Guest Post: 7 Deadly Sins: How to Successfully “Cross The Chasm” By Avoiding These Mistakes
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Guest Post: 7 Deadly Sins: How to Successfully “Cross The Chasm” By Avoiding These Mistakes

This is a guest post:

By Michael Eckhardt
Managing Director @ Chasm Institute

https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaeleckhardt

Tech-based companies – whether in Silicon Valley, Boston, Berlin, or Bangalore – often seek “best practices” to accelerate growth for their key products or services. And that’s clearly a good thing.

But today I’d like to draw your attention to a different perspective – seven worst practices or pitfalls that cause seemingly great B2B products or services to fail in the marketplace. Resulting in share price plunges, worthless stock options, customer dissatisfaction, and damaged brands. And, of course, frustrated shareholders and executives. At Chasm Institute, we call these pitfalls for tech companies the “7 Deadly Sins.”

Quick Intro

For 15 years, in 500+ client engagements, my Chasm Institute team has assisted tech-based companies through workshops / tools / training, to win in tough, highly-competitive markets. One major specialty has been helping these B2B companies move from Early Market visionary customers to the larger and more profitable Mainstream Market. Often in areas such as software, systems, mobile, and web. Geoffrey Moore, chairman of our firm, describes in his classic best-seller, Crossing The Chasm:

  • how companies must focus and win with a specific segment of customers in “pain,” before a disruptive new solution can successfully cross the chasm – i.e. commercialize – with mainstream buyers
  • companies like SAP, Cisco, Workday, Box, Lithium, and Salesforce have all applied this “focused strategy method” to drive impressive growth

But that’s not the only success driver. In addition, winning companies must also avoid these seven key pitfalls and errors:

The “7 Deadly Sins” to Avoid

  1. Target Customer Mix-up: if you’re in the Early Market and ready to move beyond it – don’t just ask your current customers what they want or need. Instead, gain insight from Mainstream customers who have not yet adopted – since they are your target in the coming 12 to 24 months and beyond. We’ve seen companies suffer $1 billion losses due to this avoidable mistake.
  2. Compelling Reason Confusion: the catalyst for driving adoption by mainstream customers is to understand the target customer’s “Compelling Reason to Buy.” Do not confuse that with “Compelling Reason to Sell.” The latter is your problem, and the customer doesn’t care about that.
  3. Whole Product Perfectionism: if you’re waiting until you have the perfect product before you launch into the main marketplace – surrender now. To successfully cross the chasm, we advise clients to focus on initially delivering MVP (Minimum Viable Whole Product). That’s the least complex solution that fulfills the target customers’ compelling reason to buy. Stop thinking about “what else to add in,” and consider subtracting features to simplify the buy / install / use process.
  4. Overdoing Sales Training: just because you are excited about your new product or service doesn’t mean everyone must be trained on it. If you truly have a new breakthrough product (i.e. a disruptive innovation), then experience tells us that less than 15% of your sales team will account for 80% or more of first-year sales – so don’t train everyone right away. Instead, double-down on training and incentives for a small “Tiger Team” of sales pros who have the right mix of consultative skills, motivation, and energy – and limit the rest to “awareness training” in that first year after launch. Avoids wasted training time and money.
  5. Pricing Misstep: the road is littered with businesses that thought cutting price by 15% to 20% would help them cross the chasm. Sadly, price elasticity is muted at this stage of the market. Yes, you need a reasonable price, but reducing it further will likely not cause unit sales growth – it will just damage margins. Instead consider reducing adoption risk for these pragmatist buyers by offering a performance guarantee or an attractive low-risk financing package.
  6. Weak Messaging: for a B2B message to be effective, it needs to be well articulated in 75 words or less. Preferably way less. And be cautious of thinking in terms of “unique selling propositions.” Unique could imply weird or different. Instead, communicate a superior selling proposition. Software companies in particular struggle with this, as many use a plethora of terms that end in “ility” and “ivity” (agility, manageability, productivity, connectivity) – yet miss the mark in communicating how their solution is truly superior to that of competitors.
  7. Lastly, the Vision Thing: it’s great, yes even essential, to have a longer-term vision for your business. But don’t confuse that vision with today’s imperative – to identify and deploy a compelling solution for specific customer pain points. And aim for revenue growth rates of 30-40% in those customer segments. That’s the fuel that will propel you forward onto a scalable and profitable path in the years ahead.


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If these “7 Deadly Sins” and related strategy challenges are of interest to you – would be great to be connected on LinkedIn (feel free to send me an invite):

 

 

https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaeleckhardt

 

Also, would love to hear your thoughts:

  • how many of these seven sins have you observed in the past 5 years?
  • which other strategy errors or missteps have you seen?


Here’s wishing you continued success in the coming year!

Michael Eckhardt

Michael Eckhardt, Managing Director @ Chasm Institute, is a veteran of Price Waterhouse, Hewlett-Packard, Harbridge Consulting, and Pepsico. An MBA graduate of Harvard Business School and Wall Street Journal Award winner, Eckhardt has deep expertise in strategic marketing + market development for the tech industry. During the past 15 years, he has lead 500 client engagements – from 2-day workshops to 3-month growth projects. Eckhardt and his team provide tech-based companies in the U.S., Europe, and Asia-Pacific with strategy workshops / tools / training for gaining (and sustaining) market leadership in highly-competitive marketplaces. His primary areas of focus are target market strategy, predicting customer and sales impact, and driving profitable growth of: (1) new disruptive innovations and (2) mature mainstream tech-based products.

Kathleen Glass

Helping Launch Innovative Products and Services in AgTech, IoT, Analytics, Privacy and CyberSecurity

4y

Sadly, I see all 7 of these quite often! I am constantly encouraging clients to raise their prices after they tested the market. While this is a marketing book, sales should read it too, since a lot of the time the fear of going out with "only" an MVP or pressure to discount comes from sales. 

Joy Montgomery

The Affordable Action Plan for Small Businesses and Startups

4y

6

Michael Eckhardt -- Chasm Director ⋆ Workshop Leader ⋆ Keynote Speaker

We help tech companies dramatically RAISE the PROBABILITY of: product/market fit • launch success • profitable growth

4y

Newly-updated on 06/26/2019 --- which of these "7 Sins" do you see most often ?

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Michael Fox

SVP of Product and Design at TeamSnap

5y

Great read. One additional sin I've seen is what I would call "under or over rotation on the Product." Over rotation from particular stakeholders, such as marketing, sales or ELT can be toxic to young, disruptive products that are just making their way in to the market. Think about examples like messaging that far over-promises the value proposition, an early effort to build pipeline before the product/org is ready, an executive team that makes promises to shareholders that aren't backed up properly by budget. Under rotation may not be worse, but might just be more frustrating. Product marketing teams not deeply involved enough in their markets, product managers and developers being too informal with complex products "because that isn't Agile", not enough investment in tooling and automation to help scale, not empowering delivery and support with the tools they need (ignoring whole products).

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