just use some round
numbers. Let's say that your OTE is $200,000. What that means is that your base salary is actually
only $100,000. So unlike in most other professions, sales reps make very little base salary,
but their OTEs are often higher than in most other professions because they're variable. And so the
second $100,000 you unlock through your performance on the sales team. And what is the most common,
again, I'm going to use like the most common examples for this and, you know, every complaint's
different, et cetera. But what's really common is if you have a 200K OTE, 100K base, 100K commission,
then your quota will be $1 million. So the ratio between your OTE and your quota is typically
five to one. Your quota is usually 5x. And this comes from this idea that your cost for a
sales rep fully loaded should be about 20%, so you can afford to pay 20% of your salary to a sales rep.
So let's talk about what that all means.
So what that means is that you as a salesperson have to sell $1 million of software in order
to make $200,000 of money.
But that $1 million of software is only around new business.
The vast majority of account executives are only responsible for new business, which means
top line revenue growth.
So let's pick two theoretical examples.
Let's say there's sales rep A and sales rep B.
And they both have the same quota, same OTE.
Okay?
And we're selling for the same product, same sales team.
Sales rep A closes $1.5 million in the, you know, to 2022.
And just for easy math, let's say that's 15, 100K deals.
So products is 100K, they close 15 deals in the year.
They close $1.5 million.
That means that they would hit.
150% of quota. When that happens, when you exceed your quota, you hit in sales what are known as
accelerators. So it's not like if you hit one million, you make 200, but if you hit like, you know,
1.2 million, you just make an extra on that 200k. You actually often make extra extra money for
exceeding your quota. And the more you exceed your quota, the more money you make. And so you would
imagine that if someone sold $1.5 million, they wouldn't make $300K, which would be 20% cost
and they might make 400K.
That's pretty common in sales.
And so this person who closed $1.5 million in business from 15 deals
ends up making $400,000,
and they get taken on a free trip to Cabo because they make Presidents Club
and they're put on the leaderboard and the CEO,
the company gives them an award at the end of the year.
And they are heralded as the pinnacle of all things that are sales.
And the VP of sales says,
wow, I can't wait to clone 10 of you.
And that's how sales teams are set up, right?
And then you have sales rep B.
Sales rep B only closes 12 deals for $1.2 million.
So they still exceed quota, but they only exceed quota by 20%, not 50%.
That sales rep ends up making, let's say, 250K,000, right?
So they make $150,000 less money.
They don't get to go on the trip to Cabo.
They don't get the award at the end of the year.
They're not the ones that are celebrated or championed, and they're seen as like a good performer,
but not as good as team player A.
That all makes a lot of sense in a world in which companies are really focused on top line growth.
And nothing is more important than the amount of ARR you're making and how fast you're growing.
And investors are basically demanding that you go 3-3-222, which is common parlands for, you know,
if you make $5 million this year, you should make $15 million next year.
You should make $45 million the year after.
And then you can slow down to going 90 than $180.
This is how VCs often think about funding SaaS companies
as they look for this like 33322 sort of multiple growth on ARR,
new business ARR.
And that's how the world used to function until six months ago.
And then six months ago, all of a sudden the music stopped
and capital got expensive and everybody started being like,
whoa, wait a minute, we should think about things like net dollar retention,
and we should think about what renewal rates look like,
and we should think about how efficient you are at acquiring customers,
and all of a sudden, profitability, efficiency, retention came into focus,
as everybody realized that unprofitable growth was no longer going to be rewarded
because you couldn't just keep spending in order to acquire customers.
And acquiring new customers was going to get harder,
so retaining the ones you had and making sure they were happy was actually far more important.
And so let's go back to our example.
So Team Player A, who closed 15 deals for $1.5 million,
and poster child for the company got $400,000.
Let's say out of their 15 customers,
10 of them churn next year.
And only five of them actually end up renewing.
How much does that affect Player A's compensation,
their performance, their celebration, et cetera,
doesn't affect them at all.
Make no difference.
99% of SaaS companies are set up this way.
Every SaaS company you know of,
with very small exceptions,
HubSpot, Monday.com, there's a handful of them.
Except for very few SaaS companies, no difference to the salesperson's performance.
It's seen as a failure of customer success, you know, other people get blamed for it.
Sales rep, no, no change in their, in their comp or their success.
Meanwhile, sales rep B, who closed fewer deals, 12 of them, let's say all 12 renew.
And not only do all 12 renew, but let's say that three of them actually,
are so happy with the product and service that they're willing to be featured on your website
as the folks that you advertise. And let's say six of them are actually willing to be references.
So they help you close even more business by getting on the phone with prospective customers
and are willing to actually, you know, advocate for your product. And let's say that not only do
they renew, but four of them actually upsell because they're so happy they end up spending more
and they sign multi-year contracts and whatnot. How much does that affect? Sales rep beast performance.
Do we go back and revise and say, well, wait a minute.
Actually, Sales Rep B's customers will wait better.
And actually, we should probably have rewarded Sales Rep B
because they actually had done the homework of finding the right clients
and said, just shoving product down people's throats.
And no, none of that happens.
And again, that kind of made sense up until six months ago.
But it makes no sense today.
And so sales comp plans are stuck in the Stone Ages.
They're stuck in the world of, you know, Glenn Gary, Glenn Ross,
boiler room, Wolf of Wall Street,
like, you know, get the dollar in through the door, Matthew McCona, hey, oh, oh, you know,
like that's where sales comp plans are.
And what we haven't done is built a modern technical sales compensation plan that
actually aligns the needs and incentives of the business, the customer, and the rep.
And so I think that, you know, for a while there, I mean, I've been writing and talking about
this for years. For a while there, it fell on a lot of deaf ears because no one cared.
people care now because all of a sudden for the first time,
all of the things that we're talking about around retention and renewal rates and stuff
are coming up.
And so I would say that my general advice to companies is to say,
what are the metrics that matter?
And ensuring that those metrics are the ones that your sales team is rewarded for.
I also call into question the notion that your sales team should have a 50-50 split on compensation.
And by the way, that doesn't just extend to the sales team.
that's often how the VP of sales is compensated.
So your executive, your chief revenue office, or your VP of sales,
who sits at the same table as your CMO and your CFO and your CFO,
that person also has a 50-50 split in most cases.
Sometimes it's 60-40, but it's very rarely 90-10,
which is what it is for almost every other executive on your team.
And so salespeople get labeled as coin operated and mercenaries
and all these other adages because the way we compensate them,
the way we treat them, the way we measure them, is in a mercenary sort of way.
And again, I would call on founders and VCs and executives to rethink that
and to instead come up with compensation that aligns the incentives, again, of the customer,
the business, and the rep and the leader.
And so I think that, you know, setting up a longer horizon where if the customer you sign up
today, ends up renewing tomorrow, the rep should get a kicker on it. We should look at what the
overall renewal rate is of the sales rep, comparing it, of course, to the renewal of the rest of the
business. And if one rep is doing a better job of qualifying the right customers up front, they should be
rewarded for that. And so things like that, I think, are missing from sales compensation, and I'm
excited to see them come to the front this year. As an outsider, this all sounds very obvious.
like this is how it should work.
I imagine a reason it doesn't
is it adds complexity.
And then there's this like feedback loop
that's a lot longer because you don't,
you have to wait to see if they renew.
So two questions there, I guess.
One is you're saying that it works.
Companies are doing it this way.
You mentioned if you have spot Monday.com.
Are there others that folks can look at to model
how they could approach it this way?
And then is there any other reason that folks haven't
rethought the way comp plans work?
Is it just like,
that's working. We're not going to, we don't have to break it.
I'll answer the second question first because the answer to the first question is really simple.
I think that there is a lack of transparency around how a lot of sales compensation plans work,
and companies tend to make it up as they go along. Oftentimes companies change their comp plans
like each month, each quarter based on like whatever is the business unit or the goal of the
business. So I've seen things like, oh, company released product B after only selling product A.
So we'll double the commission on product B because we want to get it in people's hands.
Or we really want to target CPG customers.
So CPG customers are worth extra commission.
And so like companies tend to weigh down comp plans with basically a bunch of bullshit.
That doesn't have anything to do with how the compensation plan should be structured,
but just has to do with the whims of the executives and the board that month or that quarter.
And so, you know, I don't know of any organizations, I think, do this excellent.
I just know a lot of companies that do it better than most, and I think it depends on your
company, your business, and your incentive. But I would say that in today's economy,
taking a longer term view to sales compensation instead of the short term, like, you're a hunter,
your job is just to close deals and like, you know, it doesn't really matter. A dollar is a dollar,
no matter where it comes from, is not true anymore. So I guess that's the answer to that.
Coming back to the other question, though, which is why are sales comps not innovated off of because this seems obvious?
First of all, it's obvious because of how I explained it.
And it's not that I'm taking credit for it.
It's just that I'm giving you a lot of context that you would not get otherwise, right?
The context you would get otherwise, if you just walked in and you've got your traditional old school VC and CEO doesn't really know what they're doing and it's just listening to their board is like, here's how sales comp plans work.
Right.
You want to grow revenue.
you want to get customers.
You got to pay top dollar and you got to fire them up and set aggressive quotas.
You got to push them and you want to put these big spiffs out there because that's how sales
people work.
And like a founder doesn't fucking know.
You know, like this is the problem is that people don't know because nobody really
understand sales and salespeople.
They just kind of are like, well, I can't sell and like I don't really want to do that.
And so like I'm just going to like hire this like 50 year old white guy who's done this
at a bunch of different companies and then have him bring in because it's all.
always a 50-year-old, it's always a white person, and it's always a guy, right? Sales is one of the
least diverse professions when it comes to leadership, and it's one of the things that we really
champion here at Bravado is this idea that, you know, 92% of sales leaders are, DPs of sales
are met. Over 85% of sales leaders are white. And so, like, you know, is that representative
of the total population of who should be a sales leader? No, of course not. It's just representative
of the fact that like, oh, you don't want to innovate here, just hire someone who's been there
or done that before. And so you get a lot of sludge in the system. You get a lot of people doing
the same shit over and over again, even though it doesn't work, which is kind of the opposite
of that Einstein quote, right? And so founders don't know how to set comp plans. They are just
listening to what other people tell them should be the way they do it. There's a way it's done,
and it's really hard to break that, you know? It's kind of like when you talked about waterfall versus
agile. Once you do agile, you're like, wait, why would we have ever done it the other way?
Well, it's because everyone was always doing it, though, right? Like, et cetera, et cetera.
No one ever got fired for buying IBM, you know, et cetera. You get where I'm going.
But the other thing, Glennie, that I think is problematic is everyone loves to optimize in the
short run when it comes to revenue in sales. That's really, I think, the other big driver.
If I offered you a plan that said, hey, you can grow by 20% revenue quarter over quarter,
or we can spike revenue by 75% this quarter,
though I don't know what that's gonna do
do to the business in the future,
which of these do you want?
Tell me how many founders really are willing to take option A.
What do you think?
Like let's say I just told you, those were your options.
I can figure out a way to increase revenue by 75% this quarter,
though I can give you no promise as to what that means for the future,
or I can make you a plan where we increase revenue 20% quarter over quarter
for the next six quarters.
Which of those two plans would you sign up for?
What do you think is a percentage of startup founder six months ago,
eight months ago, 10 months ago to like indefinitely,
that would have signed up for planning?
Yeah, it's interesting.
Hearing you describe the way it should be structured and then hearing you pitch this,
I would definitely pick goal one.
Like, let's grow, let's get this.
It'll work out.
It'll work its way out.
We'll figure it out later.
Let's just keep new customers coming in.
So I don't know.
I guess like 99% probably choose that first.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And, well, I mean, that is right because that's what everyone's set up for.
But then all of a sudden, and again, that was okay because even if all your customers turned, it didn't matter because you could just go raise more money based on the growth and then just keep pouring more money on it, more money on it.
No one gave a shit about the leaky bucket, right? Because you could just keep adding more water at the top. Now all of a sudden the faucets off.
And so, you know, given this seismic change in the market, how is it that we can reverse the short-term thinking and start to actually build good businesses?
Because I think that's the real problem, right?
The real problem isn't sales compensation plans and quotas.
That's a symptom.
A real problem is we all just wanted to have hypergrowth.
Instead of thinking, are we actually building good business?
And I wouldn't say that we at Bravado were immune from this, by the way.
It's not like I'm sitting here on my golden throne pontificating to the masses.
Like, we made a bunch of decisions over the course of growing this business that were incentivized for the short term.
And every single time we did that, it ended up being really expensive.
Now, sometimes we caught that before money ran out and before we saw the problem.
Sometimes we didn't.
And then we were like, ocean to fire drill.
But at the end of the day, there is no replacement for building a product that customers love
and having a great go-to-market motion that brings that product and that value to your clients
and ensuring that they actually are thrilled that they bought your product and are getting a lot of value from it.
It sounds so simple, but the amount of companies that actually don't really care if their customers get value from their product
versus just measuring top line revenue growth numbers
and numbers and logos and whatever
is I think more meaningful than people are willing to admit.
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That's a great segue to the third topic, which is around retaining your existing customers
and putting more focus on that versus top line or new growth.
You have some thoughts on just how to do that and why that's so important.
Let's start here, which is cold call, cold email response rates have never been lower,
never been lower.
And I think you're seeing this across every sales team.
Again, if you're listening to this and you have a sales team, you know what I'm saying.
And top of funnel pipeline is just,
drying fast, faster than our planet's drying, in fact. And enterprise sales cycles are just getting
longer at one. You know, we are lucky to have a couple of investors who have really, really broad
exposure to the tech market, you know, everything from really large public IPOs all down to small
startups. And in conversations with them, they've been really clear that they're seeing this
incredible, like, you know, the average enterprise sales cycle was 62 days. It's out like 115 days or
something. And so customers are dragging their feet. Everything's going to no decision. No decision
typically means I'm not going to say yes now because I don't want to spend the money. I actually
like the thing, but I'm not going to buy it, which means the same thing for you as a business,
which is that you're not making any money. So in a world in which you can't sell to new customers,
your only hope is to keep the ones you got for long enough to survive and then hopefully even maybe
be able to upsell and cross-sell those customers into new products, as well as potentially
and leverage those customers to get warm intros into a potential new business.
So first, let's, you know, psychologically, when times are tough, people hoard, people keep their
things close, and people trust the safety of those they know versus those they don't.
This is basic human psychology, right? And so given that that's the case, if you're a company
that doesn't have a lot of customers and you're trying to go out to market and sell your product
or that you're in a lot of trouble.
If you are a company that has a large customer base
and you've done a shitty job of engaging, retaining,
maintaining relationships with them
and prioritize top-of-line growth,
this is your alert.
This section is for you.
Because what you should be doing,
here's, I will tell you the most dramatic thing you could do,
and then we can kind of work backwards.
Take your best salespeople and make them CSMs.
There's no point.
There's no point in having your best salespeople sell.
Well, what's the point?
People aren't going to buy anyway.
I mean, if they do, they're going to buy in one Z, two Z is not these big enterprise
deals.
I was going to sign these big accounts right now.
Like, who in tech today is like, wow, I can't wait to sign a multi-year contract with a new
vendor we've never tried, right?
Nobody's doing it.
If people are signing things, they're signing for three-month pilots or kind of like,
you know, all sort of, I mean, the deal sizes are coming down, etc.
I mean, this is all very common.
Make your best salespeople CSMs and be like, your job is to make sure that all these great customers we have never, ever, ever leave.
CSM is a customer success manager.
Thank you.
Sorry.
Sorry, I should have.
Too jargoning.
Thank you.
So typically most sales orgs are divided into pre-sales and post-sales.
Presales worked with companies that are not yet customers to get them to sign up.
Post-sales worked with companies that have already signed up to help them either find value or retain or renew or upsell.
That's how most sales orgs are divided.
Typically, you put your best people in pre-sales because it's harder.
It's harder to sell a new customer than retain the one you have.
That's always the case because you've got to actually be able to build trust,
build the relationship, evangelize something that they haven't bought before.
So you typically take your best talent and put it in pre-sales,
and then you take the people who are really good relationship builders
and really caring and nurturing and not necessarily the people who are the most gifted
at creating value or whatnot and you put them in CS out.
That's obviously a huge show.
generalization because I know many CSMs were much better at sales than new business. And in many
businesses, it's actually harder to be a CSM because the product isn't very good. So you actually
have to do a lot of selling even after the product is sold. So that was a big generalization,
but is in broad strokes true. I would take your best account executives pre-sales reps,
and I'd put them into CSM. And I'd say, it doesn't matter how much new business we work on the next six
to nine months because it's going to be hard in a way. But what we cannot
under any circumstances do is lose our existing customers because replacing them is going to be
impossible. So it's kind of like, you know, you got your leaky bucket. You got to like patch that leak
really, really fast and really hard. And I think putting your best people on it is one good way to
start. Now, there's a lot of people who are going to listen to this and think that's crazy.
Like, why would I take my best performer in a tough market and move them to post-sale? Like,
this is bad advice. Maybe. Maybe it's bad advice. I can't predict the future anymore than anyone
else can. But I can tell you it's what we're doing. I can tell you, like, I'm actually doing it.
Like, we're taking our best people and are moving them into CSM in Brivato. We're trying to
maintain every customer we have because I believe that doing so sets us up for the best chance
of success in the business. Maybe you disagree with that. And you think that that's not right
for you. You should do what's right for your business. But I would say that, you know, it's not
just talk, it's action, you know, like, I'm doing it. I'm also telling every one of my portfolio.
I do a decent amount of angel investing. I'm telling every one of my portfolio.
oil companies to do the same thing, discussing the same thing with our investors and with our board as well.
And then let's talk about how to, like, okay, so you put your best people on it. What else should you?
So I think that what often goes underserved is the opportunity to help your customers, uh, themselves
survive. So let's take a, I don't know, what's a, what's a good product example? Let's take
something like a analytics product. Let's pick on like amplitude or mix panel or, you know, pick your favorite.
If I was a company like that, and I was like, okay, don't know how many new customers
are maybe able to sell, but I've got a lot of really good customers I want to keep,
I would invest a tremendous amount of energy into helping product managers and product leaders
get benchmarks and stats on how other product teams are, like, what changes they're making.
Because the advantage you have as a vendor, this is the advantage we have in sales as bravado,
but it's the advantage that every vendor has, is you get across,
section of what everyone who fits a certain ICP is doing at the same time. How good are you at
extracting value out of that and finding ways of becoming less of a tool as part of the SaaS stack
and more of a value-added advisor that can help you actually plan and prepare for what to do next?
I think most companies are not good at it. They put out a white paper for lead gen. I want to put out a
white paper for customer retention, you know? Like, I want to think about, like, one thing that we're
actually doing is we're basically saying to all of our clients, hey, we'll tell you what percentage
of companies that look like you are hiring or not hiring. I'll tell you how they're adjusting quotas.
I'll tell you how they are changing their comp plans. I'll tell you how much they're paying.
I'll tell you what percentage of their sales teams hitting quota, et cetera, if you stick around
with us as a client. So now you're not just, I'm not just,
like placing sales reps, say we make our business as a recruiting marketplace, so we help
companies hire sales rate people. Obviously, that's slowed down tremendously because people are
scared to hire and spend money right now. But if they're getting insights on what's happening in the
market, that's still valuable to them. That's still something that they can't get elsewhere,
that I am uniquely positioned to offer to my customer base. What are you uniquely positioned
to offer to your customer base? I think about, let's pick another example that I think is really
easy, which is greenhouse or lever or another app and tracking system. If you're
an ATS, you know, and all of a sudden every recruiting budget is getting slashed and recruiters
are getting laid off faster than any other department because no one's hiring, et cetera.
You're probably at the most risk of being ripped out or being downsized or getting downward
pressure to your business. That obviously. What can you do that nobody else can do in order to
give your customers a really good insight into how they should navigate, thinking about hiring
versus layoffs versus headcount versus barn per department, et cetera.
Because you've got some really interesting data, don't you?
You know exactly how many customers have paused, how many roles and whatnot?
If I was greenhouse, I would be putting out all kinds of reports that tell me,
you know, let's use me as a customer here.
Hey, you know, of series B companies that have roughly 50 employees,
they used to have eight open headcount, but now they're down to four.
the main area that they're investing are X, Y, and Z.
Salaries are moving up and now.
You could get a lot of insight from a company at Greenhouse.
And then I'd be like, whoa, this is so valuable.
Like, I can't live without this data because this is actually helping guide my business
decisioning.
And I think moving from a world where you just focused on like, how can I jam product
down your throat to how do I use my unique perspective in the customer segment we serve
in order to create broader insights for the industry is something I would heavily
prioritize. I take my product marketing team and I'd kind of shift them to be my research team. I'd take
a data analyst or two and stick them on the project and start to create content that is exclusive
for my customers and have them see that as another point of value that they can get that would
maybe help stay off chart. I love that advice. Be helpful. Find ways to be helpful even if your
core product isn't like basically go above and beyond what you're already doing as a software product
and find ways to help your companies be more successful.
It feels like there's just like a ton of nuggets you just shared.
And I want to make sure we also get to this other topic that I think is also going to have a lot of great nuggets,
which is around just advice for closing deals in this time.
You touched on a couple of these, form intros, a couple other things.
Anything else you could share of just like ways to increase the rate at which you close deals
during this wild time in the market?
This is a good segue because it'll bridge us back to where he just came from.
and hopefully move us forward, which is warm intros. So if cold outreach is going to be less
effective, then what increases in efficacy in this time is, again, warm intros. So one thing you
got to remember as like a more general statement is that companies either grow or they die.
There's no middle green, right? There's no like, oh, we're going to cut burn and just try to
like survive the winter long enough so that like that doesn't work, right? Because employees get
demoralize investors lose face.
the days become long and the nights become longer.
And eventually you just run out of energy as a business.
Like I think startups in particular are effectively energy driven.
And the more energy, the more belief, the more momentum that you have,
the more tailwinds you have, the more things grow and feel possible.
But of course, if you looked at the odds empirically,
no startup should ever begin because the odds are like you're going to fail.
And that failure meets you in the eye over and over again as you're shrinking
the size of your team, as you're shrinking the size of your budget, as you're doing fewer
things and you're taking things away. And so I don't really believe in this like, oh, we're just
going to like survive mentality. I think you have to adjust, of course. I think you have to be a
realist. I'm not, I'm not suggesting that you, you know, be blind to reality. I'm just suggesting
you also have to keep the energy going. And so what I mean by keeping the energy going is to say,
okay, let's get, so here's something, here's a couple ideas. First is let's cut a bunch of stuff.
but keep some money that we're going to invest in doing an in-person customer event.
Okay.
Why do I think that's a good idea?
I think it's a good idea because, first of all, we've all been stuck in our houses for a couple
years.
And so when we get a chance to go on a trip for free somewhere, we tend to say yes.
That's nice.
And secondly, I think that you could be strategic and maybe have the trip be for customers
only and in February or something.
So maybe you survive the budget cuts this year because people are like, well, I've got this
great trip and I really don't want to miss it.
So, like, is there a way we can just keep this tool on?
And you might think, oh, well, you know, are you bribing customers or whatever?
I mean, it's just psychology.
I think you have to use psychology to your advantage.
I would do a big customer event in February, invite all my current customers and say,
hey, as long as you're still a customer as of that 10, 2020, 3, you're invited to this
all paid trip to Napa to go, you know, drink a bunch of wine for a week.
I bet, you know, that would probably meaningfully change your turn rage.
you know, it's not going to change everything, but it'll change something. I bet it would.
Because, you know, at the end of the day, people are people. Sales is done by people. It's a belly-to-belly human sport.
It's not just lines of code on a piece of paper. Like, you've got to talk to another human thing, which is what makes it hard and unscalable and more of an art than the science, but also makes it really fun because it just plays by different rules, a different set of rules and many other things do.
Recruiting being the other thing that is like this. So in-person customer events.
The other reason why I like in-person customer events is because there are a perfect opportunity
for you to get new deals done.
And so how does that work?
Does that mean I also invite prospects to the event?
No, actually, I wouldn't do that.
So I think a lot of companies do this, but they'll invite customers and prospects at the same
event.
They're like, oh, they'll co-bingle and sell each other, right?
And not the smartest way to do it.
You weren't only customers in the event, and you want to use that against your thought
leadership and such.
But then it's during all the happy hours and the lunches and the ladies.
names and whatnot, where you start to say, hey, look, in this market, you're finding value in our
product. Who are one or two other folks that you know in the same position as yourself that might also
find value? Who do you know that has the same problem? Who do you know that's going through this?
Who do you know that might benefit from this research paper, et cetera? And you just start collecting
a bunch of warm interests. But then you don't just stop at getting the name because a lot of a team
stop here. They'll basically get the name, and then they'll be like, okay, got the name,
not done. Actually not the right way to do it.
You get the name and you say, great.
Can you make me an e-intrault, actually even better?
Can you connect me over text?
So one tip that I have for all founders, all sales leaders, everyone out there,
stop using email.
Email is where deals go to die.
Text message is where deals get done.
And so this notion that I'm going to e-entry over email and that's how we connect
is just far worse than the thing that I would really recommend
which I do all the time.
Like, you know, we have WebFlow as a customer.
I love Webflow and other sales leadership.
We try to do a really good job for them.
Any time that their sales leader mentions a company that might be needing to hire or whatnot,
my only response is great, connect me over text.
And then I get the text intro with the person, and then I'm, and here's the other fun part.
I don't take the intro er off the threat.
So the other thing we tend to do is BCC, the person who responded.
But in text, you don't need to do that.
You can keep the person on a little bit.
and it holds the person's feet to the fire to actually show up for the meeting.
Again, it's these little things, right?
2% here, 3% here.
This is how you win in this economy.
You got to do all the things right.
And so you keep the person on the thread long enough so that you've actually built
that relationship for the first call, obviously not forever.
But in the first 10, 20 messages, I keep the person on.
And that allows you to ensure that the person goes to you, which happens a lot.
I'm sure you know.
You get an intro in the person ever.
responds or they cancel on you and you can't come back on their calendar. You stay with them.
This happened recently where I got introed from one sales leader to another and that sales
leader basically then had a family or a legit situation, but then got busy and was like,
I'm not taking this thing. But I just kept pinging into that group that had it, you know,
every week or two for like actually like nine weeks. And then by the, like two and a half months
later, the version by them is like, I'm so sorry, you know, et cetera. Only after my original
contact was like, yo, you're making me look bad here. So that pressure is like force and then we got
them as a customer and now things are good. So like, you know, it just takes all that. It takes,
it takes this little thing. You got to build a bridge from your current customer base to future
customers and parlay the goodwill relationship, et cetera, that you've earned in serving your
current customers to get new ones because otherwise, I don't think it's going to, I don't think just
relying on a bunch of STRs and cold emails and stuff is going to get you through the next six to
12 months. I love that tip. I feel like there's probably more nuggets. I'm going to keep fishing in
this well of tactical advice for closing deals. Is there anything else that you found? I love that texting
tip. I feel like I've been on the end of that one. It works great. So yeah. From me? Yeah.
That's right. That's right. Like, for example, I didn't have your phone number and I told my wife,
make sure you take a selfie with Lenny
and then send a text message to the three of us
on one thread so that I know how to get a hold of Lenny
in case he tells me.
And here we are now.
And here we are now.
That's right.
But the point is,
sales when done well,
doesn't feel weird.
If it ever feels weird,
you're a bad salesperson.
I've been selling now for 14 years.
I've sold literally hundreds of millions of dollars
worth of deals.
I could pretty much call
any customer I've ever sold to.
and have a conversation with them.
And it would be like, hey, sales, it was going, whatever.
And that's because I put a tremendous amount of energy
into investing and building a real friendship,
not relationship, not business.
Friendship with the people that I sell to.
So I'll tell you a couple of sales stories,
and maybe from that we can bind the nuggets that you're fishing for.
I will tell you about how I sold to Facebook
when I was at Glass Store, because this is a fun story.
So Facebook was the
Moby Dick of Glassdoor.
I think the first time they tried to sell to them
was like the beginning of
to the end of 2008 or something like that.
And Facebook was one of those accounts
that obviously should be on Glassdoor
because the way Glass Store's product worked
is that the more people that came to your company page
on Glass Door, the more value there was for you
as a recruiting firm to put branding
and to put jobs and whatnot.
Facebook was the most visited page on Glassdoor.
So by virtue of that, it was the best account to sell to.
And it had gone from CEO to VPS sales to new VPS sales to enter, you know, wrap to rep, etc.
And I finally got my hands on it like Feb of 2011.
And the only reason I got my hands on it is because I closed Microsoft.
And so because I close and Google, I think I closed both Microsoft and Google at that point.
But certainly at least Microsoft.
Well, it's important to the story.
Not to break.
And so I looked at it and I looked at who is.
talking to Lori Goller, who's the chief talent. I think she's still the head of talent there,
but was the head of talent who we had pitched. And every time we got the same response,
no, we're not interested in outside partnership with the time. No, we're not interested.
I think she had a canned response for all vendors, and it was just like the same response
in the CRM over and over again. And so again, Einstein, right, same thing over and over again,
different result. So I tried something different. And I sat there and I went through every single
review that had been written about Facebook on Glassdoor. First, I had a poll by a data scientist
and did a word cloud and did a bunch of analytics on what was being discussed there,
pulled salary ranges, pulled salary just for Google and Amazon and Microsoft. So Glassdoor had
three types of information. They had like the review of the company. They had the outlook of the
company and then they had the review of the CEO. So it was like, do you approve of Mark's handling
of the company. It was yes ago. And Mark had, I think, like, 96% approval rate who was one of the
highest rated CEOs on Gloucester at the time. I have no idea what it is today, but that's what it
was that. And so, I basically pulled every review, all the salaries, and then Mark's approval
rating, and turned it into like a nine-page report that broke down how Facebook employees,
specifically software engineers, because that's what we're specialists at recruiting for,
how software engineers at Facebook
talked about working at Facebook
and how it compared to how Google engineers
talked about working at Google and whatnot,
salary ban comparisons
and even reviews of Mark specifically
versus the other CEOs of the other big tech companies.
And then sent an email to Cheryl Sandberg,
a cold email to Cheryl Sandberg,
whose email address I did not have,
but that I assumed had to be one of like 15 things.
So I think I put S. Sandberg at Facebook.com in the two line.
And then in the BCC line put every variant I could think of.
Like everything.
And when I say, I mean, everything I could think of.
I put underscores and dots and first name and last name and abbreviations and, you know, etc.
And the title of the email was Mark's approval rating on Gloucester.
And I was like, hey, Cheryl.
And, you know, I'm from Glastore.
I was doing research on Facebook
and comparing it to all the other big tech companies.
I personally work with Microsoft,
so I have a little bit of insight in this.
Here's what your employees think about you.
Here's what marked approval rating looks like versus others,
et cetera, et cetera.
This whole research report,
I kind of broke out some highlights,
a couple screenshots,
attached the report,
and said, hey, I'd love to discuss this with you sometime.
I think I sent the email around 3 or 4 p.m. on a Sunday.
By 6 p.m.,
I got a response back from Cheryl Sam.
work, ccing ELT at FB.com or something like that, which I later found was executive leadership team
at Facebook.com, saying, hi, Cahill, this is super interesting. We'd love to meet with you tomorrow.
