Imagine achieving phenomenal sales growth with no salespeople.
Impossible?
Well, Dropbox, the file storage company, founded in 2007, grew its revenues to $116 million by 2012. Its sales then rocketed to $1.46 billion by 2018.
What’s even more impressive is that for most of its short life as a company, Dropbox achieved this remarkable growth with no salespeople.
Dropbox has historically relied on viral growth, together with a referral marketing model, with more than 90% of its revenue generated from self-serve channels. See here and here for discussions of Dropbox’s business model.
It’s easy to understand the appeal of no salespeople. No headaches or expense dealing with hiring, training, managing, and paying sales reps.
So, did Dropbox discover a better (and more profitable) mousetrap?
Not really.
As Dropbox moved from consumers and small businesses to targeting larger, enterprise customers (that’s where the money is), they found that their first self-service sales strategy wasn’t effective.
Selling to the enterprise requires a skilled sales force.
Don’t take my word for it. Here’s Dropbox in their 2018 10-K, stating that its “…lack of a significant outbound sales force may limit the potential growth of our business.”
Selling to large corporate buyers requires engaging with multiple stakeholders with different, and often conflicting, needs. You also may need to add sophisticated features to address significant company needs that are more difficult to explain to buyers. And, of course, the sales cycle gets longer. Only a highly skilled salesforce can manage all of these challenges.
Pivoting your team from a simple to a complex sale or selling to the enterprise is incredibly challenging. If you need to make this pivot, here are a few factors to consider:
As Dropbox’s experience illustrates, there is no shortcut to selling to the enterprise. Only high skilled sales reps can navigate through corporate bureaucracies, uncover not so obvious needs and explain complicated value propositions.