Tempting startup ideas for first-time entrepreneurs
onstartups.comB2B ideas are sorely missing from the list, yet these are the customers that have problems they are willing to pay real money for.
Agree! From my experience having done a consumer startup and a B2B(at present), B2B ideas are easier to monetize.
They are also more predictable so it is unlike to get 100M acquisitions out of hype. You have to decide which game you want to play. Both are perfectly legit IMO.
How do you market B2B products? I know enough to write good software but I have no clue how to hire sales people, etc.
Try selling yourself for a while, it'll let you understand your customers better and will also make it much easier to hire sales people when the time comes.
For initial sales the easiest approach is to pitch to people you know who work at companies that might be interested in your product and convince them to act as an intermediately in getting you a meeting with the person who can make the buying decision.
I'd also recommend reading "Crossing the chasm" as it'll help you decide who the best companies to target initially are.
If your product is one that sells itself (i.e. it solves an obvious problem, clearly enhances revenues or reduces cost) then cold-calling might well work as well. Use networks like LinkedIn to find the appropriate people to pitch to and just send them an email or give them a call.
I am not qualified to write much and what I can write would delve more details about our super nascent business than I'd want to. That's probably lesson number one: when you get sales right, you don't talk a whole lot about it with people:) I am very open in general, but when it comes to sales, I think it is a lot of very domain specific knowledge(getting over customer objections) that make or break your sales.
On hiring, we are only now beginning to hire direct sales people. First, I find people from my industry. Then, this is how I quickly filter them: what was your quota, did you meet them? I let the numbers talk. I have no idea how this will work. We'll know more over next few months. My cofounder-on-trial comes from a sales background where he did 60K in sales over a year as an intern.
One major suggestion I would give you is to take a sales class at the best uni around you. I took it around the time I was negotiating my first reseller contract. My professor really helped me in negotiating the deal all the way to close. But most importantly, I learned really different ways sales can be structured that we tech folks would never imagine.
Good luck!
I am going down that road at the moment and I don't really know either. Yes, business have money that they are willing to spend, but many are willing to spend the most for what they see as the best product. Things like "simple" often come across as immature. Maybe the mindset just needs to change, I'm not sure.
Agreed. I think "simple" matters more for consumers. Whether your product can increase revenue or reduce cost is probably the end goal of most solid b2b deals.
It's not a list of good ideas, just ideas noob entrepreneurs like myself can get sucked into.
It's a pretty accurate list.
This was already posted once before here: