Nearbound demands adjustments to RevOps processes and solutions. At the Nearbound Summit, Cindy Zu & Graham Younger will show you how to get it right without breaking everything. |
It’s all about the people |
Tom Slocum, CEO & Founder at The SD Lab, shares why he is so excited to see the market adopt a nearbound mindset in our recent article, The State of Sales:
What excites me about nearbound is I see that the future of selling is all about the people. We had the one percenters, top sellers doing that model in the shadows for so long, but now it’s amplified across the board.
When you look at that evolution, you’re bringing in nearbound. You’re activating partners, you’re diving into the community. Scott Leese talks about GoToNetwork and what he’s doing within GTM United is exactly of that nature, and it shortens their deal cycles.
Let’s be real. The point of the nearbound and the real point of partners and warm intros is it shortens sales cycles. It builds trust and even gets you bigger deal sizes.
Because there’s credibility. You’ve come in with an intro. Somebody’s vouched for you at the end of the day. Word of mouth has always been a thing—it’s just now even more amplified through the community. |
Read more from Tom and other top sales leaders in The State of Sales. |
We need to (un)learn a thing or two |
Companies have a lot to (un)learn when it comes to using nearbound. Here are the downfalls the experts say Sales teams need to avoid, and what to do instead:
Read the full version of The State of Sales here. |
The Enshittification Phenomenon |
Image source: pluralistic.net
Back in January, blogger, journalist, and science fiction author Cory Doctorow coined the term Enshittification to describe when platforms slowly (and painfully) turn to 💩.
Doctorow explains that this typically happens in four phases:
We’ve seen it time and time again: Facebook becoming nothing but targeted ads, Netflix banning long-distance users on your account, Twitter...well...being Twitter.
But what causes platforms to shoot themselves in the foot?
Doctorow explains that enshittification is "a seemingly inevitable consequence arising from the combination of the ease of changing how a platform allocates value, combined with the nature of a ’two-sided market,’ where a platform sits between buyers and sellers, holding each hostage to the other, raking off an ever-larger share of the value that passes between them."
So, how can we, the ones building platforms for our buyers (who also happen to be sellers, more often than not) avoid the enshittification phenomenon? By approaching it through a customer-centric, nearbound mindset:
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If you build it, they will come...right?Unfortunately, it takes a little more than building a partnership to hit a revenue home run. |
Big thanks to Bryan Williams for the laugh! |
Stuff you don’t want to miss!
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Everyone is going to the Summit! Nearbound is relevant to every company size, stage, and vertical!Professionals from Adobe, G2, Clari, SAP, HubSpot, fullstory, 6Sense, Onflow, LinkedIn, and more are already signed up! Are you? |