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The weekly top 10 for B2B tech operators · Every Friday

Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending June 25 2021

Friday 09:00 NZT Curated by Jon Davies
Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending June 25, 2021

SaaS METRIC OF THE WEEK

LTV:CAC - the LTV:CAC ratio is often interpreted as a true value of a companies customers. I say it can be a way to measure the viability of a companies business model. The question is simple: How much money will a customer spend on you versus how much effort is spent acquiring that customer? This ratio needs to be quantified to validate go-to-market strategies, monetization strategies, product strategies. If one of those isn't working - that ratio will be whack.It is almost folkloric now that this ratio has to be 3:1 - but is that true? The SaaSCFO takes a look - TL;DR - kinda yup. It's a good rule of thumb.

PRODUCT LED GROWTH

Total banger of an article here this week (thanks for the link Christelle Blanchet-Aissaoui). It's a Product-Led-Growth playbook for B2B startups. complete with metrics, scale-up strategy, and experiments. Want to know how far along your organization is on the PLG maturity spectrum? Check this Product Led Growth Maturity Grader from OpenView.

COLD CALLS

Cold calling and email are increasing as a tool during our new sales regimes but these methods historically have very low response rates (1.48% for cold calls and 1% for cold emails). Jason Bay has some methods to optimize responserates and Gong has some recommendations on cold calling.

LEGAL DOCUMENTS

In startup land, there is a veeeery long tail of legal documents that need drafting in order to run a business, never mind grow one. Here are some great resources for free legal documents so you can stick to the mission: Avodocs- 3 free per month. Cooley Go has a library of documents for the US and UK, from Penn State Law School - a startup Kit bundle For those of us in NZ, Simmonds Stewart has a comprehensive library of agreements and templates.

MLP

For your tech dictionaries - Minimum Lovable Product. MVP (Minimum Viable Product) is OK but what if no one likes it? FirstRound capital uses the analogy of burnt pizza - pointing out that the fastest and cheapest functional prototype could produce a poor or flawed version of something that people may actually love.

NO, NADA, NOPE!

Two sides of the no-coin here….a bit of a NO deep dive. This first one was shared by one of my team and it's too good to not share. Learning to say no is the most important skill a programmer can learn - TL;DR - it’s all about keeping the codebase small and solving the right problems/jobs! On the flip side - when it comes to selling, "No" is almost a curse word. Sothis article goes into depth on ways to be 'Yes', rather than have to say no - it’s a great way to think about how to say yes through the product.

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