Monthly Archives: May 2023

Fly the Aircraft First: The Potentially Paralyzing Effects of Fundraising

Startup CEOs can learn an important lesson from pilots.  Specifically, to always fly the aircraft first.  Sounds obvious, like maybe you shouldn’t need to remind pilots to do this, but here’s what they teach them and why:

From the earliest days of flight training, pilots are taught an important set of priorities that should follow them through their entire flying career: Aviate, Navigate, and Communicate.  The top priority — always — is to aviate. That means fly the airplane by using the flight controls and flight instruments to direct the airplane’s attitude, airspeed, and altitude …

A famous example of a failure to aviate is the December 1972 crash of Flight 401, an Eastern Airlines Lockheed L-1011. The entire crew was single-mindedly focused on the malfunction of a landing gear position indicator light. No one was left to keep the plane in the air, as it headed towards a shallow descent into the Florida Everglades. Four professional aviators … were so focused on a non-critical task that they failed to detect and arrest the descent.

In my work with startups, I periodically see CEOs surprisingly stop flying the aircraft first.  When does that happen?  When they are raising money, or think that they might be soon.  I know they’re not flying the aircraft first because they say things like:

  • “I want to replace the CRO, but I can’t because I’ll be out fundraising next quarter.”
  • “We need to reduce the burn rate because cash-out is about 9 months away, but I don’t want to cut expenses now because I’m trying to raise money.”
  • “I’m no longer excited about the new product that we’re building, but I want to keep funding it because we’re out raising money and VCs like it as part of the pitch.”

Not flying the aircraft first means not making operational changes that you normally would because you are fundraising, or believe you soon will be.  It means running your business differently because you are trying to raise money.

This begs two questions:

  • Are you actually fundraising or just talking to venture capitalists? There is a difference.
  • Even if you actually are fundraising, is deferring such changes a good idea?

Are You Actually Out Raising Money?

Sometimes you want to keep the burn rate high while fundraising to stay on a hypergrowth trajectory and enable the big, next round.  Other times, you’re growing at 30%, and not particularly efficiently, and that next round is more fantasy than reality. Happy ears can help you avoid unpleasant-but-necessary decisions for another few weeks or months.

Are you out raising money or are you simply talking to VCs? How can you tell the difference?

  • By receiving a term sheet.  VCs don’t need your permission to make you an offer, though such proactive term sheets are less common than they used to be.  Remember that if all that love is real, there’s an easy way for a VC to show it.
  • By asking.  Remember the first rule of VC (and M&A):  the amount of time you invest, access you offer, and data you provide must always be proportional to the odds you see of actually closing a deal.  Ask if they’re thinking of making an offer, why or why not, and when.  Ask what additional information they need and provide it only if they are clearly doing their homework, signal an acceptable valuation range, and express valid concerns that you can resolve.

If you’re not getting term sheets and are starting to doubt some of the answers you’re hearing, then look for these clues that you’re more talking to VCs than raising money:

  • You have been talking with an analyst or associate for 2+ meetings without talking to a principal or partner.
  • Your meetings get rescheduled and responses to your communications come slowly. That likely means the VC doesn’t see your deal as urgent and probably thinks of your interactions more as a simple chat or check-in.
  • The VC doesn’t appear to be doing their homework. They ask questions that are answered in the material you’ve already shared, they don’t communicate the due diligence agenda ahead of meetings, and they don’t follow-up on the data requests they’ve made. VCs do a lot of work preparing for their internal investment committee, and you can usually tell when they’re doing it.
  • The VC focuses only on financial metrics, which could indicate that they’re just updating their database or, worse yet, are looking at another player in the space and using you as a data point. [1]

But even if an investor is genuinely working on an offer, if that offer is not qualified on valuation or, increasingly in these days, terms, then once again you’re not out raising money, you’re just talking to VCs. On valuation, it’s pretty clear — if an investor says they’re working on a term sheet at a valuation of 4x revenues when your absolute minimum is 6x, then you’re not out raising money; you’re just talking to VCs.

With terms (also known as structure), things are somewhat more subtle. You can receive a term sheet with an attractive headline valuation only to discover it’s dirty because it contains terms such as:

  • A multiple liquidation preference, where the new investor gets not the usual 1x their money back before the common shareholders, but perhaps 1.5x or 2.0x.
  • Participating preferred stock, where the new class of preferred stock gets both its liquidation preference and its pro rata, as opposed to one or the other.
  • Redemption rights, where the company has the obligation to repurchase the shares from the new investor after some time period (e.g., five years). (Which begs the question of where it’s going to get the money to do so?)

