Business

Side motivation

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I recently obtained a second 27” monitor for my iMac. This one is off to the side and rotated 90 degrees so that I can look at long bodies of computer code easily without scrolling up and down.

I also use the ‘Mission Control’ feature on macOS, which allows me to have several desktops preconfigured, and to jump between them as needed. I have Spaces set up for communications, programming and web browsing.

On the communications and programming spaces, I have apps set up on both screens for maximum productivity. But on the web browsing space, I used to have the second monitor showing my social media pages while I browsed other pages on the main monitor.

This was less than optimal, because I would routinely find myself getting distracted by my Facebook or Twitter feed all the time. The question was - what to put on that second monitor as a semi-permanent display.

The answer was actually pretty simple. I now have the page for my SaaS HR Partner showing on that screen all the time when I am browsing the web. I absolutely LOVE what our UX designers have done with the website, and I enjoy looking at it all the time. Additionally, I enjoy looking at the customer testimonials and new customer logos that are getting rapidly added to that site. It is hugely motivating and helps me to stay focused on our mission of building the best possible HR system for small to medium businesses worldwide.

What is your ‘go to’ static display screen that you would like to have in the background all the time?

Working with peak performers

My co-founder Fiona, standing on the ‘roof of the world’, the summit of Everest.

My co-founder Fiona, standing on the ‘roof of the world’, the summit of Everest.

Yesterday was my usual weekly catch up meeting with my co-founder in my SaaS startup. Fiona has been with the company for about 7 months now, and has been responsible for amazing growth and success in our company in that time.

Before she joined, as part of my due diligence before signing her up as a director of the company, I spoke to her previous business partner, and he mentioned during that conversation something about Fiona and her husband doing an “Everest expedition” some years ago. I assumed it was a hike up to one of the basecamps or similar, like I have heard others do.

But during our meeting yesterday, our talk somehow turned to the tallest mountain in the world, and I was startled to learn that Fiona is actually the 3rd Australian woman to ever have climbed and stood at the summit of Mount Everest!

Work talk was put aside as we spent a long time talking about that incredible achievement. The sheer amount of mental and physical strength required to undertake that sort of climb, over a long period, and to actually make it to the top that so few have done before just had my jaw on the ground for most of the conversation.

I can see now the where some of the dogged qualities that my co-founder has comes from. There is a big difference working with flakey people who will turn tail and run at the slightest discomfort or inconvenience, and those that will persevere through the tough times and have your back no matter how precarious the situation becomes. I think I know which category Fiona belongs to.

I am really proud of my co-founder, and am glad that I have the opportunity to work with strong women like her in my career.

My 'Chinese Bamboo' startup...

Photo by Jason Ortego on Unsplash

Did you know that when you plant Chinese bamboo seeds in the ground, that it can take up to 4 or 5 years for the first shoots to show? And did you know that as soon as the first shoots emerge, it then only takes about 6 weeks for the plant to grow to reach 90 feet in the air? The trick here though, that you still have to nurture and care for those seeds through all those years of not being able to see anything above ground. Otherwise you won’t get that dramatic growth spurt at the end.

This actually draws a really close parallel with my startup story for HR Partner.

I clearly recall sitting down and writing the first lines of code for my B2B cloud HR system back in late 2015. I basically chained myself to my desk for 3 months straight, single handedly writing around 20,000 lines of code to get that first beta version out by Christmas.

Like all startup founders, I believed in the mantra ‘if you build it, they will come’, but like all startup founders, I was completely wrong about that, and the sales & marketing side of the business took up all of my time and energy.

I managed to get my startup to around $1K per month in recurring revenue by mid 2017. Enough to pay the hosting bills and other incidentals, but that was about it. I stayed at that level for nearly 18 months. In late 2018 I put in a superhuman effort to basically double that, but still it seemed that growing my startup was going to be an extremely difficult and questionable proposition indeed.

Our actual MRR graph from ProfitWell for Nov 2019

Our actual MRR graph from ProfitWell for Nov 2019

Then, in mid 2019, my amazing co-founder Fiona joined the company. We took a look at the marketing, and decided to make some tweaks to try and see if we could ‘move the needle’.

November 2019 (almost 4 years to the day after I launched the Beta) was the biggest month we have ever had. We have basically tripled our MRR in a matter of weeks. This was our ‘Chinese bamboo’ moment, of sorts. I posted about this on Twitter, and people asked me what we changed or tweaked in order to get such results. Here are my thoughts on this. Maybe it will be a useful reference for someone else wanting to build a B2B startup.

1. Play the ‘long game’

In the early days of my startup, we would chop and change marketing tactics on a whim. I thought we were being all ‘agile’ and responsive, but really, all we were doing was wheel spinning and flinging stuff at the wall to see what stuck. Sometimes, our website would completely change twice in a month, because we didn’t see any increase in user signups.

