Avsnitt

  • Takeaways from this discussion include:

    There is a pendulum between governance and self-serve, and that swing is narrowing with developments like OmniThere's a dynamic with centralization and decentralization hybrid execution at the edge which allows super-interactive user experiences. As these experiences improve, the number of people who benefit and can access data in meaningful ways only increases.

    00:06 Introduction

    01:27 Being Chief Analytics Officer

    04:08 Evolution of BI

    08:23 Data Organization Structure

    10:53 Data Permissioning Philosophy

    14:12 Hybrid Execution

    17:36 BI Application Architecture

    19:36 Mitigating Buyer Fatigue

    21:20 BI & AI

    25:59 Semantic Layer

    27:12 Audience Question: Should AI Suggest Analyses?

    28:43 Embedded Analytics

    32:48 Will AI Automate BI Users Away?

    35:00 Summary


  • 00:06 Introduction

    02:10 Arbitrum Statistics

    02:47 Building Your Developer Community

    09:08 Arbitrum One v. Arbitrum Nova

    14:55 L3 & Customization

    19:41 Arbitrum Orbit & Chain Clusters

    24:39 Future Customizations for Developers

    28:30 Accepting Developer Languages: To reduce barriers to entry

    30:11 Accepting Developer Languages: To access legacy code

    32:38 Accepting Developer Languages: To reduce fees

    33:48 Convergence of Web2 and Web3

    37:55 Community-Source-Software

    42:03 Summary

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  • 0:00 Office Hours with Philip Zelitchenko

    01:47 Q: How did you decide to structure your team like software engg?

    05:07 Q: Determining the value of data 09:17 Structuring data teams: data PMs

    10:47 Q: Same data team responsible for internal v. external PRDs?

    11:14 Structuring data teams: data engineering 12:02 Q: What is a data product?

    12:47 Structuring data teams: data analysts 13:22 Structuring data teams: data governance

    13:37 Structuring data teams: data platform

    14:18 Q: What distinguishes a DPRD from a PRD?

    17:33 Q: Role of the DPRD?

    20:05 Q: DPRD v. TEP?

    20:55 Demystifying data governance

    23:22 Data alert management - internal team and customers

    26:20 Q: Motivating ownership of data assets?

    28:51 Defining value of a data asset

    30:29 Measuring data usage

    31:37 Q: Can tools today handle the stochastic nature of data?

    33:28 Building a data team within the enterprise

    35:42 Q: How to test data products prior to release?

    40:00 Q: How do you use observability to manage diversity of alerts?

    41:51 Summary

  • 00:11 Introduction

    02:54 What is Outbound Fury (OBF)?

    03:34 Inspiration for OBF

    05:03 OBF Tactics

    07:44 Determining the Line

    11:22 The Challenger Sale

    14:11 Personas & OBF

    16:05 Product-Led Growth (PLG), ABM & Outbound Fury

    19:35 Setting Up Your Team for Success

    21:54 Managing Internal Stakeholders

    25:28 Measuring Success

    27:16 Brand & OBF Campaigns

    29:25 Pricing in Marketing Considerations

    31:47 Analyst Community (e.g. Gartner) & OBF

    33:43 Company Scale & OBF

    36:23 Conclusions

    Materials Mentioned in Today's Session:

    -- Raj Sarkar's Post: https://rajsarkar.substack.com/p/mark...

    -- Marc Benioff, Behind the Cloud https://www.amazon.com/Behind-Cloud-S...

    -- Matthew Dixon, The Challenger Sale https://www.amazon.com/The-Challenger...


  • 00:00 Introduction to Tom and Oliver

    03:07 Overview of PLG at Dropbox

    05:30 Overview of PLG at Asana

    06:07 How to succeed in PLG end user acquisition phase

    09:15 Tactics for Generating Awareness

    10:17 Customer Expansion Phase

    13:15 When Tension Arises Between PLG & Enterprise Security Needs

    15:24 Security is an All Consuming Roadmap, not a Feature

    18:35 How the Organization Shifts during the Transition from PLG to SLG

    20:48 How Pricing Changes from PLG to SLG

    26:22 The PLG Trap

    28:03 Avoiding the PLG Trap

    31:55 Value-Based Selling: Generalizable or Vertical/Use-Case Specific?

    35:35 Atlassian v. Asana's Approaches

    37:11 Advice for New Startups Pursuing PLG

    38:22 Navigating from SLG to PLG

    42:19 Resources for Founders

    43:06 PLG, SLG & AI

  • On November 29th at 9am Pacific Time, Office Hours hosted Fredrik Haga, founder & CEO of Dune.

    Dune is the authoritative source of web3 data. For information on Decentralized Exchange activity, lending volumes, or even the current FTX account balances. I used Dune to make the State of Web3 Presentation.