Are you available to come to Facebook HQ at 10 a.m? So at the time, I was 22, 23 years old or something
like that. It was pretty new to Glastore anyway. And so then, of course, I said yes. I sent the
email to the CEO. He was like, do you want me to come? And, I was, like, do you want me to come?
you know, whatever, and I just didn't know, I'll handle it. I brought a customer success person,
and the two of us went. And we actually got to meet first with Cheryl, and then I got to go to
the fishbowl. I don't know if you know this story, but like Mark, Mark had a famous, like,
office that was all glass, like, in the middle so that, you know, he'd really blame and Trent
parents or whatever, so it was known as the fishbowl. So I got to go to the fishbowl, I met Mark Zuckerberg
himself. And as it turns out, that report and that rating got added to, you know,
their weekly packet because Mark wanted to know on a weekly basis how his rating and how
their, the employee's view of Facebook was, you know, how it was changing week over week and
what people were writing, et cetera. And it became like a thing. It became like, I don't know if
it's still a thing today. I have no idea, but like I got to have this like in-depth strategic
conversation with the executive leaders of Facebook around their reputation, what their
employees thought, their pay bans, their interview questions, you know, leadership,
the guidance, you know, shared the word cloud, sentiment analysis, et cetera. And the needless to say,
of course, we closed a massive deal with them and whatnot. But like, that's the kind of shit it
takes in order to close deals, right? So like this idea that like I'm going to go onto my CRM system
and fire up 100 cold emails and I'm going to close business, like that works when capital is cheap
and everyone's buying everything and every rep hits quota and every company. And every
companies growing, et cetera. That shit does not work when you are in tough times and desperate
measures trying to figure out a way to build your business. So what I would say is you got a really
over, over, over index in the whole, I'm going to teach you something, right? It's not that I'm going
to give you value because that's like a really weird thing to say. And it's not like my product's
going to solve a problem for you because frankly, I don't know if you know what my problems are.
But I think that one thing I would advise is how can I do something that will make this worth your time in a way that it isn't about buying my software or putting job ads on my site?
And so that's how Facebook became a customer.
That is an insane story.
I feel like those are like moments that salespeople live for.
How did you feel once you got that email that day where you just like freaking nervous where you jump it up and down?
That's where it might work.
I love to play chess.
It's my favorite game.
The reason I love chess is because I love to think a few moves ahead.
I expected to get that email back.
I knew when I sent the email that this was going to work.
I was like, there's no way this will work.
The only way it wouldn't have worked is if she never saw it.
If she sees this, she's going to respond, you know?
Because it would be crazy for her not to.
The information on here was so good.
And so I felt a sense of satisfaction that I had played the game right
in a way that no one else that my company had.
You know, like no one else understood the psyche of the buyer, you know?
And so to me, sales is, I don't care about the commission.
I've never cared about the money.
I think this is true for most great salespeople.
I think this is actually true for most people who are great at something,
is that they don't do it for the money.
They don't do it for even necessarily the trophies or whatever.
They do it because they love it.
And winning is, it's contagious, it's addictive, and it's rewarding.
And so the closing Facebook was a blast because I really got a chance.
to flex into something that I take a lot of pride in,
which is being able to deeply understand my customers,
where they sit, and how I can be not a sales rep,
but someone who actually changes your perspective
and how to do your job.
Like, that's what I live for.
And so I think that's what you have to do
in order to be a great salesperson,
is I think you have to be willing to go beyond just the,
oh, I want to hit my quota or whatever.
If you're a founder and you're trying to like sell
in this market. It's like, how do I get my product in the hands of customers? Like, you got to go beyond.
Like, how do I change the way you operate as a business? How do I do something that is transformative?
Like, that glass door rating literally got added to the ELT report that went out every single week.
That's the part of the story I'm proud of.
You just mentioned that you don't do sales, that you're not a salesperson technically anymore.
You're not run this company. Do you miss that job being a full-time salesperson?
I think CEOs are full-time self-people.
I mean, think about the job of a CEO, right?
Like, your job, like, let's start from the infancy, right?
Let's start from starting a company from scratch.
First thing you got to do if you want to start a company is you have to convince yourself
to do it.
You have to sell yourself on the fact that you want to do this.
This is where most people fail, actually.
They can't sell themselves.
They're not able to convince themselves that they should take this leap.
They don't believe in themselves enough to do it.
And so first, you've got to be good enough to sell yourself.
Maybe that's delusional.
I don't really know how to coin that, but let's just say sell yourself.
You got to then sell other more talented people than yourself
to join you at a time at which you have no money,
often no idea, no traction, nothing.
And they're typically making a lot of money at a well-paid.
If you hire great founders, they have a choice of where you're a choice of where you.
And you've got to convince them to believe in you, believe in your idea,
believe in the future that can be.
This is the second place where most people fail.
Assuming you do those two things, you still got to do one more thing,
which is you got to actually sell an investor to give you capital based on typically virtually nothing
or maybe like bearing model attraction. And then you have to go and convince your initial customers
to believe in you because I sure as heck, no startup's product is great, right? Like everyone wants to be
like, oh, we're going to go change. Well, you're not changing the world today, right? You've got,
you know, one, one hundredth of the feature set of any of your competitors. And all you have is this
dream and this energy and this belief and, and somebody who's willing to take a,
bet on you. You got to get someone to be willing to bet on you. That's sales. And then if you do all
that, then maybe you need to get some press. And so now you got to convince a reporter to
write about you. And you got to be able to do that. And then maybe you need to hire some more
people. So you got to convince some candidates to come work for you. And then you again go,
I mean, like I spend my whole day selling. All I do is sales. And all any founder does is sales.
It's kind of like venture. You know, people, people don't misunderstand this. Like VCs are salespeople.
100% of VC as a salesperson
because they're selling LPs to give them money
and they're selling CEOs to take their money
in exchange for equity.
That's the job of a VC.
All the analytics, all the data and the this and that,
those are just like updating their CRF.
Like the core function of a VC has to sell.
The core function of a CEO is to be a great salesperson.
And like any great salesperson,
you have to balance cynicism with optimism.
Great salespeople don't have what I call happy.
years. This is a problem that the people
misunderstand. People think that
being a great salesperson is being ever the
optimist. And it's actually not the case, because then you'll
waste your time on a bunch of deals that'll never
close. Great
salespeople are extremely
pessimistic
internally and are great
at being able to then still
be domestic
external, where they're actually
trying to disqualify you. They're looking
for signals that you're not going to buy
and weeding those out, while still
still at the same time positively spinning you and selling you. And that ability to juxtapose
is what diverges good from great. Because good salespeople will get misled by customers who tell
them they want to buy, but if you would really press harder, you'd understand that they can't
or won't or whatever. So you waste your time on a bunch of companies that never buy versus
great salespeople know how to prioritize and spend their time properly. The same applies in
venture. You know, like if you are a CEO who's fundraising, I can't.
not tell you. Honestly, Lenny, I can't tell you how many other CEOs I know get constantly
misled by VCs, where the VC says like one or two good things, and they're like, oh,
they're definitely going to invest. As opposed to giving that VC every out to not continue the
conversation, and if they still are willing to talk to you after that, then you know that they're for real.
I think that, like, you know, being a CEO and being a salesperson are the same job.
Different forms of it, of course, like different audiences, different products, etc.
But ultimately, they're the same thing.
So, no, I don't miss it.
I do it every single day.
And I love doing it.
And I'm learning more and more every day from the failures and shortcomings I have.
It's very clear that you love doing it.
It's so interesting just to watch the energy when you talk about sales.
I rarely meet folks that do sales.
And so it's really fun to dive into all this stuff.
We promised folks five topics.
We've gone through four.
The last one I wanted to touch on.
And you've already talked a bit about this.
And maybe there's just like a quick tidbit to add here is around just how important growth continues to be for companies at this stage.
Like it's easy to be like, no, the markets are tough.
People are going to give us a little bit of a leeway because no one's going to be able to grow.
And your point is it's still incredibly important.
Is there something you want to add there before we get to our very exciting lightning round?
I guess there's just one last thing, which is innovation is often put to the side.
People just try to do the things that everyone else is doing.
And so I'll tell you something that we did at Bramato as an example of this.
So we run a recruiting marketplace and competing with LinkedIn and AngelList and hired and all the rest of it.
And like all those companies, we've seen a massive slowdown in our business.
Unlike those companies, we didn't take that as kind of the end of the road for
growth for now, but instead said, okay, so let me put myself back in the perspective of my buyer,
my customer, who are often founders and CROs and CFOs. Those are the people that tend to buy
from Provado because they're the people who care the most about growing revenue.
I can't hire any more full-time sales people because, like, you know, the market is tough
right now and I can't increase my burn or what. But I still want to get new customers. It's just
I can't afford to hire full-time people. In fact, I might be forced to lay off my team.
What do I do?
And, you know, we kind of just sat there with a, I'm quite bored and just said,
all right, you know, put ourselves in this situation, what is you do?
And one of the things that I think would be really interesting is I'm actually willing to pay
money to acquire customers.
I just can't take the risk that I hire someone and they won't bring me a customer.
What if we created a 100% commission-only sales rule?
It doesn't exist today in SaaS.
It does exist in other places.
It just doesn't exist in sales.
SaaS, really. But what if we created a way for sales reps who can't find a full-time job because
the market is slow? And companies who can't hire a full-time sales rep but still want customers
to work together on a commission-only basis. Now, a year ago, this product would not have worked,
right? Because the supply demand equilibrium was so tilted where every company needed great sales
talent and every sales rep was getting multiple offers. So in that world, this product, you know,
makes no sense. But in a world in which you have far more sales reps who are looking for work
and far fewer companies who are hiring, maybe we can create a new model of sales. If Airbnb and
Uber grew dramatically during the pandemic and actually are somewhat counter-cyclical
businesses, because if you can't find a full-time job that you find gig work, what would we be
able to do for our community that instead of putting them in a different field, let's them
use the skills, the network, and the expertise they already have in order to do the thing they want
to do, but be able to do it in a down market as well. And so we launched something called Bravado Flex,
which is a way for companies and candidates to work together in a non-full-time employment way.
And that can mean contract to hire, it can mean 100% commission, it can mean fractional work,
it can mean, you know, small stipend plus milestone-based, like, there's a bunch of different
ways it were. And overnight, we went from, you know, having a massive slowdown in our business
to one of the best months that we've ever had in company history, which was last month. And this
month will be even better than that. And so while our full-time recruiting business slows,
our fractional business grows. And so there's, you know, I use that as an example of the type of
innovation that company should be thinking of, as well as, you know, if you are a company that is
thinking of increasing revenue, but doesn't have enough levers to pull.
Maybe this is one that you might want to explore.
But I think it comes back down to that fundamental, like,
staring at the whiteboard being like,
if I'm a customer and I'm in this world,
what can we do today to change the rules of the game?
Because sometimes the rules of the game are stacked against you.
You know, like as a recruiting business,
the rules of the game were now stacked against us.
No one's got money.
People don't want to hire.
There's hiring freezes, etc.
Like, you know, there's more candidates in the market.
than ever before, companies are going to be less and less likely to want to pay us to recruit
for them. There's nothing I can do about that. I mean, I can stick my head out the window and
scream and cry and complain, but that ain't going to get me anywhere either. So what I need to do
is change the rules of the game and start to think about the problem differently. And I think
that not enough founders do that. They just kind of bash their heads against the wall with the same
pre-conceived notions of what success may or may not look like. And so I would really
advise, you know, I'll give you some examples of where this goes beyond ProvadoFlex,
but like, you know, change your pricing strategy. Let's say that you sell a product and it's
$12,000 for a year. Try charging $1,000 a month and going month to month. Try charging $20 a day
and going day by day. You might be like, well, wait, I mean, that just changes to every,
but you have to adapt, right? Like, if your old model is not going to work, it's assinine to just
sit there and then try to like make minor changes like, oh, and so 12 will reduce price to
tend or something. People try to optimize their way out of problems. You can't optimize your way
out of a problem. You've got to completely change the rules of the game. And in doing so,
you suddenly will learn something new. No, it may not say, well, the bravado flex, they not work
forever. It may not be the, who knows? But maybe, just maybe, as we've been doing this,
we've realized that there's actually a lot of sales reps that prefer this, because they can do flex
for multiple companies. So, you know, all of a sudden, we learned something really new, which
is that our audience are the same candidates that we're replacing the full-time jobs
are actually, in some cases, preferring doing this fractional work.
Because now they don't need to go to all the meetings and they don't need to update
Salesforce.
They don't need to do all the boring shit that sales reps don't like to do.
Instead, they can just work for three companies, use the existing network they have,
get meetings set up for all of them, pitch the best product to the right customer.
And all of a sudden, they feel like instead of having to pitch the one hammer that you
need to use forever, they have a wide tool set.
that they can bring to their customers.
And all of a sudden, companies are like, well, wait a minute,
this is actually pretty cool because now,
instead of just hiring one person at a time and training them,
I can hire 10 people at a time.
And I can have multiple, you know, kind of fish in this.
And so we just change the rules of the game around sales hiring as a market.
And I think that's the sort of innovation that you have to bring to the market
if you want to survive in the downturn,
which you can't just sit there and just try to do the same stuff over and over and over again.
You got to really be willing to break all preconceived notions of what success looks like,
innovate something new, and then give it, like take bigger swings, I guess is the thing I would say.
That's a very empowering way to close out our chat.
But first, we've reached the very exciting lightning round.
I'm going to ask you five questions.
I'll go through them pretty fast.
Whatever comes to mine, fired away.
Does that sound good?
What sounds great?
What are some books that you recommend to other people, like two or three, maybe even one book that you most recommend to other people?
There's one book that I think every person should read. It's called Stumbling Upon Happiness.
Yeah, Dan Gilbert, I think, is the author. Yeah, that's right. That's right. It's a really fun book. A lot of interesting studies and reading. And I think especially if you're a founder or an executive who wants to learn how to sell and wants to understand how your buyers make decisions, I think it's really impactful and teaches you a new way to think about sales using psychologists.
Great pick. Second question, favorite other podcasts that you like to listen to? There's actually only two other podcasts I listen to. So it's a small choice. I listen to the All In podcast because I love the fact that they have really good show notes. So I can just jump to the section that I want to hear them talk about instead of listening to like. We got those show notes here too. That's right. And I'm excited for that as well. And of course I listen to yours, but I figured that was too. It's off limits. On the nose. Yeah. And then the other one is how I built this.
Great choices. What's a recent favorite movie or TV show that you've really enjoyed?
You know, I don't watch a lot of TV or movies, but I would say that a strong exception to that
is I really like the Blacklist. I don't know if you've seen that show, but it's a pretty,
it's a pretty good one. James Spader. Yeah, I really love James Vader. I find him to be someone I really,
really like. I'm also a big fan of Aaron Sorkin, so I liked the newsroom a lot and West Wing and
whatnot. I think the thing is I like really nerdy stuff, you know, like Jeopardy and like
Razor. I never liked friends, you know, I think it's just like the dork in me that I like to watch
nerdy stuff. Final question. What are five SaaS products that you find incredibly useful at your
company, especially new ones, but if not anything that are just, I love these products. I'm a huge
Luddite because my favorite tools to use are pen and paper. I like to write by hand. I like to write on a
whiteboard. I enjoy the tactical part of that. I've tried to use the remarkable tablet and other stuff like
that, but I don't get the same pleasure of writing like on actual pen and paper. Like that's my favorite.
I mean, in terms of tools that we use at Bravado that are hugely impacted by being Slack is the central
OSMR business, as I'm sure it is for many others. Obviously, we use Zoom a lot to need and that's a, that's a
core one. You know, no shit operates everything for us as well. So I don't think I'm saying anything
that's exciting here. There's a product called Grain that I really like that I think is really cool.
Grain allows you to make clips of Zoom meetings and send them out. And the reason I really like that
is because if I have a customer call or if I have a user interview or a VC call or whatnot,
I can take a snippet of something that someone said and let other people hear it from their
words. I think that's really powerful and something that I really enjoy. Great. Maybe that
great. Love it. Sahil, this was amazing. I feel like I want to be a salesperson now. You
infected me, but I still would be really bad at it. But there's a lot of nuggets in this episode that
would make me less bad. So, so thank you for that. I'm going to jump in. You've said that once,
you've said that to me before. And I can't let you end on that note because it's not fair.
because Lenny, you are a salesperson and you are one of the best that I have met.
And the reason why that's true is because you have built a business from the ground up.
I didn't know who the heck you were a couple years ago.
And maybe you had a big brand more than a couple years ago too.
And I was just the idiot.
But everybody I know now knows and respects you.
And the reason for that is because you, I mean, I think you have really deep knowledge
in a product.
I think there's probably other people that have really deep knowledge.
me many more. But, but, but you are the best at marketing that and turning that into,
you, you've got distribution around it. You've given so much to the world of, of, of product,
and been kind of a bright light that so many people have, have gravitated around. And such so that,
you know, when you launch Lenny's talent collective or Lenny's whatever podcast or whatever's
is the latest Lenny thing, in fact, I remember you did a poll to try to figure out what should be
the name of this podcast and ultimately the thing that one was Lenny podcast. I think. And so,
like, I think that is the core of sales. Like, I want to go back to the first principle, right,
which is that sales when does, when done well, does not feel salesy. Sales when done well is a
delightful experience. People love paying you money. People love consuming your content because
it's good. That's what makes a great salesperson. Like, you know, Facebook didn't regret
taking that meeting with me. Facebook didn't regret signing that contract. They enjoyed it. They
liked it. They were happy for it. And it felt delightful to them. And that's how sales should feel.
And so, you know, this notion that like the way you're good at sales is because you're super
extroverted and pushy and willing to put yourself out there and whatever is a misguided notion.
You are the future of sales. If every salesperson gave a ton of value, played the long game,
nurtured their community
and created products and services
based on the feedback from their customers,
the world would be such a better place.
So don't sell yourself short, my friend.
I think you are a phenomenal salesperson.
Damn, what a way to end it.
I so appreciate that.
I'm going to deflect from this epic compliment
and move on to closing this out,
but I really appreciate that.
Where can folks find you online
if they want to learn more about you, Brivato,
and how can folks be useful to you?
First of all,
You can just email me.
I'm just Cahill at bravado.com.
I love responding to emails and meeting people,
so I'm always down for that.
Secondly, you can find me on LinkedIn
where I regularly post content around sales
and revenue and hitting targets and all that.
And then lastly, if you want to learn more about bravado,
it's just bravado.com, sign up, check it out.
And if you like something, let me know.
If you don't like it, then please let me know
so we can make it better.
Amazing.
So Heel, thank you again for being here
for sharing all your wisdom with us.
Thank you. Thanks for having me.
Thank you so much for listening.
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