For more information on dirty term sheets, see this excellent post by Janelle Teng. If you’re in receipt of one, I recommend doing these three things:

  • Do the work to understand the terms. Ask your CFO, lawyer, or banker to create liquidation waterfalls to model the outcomes in numerous liquidation scenarios.
  • Ask the investor if they would provide an equivalent offer on clean terms [2].  Understand and compare a possible down-round to a flat- or up-round on less desirable terms.
  • Remember that terms only get worse.  No investor wants to invest on terms inferior to the prior investors.  This suggests that if you’re going to do a round with dirty terms that you make it big enough (and/or your path-to-profitability fast enough) to be pretty sure it’s your last [3].

But let’s zoom back up.  Why are we talking about dirty term sheets again? 

Just as spending time with VCs who will eventually make you an offer at an unacceptable valuation is not actually “out fundraising,” so is spending time with VCs who will eventually make you an offer on unacceptable terms. It’s more subtle, but it’s the same issue. And to defer necessary operational changes because of it is a big mistake.

Is Deferring Change a Good Idea?

Let’s say that you are actually out raising money — not just talking to VCs, but talking to VCs who are likely to make you an offer at an acceptable valuation and on acceptable terms.

In this case, is not flying the aircraft first a good idea? I think this is a hard question because of the risk of derailing a potentially transformational financing round. 

Even here, I think it’s wrong to defer the changes [4].  Why?  Because it’s:

  • Dishonest.  You shouldn’t start your long-term relationship with a new investor by saying, “just kidding when I said the CRO was great, we need to replace them.” [5] You might be working together for the next 5-10 years.
  • Ineffective.  It has spectacular backfire potential. Specifically, the investor is likely to detect the problem with the CRO and your vigorous (but disingenuous) defense of the CRO may cause them to question you and drop out the round as a result. [6]
  • Bad for the company.  Failing to make a desired operational change is definitionally bad for the business.

As one VC said to me, “We don’t invest in perfect companies. We invest in companies where the upside is greater than the downside. I have invested in companies where the CRO, CTO, and CFO were all recently or in the midst of transition. The important thing is that we talk about the changes and understand them. We’re going to be investors for the next 5-10 years.”

What does that mean to me? If you, as CEO, think something needs to be done, then do it. Always fly the aircraft first.

# # #

Notes

Thanks to Michael Lavner for his comments and review.

[1] This happened to me. If the VC had just told me they were doing diligence in the space on another potential investment (as opposed to seeming to express genuine interest in my company), then I wouldn’t have felt burned. Plus, a note to VCs: if you meet me, ask me all about the space, and then announce a deal with one of my competitors in about 2 weeks, I’m going to know what happened and feel used in the process.

[2] I love this one because they do the work for you and show you an offer that is mathematically equivalent (to them). Comparing the two sheets (and associated liquidation waterfalls) shows you the cost of maintaining the headline valuation and avoiding the consequences of a down-round.

[3] To be clear, some investors will be scared off by finding a lot of structure in previous rounds. So it’s not simply a question that you will have to raise subsequent rounds on equal or inferior terms. You may not be able to raise at all, or at least from the investors who you want to raise from.

[4] Though, perhaps sadly, it takes me longer to reach that conclusion. While I “get” the theory that I’m preaching, I’ve also raised money on the back of a CRO transition, and it wasn’t easy. Nevertheless, I still preach the theory.

[5] You easily could have said, “they’re nearing the end of their runway” during the process, instead.

[6] Or, more simply, they may just detect the deception.

Appearance on The SaaS Growth Hub Podcast on Founder Sales Knowledge and Sales & Marketing Alignment

This is a post to highlight a recent podcast appearance I made on The Growth Hub podcast with Seija Lappalainen and Reeta Westman, who are both based out of Finland, and with whom I had a lot of fun talking. So much fun, in fact, that we ran long and they ended up splitting the episode in two parts: one focused on founder sales knowledge (material derived from the Balderton Founder’s Guide to B2B Sales that I wrote and about which I’ve blogged here) and the other focused on sales & marketing alignment.