    During this Office Hours, Fredrik & I will talked about

    - the importance of data in a decentralized world
    - the impact of the three major collapses this year: FTX, Luna, & ThreeArrows on the ecosystem
    - the evolution of web3 in 2022
    - building a startup through tough market conditions

    Thanks to Fredrik for the great session.

  • On October 18th at 10am Pacific, Office Hours will host Carilu Dietrich. Carilu headed corporate marketing for Atlassian from $150m to $450m in revenue & through their massively successful IPO.

    Since then, she’s advised Segment, Kong, Miro, Bill.com & 1Password, among many others. Needless to say, her vista across many leading SaaS companies marketing practices is exceptional.

    During the Office Hours, we’ll discuss:

    the role of marketing in PLG motions.
    debate the two different ways of trimming marketing spend : better to cut people or programs?
    how to develop excellent positioning for a business. When to rebrand a company?
    If you’re interested to attend, please register here. As always, we will collect questions from participants before the event, weave them into the conversation, and answer live questions at the end of the session.

    I look forward to welcoming Carilu to Office Hours!

  • Office Hours welcomed Bill Binch, former CRO at Pendo, EVP Worldwide Sales at Marketo & operating partner at Battery to share his views on building world-class sales organizations.

    Bill & I exchanged emails about Deliberately Underselling as Sales Strategy. I asked him to share his views on land & expand team structure & quotas. But we covered much more. Here are three highlights from the session.

    First, Deliberately Underselling means optimizing the sales process for Net Dollar Retention (NDR). Logo-based quotas focus the team on speed to close. Sometimes, these plans have a minimum contract value plus a bounty.

    Another structure establishes land account executives & expand account executives. The company’s leadership should calculate sales efficiency on the combined OTE (on-target earnings) to quota ratio of these teams.

    A land AE with a $300k OTE might have a $600k quota. Her land AE counterpart might also have a $300k OTE with a $2.8m quota. If they attain plan, the combined OTE/quota ratio is 0.176. Most startups operate between 0.15-0.25.

    This land & expand team construct recognizes the difference in difficulty between landing & expanding accounts; also, the potential difference in ideal AE for each role. Last, the plan compensates those responsible for growing accounts with a quota - in line with Frank Slootman’s philosophy.

    Second, Bill offered a bold prediction. Top startups will record 200-300% NDR as PLG becomes a dominant go-to-market strategy. Today, best-in-class tops out at 170% or so. We agree there!

    Third, Bill revealed his Mojo Metric, his north-star metric. The Mojo Metric reports the net change in pipeline daily. Here’s how to calculate yours:

    Mojo = new pipeline + new_pipeline_expanded + deals_pulled_forward deals_killed - deals_shrunk - deals_pushed

    Each day’s Mojo reveals how much incremental pipeline the team has generated & informs the sales leader early on about this quarter’s health.

    There’s much more in the session including handling commissions on multi-year deals (TCV vs ACV), criteria for evaluating ramping account executives that echoes insights from the Vista sales playbook, optimal ratios for team construction, how sales has changed in 30 years & how it changes after Covid, amongst other topics.

  • Office Hours welcomed Lars Nilsson, VP Sales Development from Snowflake to talk about his learnings across 5 companies he helped take public.

    Throughout the hour, Lars provided insightful perspectives on how to build sales organizations. These the five most memorable takeaways for me.

    In early-stage companies, founders sell for the first three to four quarters. Then, many founders opt to hire an AE. Hiring a sales or business-development representative (SDR/BDR) can be the better choice. Incoming account executives will want to see a significant lead volume before joining, especially when selling into the enterprise.

    Teams often overlook storytelling as a critical part of effective lead generation. Fear-of-missing-out or the inspiration of a potential future, stories equip champions inside customer organizations to sell the product through the buying process. Founders validate the effectiveness of their stories when hiring SDRs better. SDRs call ten-times as many prospects as AEs do. Much the better to iterate with greater speed and confidence.

    As the company grows, building the sales development team becomes the most productive source of pipeline particularly for enterprise-grade technical products. Hire for hunger. Then surround the new SDR/BDR with three pillars: strong training materials, a manager who cares about the employee’s success, and a peer to accelerate learning.

    At Snowflake, sales development lives within the marketing team. Lars manages his team through a single metric, meetings. Getting to an account late, a few days or a week after they’ve signed with a competitor accrues to the meeting metric (see why in the video).

    Last, exiting unlikely sales processes saves the company’s resources and boosts team morale. Closed - no decision is the worst outcome of an engagement.

    We covered much more in the session including the techniques Snowflake uses to align account-based marketing with sales development & sales teams; how to structure career paths within the team; transitioning accounts between SDRs/BDRs to account executives; and the right SDR:AE ratios as companies scale.

    Thank you, Lars, for the masterclass on sales development.