We were just a small sail boat in a pond being blown to and fro on whatever winds were the flavour of the month at the time. Our fingers were in too many pies, and the effort was draining all our precious energy.

My new co-founder Fiona insisted that we take a more disciplined approach to marketing when she came on board recently, and so we stopped making constant changes to our website and blogs and marketing channels.

We would make one change, then set in in place for at least a month to monitor it. We would set definitive KPIs in place to measure effectiveness on several levels. At the end of the month, if things were not working or trending down, we wouldn’t throw it all our and start again as before. Instead, we would make one small incremental change. Sometime even using Google Optimize or similar to A/B test small changes. Then we would begin the monitoring process again.

From this, we began to learn a LOT more about how users approached and engaged with us. We learned things like how reducing just one field in a form could double the chances of people filling it in and submitting it.

Our website basically hasn’t changed much since mid 2018, and likely won’t for a while yet.

2. Spend time making life easier for the user

While I spent all of 2015 to 2018 coding up brand new features and fancy bells and whistles for HR Partner, during 2019 I stopped all new development altogether, and spent the year just listening to our existing customer base and making smaller, incremental improvements to our UX and functionality just to make their lives easier. Some may call this ‘Product Market Fit’, but for me, it was more about removing any pain points in my customer’s lives that may be hindering their use of my product.

It was really hard having to sit on tons of ideas and put them on the back burner, but I had to focus on what users actually loved about my product. In talking to them, I discovered that there were things that they thought were cool or nice about the system that I had never even considered as being interesting to anyone.

But when I started mentioning these same things to potential customers at demo sessions, I could see that they would also become excited about them.

As the developer, I had in my mind one set of features or functionality that I thought would be exciting to future customers, but as my existing customers, and Fiona showed me - what really got customers excited was a whole different set of factors. That was an important learning for me.

3. Go to where your audience is

I have written before about focusing your marketing on where your audience is going to be. We spent too much time and energy in the past promoting our SaaS on sites that were frequented by designers, developers and other solo founders. Don’t get me wrong - those places got us fantastic feedback and suggestions for our system, but it never got us paying customers.

It was only when we started promoting HR Partner on places like LinkedIn and Capterra, G2 Crowd etc. that we saw a marked increase in paying customers. LinkedIn allowed us to talk directly to HR managers and business owners. People who would be making the decisions. The Gartner sites like Capterra were already full of people who were ready to buy an HR system and were actively looking. They were already pre qualified, hot leads!

But once again, the ‘long game’ is essential even in these avenues. We couldn’t just put up a single ad and expect immediate results. We had to carefully balance placing ads along with posting good content and articles to get our name and branding in front of the audience there without coming across too strong. That took a lot of patience and careful strategic consideration.

4. Study the channels you will be using

There are a plethora of ways to market you business online these days, and none of them are simple. From SEO to ASO (App Store Optimisation) and even Facebook Ad campaigns - most of them can seem like a ‘dark art’. There are so many cunning tips and tricks that you can use to influence your reach and reduce your spend that there are now entire courses out there to show you how to do it.

My advice would be to always stop and study the platform that you will be using to promote your product. If you just decided to ‘dabble’ in a particular promotional tool, like Facebook Ads or Google AdWords, and you were only intending to spend a few hundred dollars ‘to see what happens’, then I would say you would be better off taking that few hundred dollars down to the nearest casino and putting in on black or red at the roulette table. You have a far better chance of making money that way.

Take the time to become intimately familiar with the tool or platform you intend to use.

In our case, when we decided to use Capterra, we saw that it was critical on that platform that when people searched for “employee management software” etc., that were were in the Top 10 company names that came up. It is the old ‘above the fold’ trick. Companies at the top of the list had a phenomenally higher click through rate than those below.

The problem was, in order to get to the top of the list, you had to bid an extraordinary amount of money - something like $20 or $30 per click to get there. We were only a small bootstrapped company, and didn’t have the marketing budget of our well funded competitors. Even putting $500 on our monthly CPC budget on there would run out within the first few days of the month. Our cost of acquiring customers was huge.

But then we discovered something out of our own experimentation. We discovered that while Capterra’s own internal CPC tool was saying $20-$30 for top listings, that we could actually bring it right back to around $15 per click and still stay at least within the top 15. We also found out that if we kept our budget really low during the start of the month, then increased it later in the month, we would appear higher in the searches, as most of our competitors would have exhausted their CPC budget earlier in the month (like we used to do).

But by far, the biggest learning for us was that we could allocate our CPC budget per region. We had always gone worldwide on Capterra with our CPC budget, however we found that if we focused on just regions like the UK or Canada or Australia, that we only needed to spend about $8 per click to be in the Top 10 for anyone searching from those areas.

And once again, the $8 that Capterra was telling us was only a suggestion. By careful monitoring, we found that we could in fact drop our budget back to $4 or $5 in some areas and still be in the top 10.

It is all about getting to know the platform you are working on intimately, and the exploiting that to full advantage.

5. Persevere with the things you don’t identify with

I have also posted before about inadvertently being good at things that you don’t actually enjoy doing. In my case, it was taking sales calls with customers. I don’t, and I never have, and I never will, consider myself a salesman. I really don’t enjoy anything about the process. I would much rather be coding.

But for some reason, I seem to be OK at it. Customers seems to like talking to me, and I actually love talking about my product. Somehow, out of all that, sales seems to happen.

Is there any aspect about running your startup that you don’t look forward to and try to avoid at all costs? Another one for me is the accounting paperwork. I loathe it and will make any excuse to avoid it. But it is essential for the health of your company, and we can’t make any long term strategic decisions about the company without meaningful financial data. So I have to grit my teeth, roll up my sleeves, and get down to it.

6. People trust people, not companies

This is about the only tip that I have here that seems to get easier as we grow. It was hard - VERY hard, getting our first few customers on board our SaaS. This was mainly because we had no proof that we could offer those first customers. We had no loyal, happy customer base. We had no reference sites that we could point them to in order to reassure them that they were making the right decision in choosing us.

But nowadays, we have quite a few customers who love to evangelise for us, and to talk us up to anyone who will listen. And we ensure that we find them people to talk to!

How did we get such a base of happy customers? Well, it was one of our philosophies right from day 1 - because we didn’t have the venture funded deep pockets of our competitors, the only way we could get and keep customers was to provide them with outstanding support levels, and to also listen to them and make changes in our software to meet their needs.

In fact, if you go and read our 5 star reviews on Capterra etc., you will see that most of them explicitly mention this fact. That has turned into a really powerful tool for us.

We’ve found that no matter how good our demo is, and how many features we show them that they go “Wow” to, that at the end of most sales calls, the person on the other end will almost always ask about other customers in their industry who use us.

Usually, we point them towards our Capterra review page, or else give them the contact email of another happy customer, and that is enough for them to commit to subscribing to our service. In fact, we scored one of our biggest customers in November this year precisely because of this tactic. The customer emailed me back and said that they were signing up based on the glowing recommendation they got from another customer of ours.

Conclusion

I hope that I have managed to give you an insight into what we did do accelerate our growth in the later half of 2019. Going back to the Chinese bamboo analogy - it is important to know that for those first 4 or 5 years of the bamboo seeds being in the ground, it is imperative that you keep up the nutrient feed to it, and ensure that it can germinate undisturbed.

It was like that in my startup. Even through the lean years from 2016 to 2018, I would put all my heart, soul and passion into my startup and treat every customer like gold. I never wavered from my vision. I knew that this was setting the standard for what it would be like once we had broken ground and started reaching for the stars.

Thanks for reading. Best of luck on your own startup journey.



You don't have to love something to be good at it

Image by mahindraraj

Image by mahindraraj

All the popular motivational books say something like ‘Do something you love, and you will never work a day in your life’.

I am lucky enough to do work that I absolutely love, and work on a project that is entirely of my own creation. Every day, I can’t wait to get up and work on my startup HR Partner.

However, there are aspects of building a business that I don’t enjoy. I could sit and write code for hours straight, but picking up the phone to talk to a new potential customer ties my stomach up in knots.

I am skewed towards being introverted, and I have never considered myself a sales or marketing type of person. But a big part of growing a business is getting customers to pay money for what you have built. It’s not that I dislike talking to people - on the corollary, I actually love talking to customers. It is the ‘salesy’ part that I don’t like. Some deep part of my psyche must believe that ‘selling’ somehow equates to ‘making people buy things they don’t want’.

Now, I am currently lucky enough to have a co-founder and an outgoing team that is great at marketing and sales, but as in most small companies, we tend to share tasks around. Added to that the fact that most customers like talking to company founders, I find myself doing sales and marketing quite frequently.

If I know I have to wake up in the morning and code up a new feature, I spring out of bed with a bounce in my step. But if I know I have to wake up and do an online demo of my product to a customer on the other side of the world, then wild horses have to drag me out of bed!

But here is the rub… If I focus on just having a conversation with the customer during the demo, and letting my genuine love and passion for my software product come through on those calls… it works! Customers respond positively. They buy subscriptions to my SaaS. They actually give me money for all this ethereal code that was spun out of my crazy imagination.

In talking to colleagues and vendors, they all seem to say the same thing. “Gee Devan, you are good at marketing and selling”. I always do my incredulous face when I hear this. If I had to rate myself, I would give myself a solid ‘4’ out of ‘10’ for it.

But it is obvious that there is a lot more depth and subtlety to this art of selling. And I don’t understand it. But it works for me, even though I don’t love it - and that is what is important. You don’t have to love something to actually be good at it.