In the podcast episode we address questions including:

  • Which role I most preferred in my career (e.g., CMO vs. CEO vs. NXD)?
  • What are my duties in my role as an EIR at Balderton Capital?
  • Why we decided to write the Founder’s Guide to B2B Sales?
  • What are key things founders need to know about sales?
  • The Andromeda Strain problem — what explains what chief architects and top salespeople have in common?
  • What is the most common thing that product-founders get wrong in approaching sales?
  • Why I think a popcorn machine is a better analog than a funnel when it comes to sales?
  • How do founders become good salespeople?
  • How can marketers best learn about sales?
  • How much has technology changed sales and how important are technology skills?
  • Why am I such a massive fan of conversation intelligence tools, such as Gong or Chorus?
  • What should founders know about marketing?
  • Why I think marketing is in part responsible for the confusion surrounding marketing?
  • How to better align sales & marketing (and why unfortunately it’s still worth talking about)?
  • How to resolve alignment conflicts between the CEO, CRO, and CMO?
  • Why marketers should be broad in skills, tools, and knowledge to help avoid the Maslow’s hammer problem?
  • What are my views on titles (and associated structures) such as chief growth officer, growth marketing, and performance marketing?
  • How to grow sales & marketing together, which touches on the pipeline chicken/egg problem and the inverted funnel model?

I’ve embedded a video version of the episode below.

The podcast is available on Soundcloud, iTunes, Spotify, the web, and YouTube.

I hope you enjoy it and thanks again to Seija and Reeta for having me.

Slides and Video From SaaStr Workshop Wednesdays: The 7 Things Founders Should Know About Sales.

This is a quick post to share the slides today’s SaaStr workshop where we discussed the seven things founders should know about sales. This material comes from the Balderton Founder’s Guide to B2B Sales that I wrote and we published last fall.

I’ve embedded the slides below. You can download them on Google Drive.

SaaStr has also provided a video of the session, and I have embedded it below.

Thanks to everyone who attended for being so engaged and asking such great questions.

ChatGPT Writes a Kellblog Post: The Indispensable Role of Marketing in the Age of the Customer

Since there is much talk of AI replacing workers, including writers, I thought I’d give ChatGPT a crack at writing a Kellblog post. Here’s what it came up with (and I’ll post some thoughts on its work down below):

Sure, here’s a blog post on the role of marketing, written in the style of Dave Kellogg:

Title: The Indispensable Role of Marketing in the Age of the Customer

If there is one thing that all successful companies have in common, it’s a deep understanding of their customers. But how do you gain that understanding? The answer is simple: through marketing.

Marketing is the lifeblood of any successful business. It is the art of identifying and communicating the value of your product or service to your customers. In the age of the customer, where customers have more choices than ever before, marketing is more important than ever.

Here are three reasons why marketing is an indispensable part of any successful business:

  1. Marketing Drives Revenue

Marketing is not just about creating pretty logos and catchy slogans. It’s about driving revenue. Marketing creates demand for your product or service by identifying your target market, understanding their needs, and communicating the value of your offering in a way that resonates with them.

Marketing also helps to convert that demand into revenue by creating a seamless customer journey. By understanding the customer journey, marketing can create targeted campaigns that move prospects through the sales funnel, from awareness to consideration to purchase.

  1. Marketing Builds Brand Awareness and Loyalty

Marketing is also essential for building brand awareness and loyalty. In today’s crowded market, it’s not enough to have a good product or service. You need to stand out from the competition.

Marketing helps to differentiate your brand by creating a unique value proposition and communicating it consistently across all channels. By building a strong brand, you can create an emotional connection with your customers, which leads to loyalty and repeat business.

  1. Marketing Provides Insights for Business Strategy

Marketing is not just about executing campaigns. It also provides valuable insights that can inform business strategy. By tracking and analyzing customer behavior and preferences, marketing can identify trends and opportunities that can be leveraged for growth.

Marketing can also provide insights into the competitive landscape. By monitoring the competition, marketing can identify gaps in the market and areas where your business can differentiate itself.

In conclusion, marketing is an essential part of any successful business. It drives revenue, builds brand awareness and loyalty, and provides valuable insights for business strategy. In the age of the customer, where customer experience is everything, marketing is more important than ever. So invest in marketing, and watch your business thrive.

So, how’d it do? First, not to take AI progress for granted, the fact that ChatGPT can even come up with this is rather amazing, especially compared to AI capabilities of a few year’s back. But in actually synthesizing a Kellblog post? Not so great in my estimation:

  • It missed a major Kellblog mantra: marketing exists to make sales easier.
  • The writing is a bit cringey. I don’t say things like: “marketing is the lifeblood of any successful business.” A site search for “lifeblood” on Kellblog happily returns zero results.
  • While leading with “marketing drives revenue” is not bad, I’d be unlikely to put brand awareness and loyalty on the list, and I’d never say marketing provides insights for business strategy. I might say something more like marketing strategy is business strategy, or marketing strategy must align to business strategy.
  • It doesn’t attempt any jokes. Hopefully, a hallmark of my hard-headed but light-hearted style.

This is not to say that AI won’t improve over time and with increased scale. But for now, ChatGPT doens’t appear to be close to putting me out of business.

How to Simplify Your Marketing Funnel:  Seeing the Unit Cost Forest for the Conversion Rates Trees

Let’s say you’re a CEO.  You don’t come from a marketing background.  At every quarterly business review (QBR) and board meeting, your marketing head presents a chart like this:

What happens next?  More than likely, after 10 or 15 minutes of effectively random probes into this minefield of numbers, you do what any good CEO would under the circumstances.  You say:

“Next slide, please.”

To paraphrase Thoreau, the mass of CEOs lead lives of quiet marketing desperation. Slides like this are why. What’s wrong with this slide? [1]

Well, to get this out of my system, there are a number of what I’d call mechanical problems:

  • It mixes different time periods as the reader scans across columns making it difficult to spot trends.  Better to group quarters and years on the right.
  • It has excess precision.  Too many digits are unnecessary and impede comprehension.  Better to show pageviews by the thousand, demandgen by the kilodollar ($K), cost/MQL without the pennies, and conversion rates to the percentage point, not the basis point.
  • It contains too many rows.  Even if they’re all of interest (and they aren’t), it’s simply too much.
  • It fails to use formatting, such as commas, to make figures more easily grasped.

These details aren’t nits [2].  Particularly if you’re a finance or ops person (e.g., saleops, marketingops), your job is to present data in a way that is clear, consistent, and comprehensible.  In short, your job is to “light shit up” when there are problems.  This slide does anything but.

More importantly, there are what I’d call conceptual problems with the slide:

  • It’s a sea of numbers that drowns the reader in data, making it impossible to find insights.  To paraphrase the old saw, “all these trees are making it hard for me to see the forest.”
  • It’s supposed to be a summary of the funnel for a board meeting or QBR.  This summary doesn’t summarize.
  • It contains numerous rows that are not appropriate for such a summary and serve only to cognitively overload the reader.
  • Worst yet, it omits rows of high potential interest.  Specifically, unit cost (e.g., cost/oppty) rows that can help readers understand the viability of the business model [3].

In the above table, I tried to hide a big problem floating in that sea of numbers. Did you find it? Did the slide help you do so?

Before transforming the table into something more useful, let’s talk briefly about what we’re going to do. Three simple things:

  • Take hops down the funnel instead of steps.  Instead of looking at each conversion rate as we descend, we will look only at MQLs, stage 1 and stage 2 oppties, closed/won deals, and associated conversion rates between them. Any problems involving intermediate conversion rates between those hops will usually show up in those numbers, anyway [4].
  • Add cost information.  Ultimately, the business cares about how much things cost, not just what the rates are compared to benchmarks and to history.
  • Be sensitive to cognitive overload, both in terms of the size of the table and the total number of digits we’re going to put before the reader.

In addition, I’m going to keep website unique visitors not because it strictly helps the funnel analysis, but simply because I think it’s a good leading indicator [5], and I’m going to add information about new ARR booked and the average sales price (ASP). In the end, the point of all this marketing is to bring in new ARR. Finally I’m going to add highlighting [6].

Here’s our chart, simplified and transformed [7]:

Here you can see a few important things that are not even present in the original chart:

  • Demandgen cost per deal has increased from $6.8K to $10.1K
  • Demandgen cost per stage-2 oppty has stayed remarkably constant at $2.2K
  • The stage2-to-close rate has dropped by a third, from 33% to 22%
  • The new ARR ASP (average sales price) has dropped from $33K to $26K, about 22%

Thus, while we are generating stage 2 oppties at the same cost, they are closing both at a much lower rate and for less value.  We can finally see what’s going on. We have a mid-to- low funnel problem in converting oppties to deals and in closing those deals at our historical value. Note that this analysis doesn’t tell us precisely what the problem is, but it does tell us where to go look. For that reason, I refer to this kind of chart as a smoke detector [8].

As part of the next-level investigation we might actually go back to the original chart. When I built the exercise, I tried to confine the problem to a single row, demo to shortlist conversion, which drops nearly monotonically across the year.

To understand why demo-to-shortlist is falling, I’d start asking sales questions, listening to demo calls, and speaking with prospects (who both kept and excluded us after the demo) to try and understand why we decreasingly reach the short list. Generically, I’d look to possible explanations such as:

  • A new demo script, that is perhaps less compelling than the old one
  • A new demo methodology, perhaps we’ve moved to a less customized boiler room approach to save money
  • A change in demo staffing, perhaps putting more junior SCs on demos or having sales take over basic demos
  • A new competitor in the market, who perhaps neutralizes some our once-differentiating features
  • A loss of market leadership, such that we are decreasingly seen as a must-evaluate product

The great irony of this example is that while I was trying to type numbers that didn’t vary that much (using mental math) across most rows, I failed pretty badly at so doing. My intent was to have every rate stay roughly constant while demo-to-shortlist fell by around 25 percentage points across the year. However, when I look at the data after the fact:

  • Meeting-to-SQL fell by more than 20 percentage points across the year
  • This was somewhat offset by MQL-to-appointment rising 17.5 percentage points across the year

So if this were real data, I’d have to go investigate those changes, too.

The point of this post is not that the next-level analysis and detailed step-by-step conversion rates are useless. The point is that unless you summarize (e.g., by analyzing hops) and map to business metrics that executives care about (e.g., cost/deal) that you will lose your audience (and maybe yourself) in the process.

And remember, we’d addressed just one form of funnel complexity in this example. Marketing-inbound funnel analysis. We haven’t looked across pipeline sources (e.g., partner, outbound, sales). We haven’t touched on attribution or marketing channel analysis. But when we approach those problems, we should do it the same way. Keep it simple. Come at it top down. Peel back the onion for the audience.

The spreadsheet I used for this post can be found on Scribd or Google Drive.

# # #

Notes

[1] Let put aside of the question of whether it should be a chart.  Yes, there certainly is a time and place for charts, but in my experience, they are far too often a waste of space, using an entire screen to show 12 data points. (This always reminds me of the Hyderabadi taxi driver who once told me that lines on the roadway were a waste of paint.) Conversely, I’ve never met a board who can’t handle a well-prepared table full of numbers.  Let’s just stipulate here that a table is the right answer, and then make the best of that table, which is really the purpose of this post.

[2] “They’re important,” the author screams into the void.  My reputation notwithstanding, it’s not for obsessive-compulsive reasons, it’s for comprehensibility.  (Or perhaps, I’m obsessive about comprehensibility!) 

[3] For example, if your demandgen cost/opportunity is $4K and your close rate is 25%, then your demandgen cost/deal is $16K.  If, continuing the example, demandgen is 50% of your total marketing cost and sales & marketing contribute equally to your CAC, then you are spending $64K in total S&M cost per deal.  If your ARR ASP (average sales price) is $32K, then your CAC ratio will be around 2.0. If your ARR ASP is $128K, then your CAC ratio will be around 0.5. I say “around” because I presume you’re not operating at steady state and certain accounting conventions (e.g., amortizing commissions in sales expense) can cause variations with this back-of-the-envelope CAC ratio approach.

[4] Unless they magically happen to offset each other, as coincidentally largely happened when I created my synthetic data set (which you see if you read to the end of the post). Thus, this is not to say that no one should ever look at step-by-step conversion rates. It is to say that they have no business in a C-level summary.

[5] I think every marketer should track and share unique visitors. It’s a good leading indicator, if only loosely coupled to the demandgen funnel. It can be benchmarked against the competition (if somewhat imprecisely) and should be. The first time you do so is often sobering.

[6] You could argue this is cheating and that I could easily improve the wall of numbers chart by adding highlighting. While highlighting could quickly take you to the problem row, it’s not always the case that one row is so clearly responsible. (I contained the problem to one row here to make my life easier in making the slide, not because I think it’s common in reality, where stage defnitions are rarely so clear and used so consistently.)

[7] In addition to many other changes, I’m switching to my preferred nomenclature of stage-1 and stage-2 opportunity as opposed to SAL, SQL/SAO and such. Also, please note that at the risk of complexifying the chart, I’m separating stage1 and stage 2 oppties (instead of, say, just looking at stage 2s) because that is often the handoff point between SDRs and sales which makes it worth closely monitoring.

[8] Much as an employee engagement survey tells you, “there’s a management problem in product management,” but doesn’t tell you precisely what it is. But you know where to go to start asking questions.