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A visual guide to selling Software as a Service

161 points| SePP | 11 years ago |slideshare.net | reply

32 comments

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[+] glynjackson|11 years ago|reply
I clicked on the linked out of curiosity. I must say, I am glad I did. By far the best presentation I have seen on this subject. It is a bit pro slack, but I can forgive that for the content.

On slide 25, could anyone give context? Are they saying that they engage 60% of their users, of this they get 2% paying? That even seems a little high to me.

[+] unchocked|11 years ago|reply
+1 on the best presentation I have seen on the subject. I'd like to download it.

How can I get this as a .pdf without submitting myself to social network analysis by Slideshare? I think that's too rich a price to pay for the privilege of downloading a file from a hosting company.

[+] ericcholis|11 years ago|reply
Since this is a long (but very well done) presentation, I found that I wanted to share a specific page with a colleague.

Fun Slideshare tip that I just learned, you can link to a specific slide by adding "/13" to the url. Replace 13 with your desired page.

[+] fritsbits|11 years ago|reply
Cool, didn't know this. Thx for sharing :)
[+] ripberge|11 years ago|reply
Anyone here get resistance from your sales people when trying to get them to use CRM? If so, how did you overcome it?

At my company people basically refuse to do it, saying it turns them into a data entry person instead of a salesperson.

[+] salsakran|11 years ago|reply
The easiest way to get them to use a CRM is to only pay commissions on deals marked as closed in the CRM. Run all meetings off the CRM, and if someone's lead status isn't updated make a point of asking why. Requires a bit of discipline, but if you make it the rules of "the game", sales people will play along.
[+] digitalbase|11 years ago|reply
Hi Emarthinsen,

We use incoming/outgoing hooks that communicate with a very simple slack PHP service/class. For CapsuleCRM the command 'elvis leads' dispatches a call to the capsuleCRM API, parses the results and outputs does in the channel (with an incoming web hook). I would be happy to tell you more about this and share snippets

For quick and dirty integrations or integrations that are less time critical we use Zapier and IFTTT

[+] emarthinsen|11 years ago|reply
Thanks digitalbase. That's exactly the info I was interested in.
[+] emarthinsen|11 years ago|reply
This is really well done.

How are you integrating Slack with, for example, CapsuleCRM? Did you write some custom integration code or are you using something like Zapier?

[+] digitalbase|11 years ago|reply
Hi Emarthinsen, We use incoming/outgoing hooks that communicate with a very simple slack PHP service/class. For CapsuleCRM the command 'elvis leads' dispatches a call to the capsuleCRM API, parses the results and outputs does in the channel (with an incoming web hook). I would be happy to tell you more about this and share snippets For quick and dirty integrations or integrations that are less time critical we use Zapier and IFTTT
[+] k__|11 years ago|reply
Doesn't the funnel metaphor imply that all people come to the end, just not at the same time?

What they are talking about seems more like a sieve to me.

[+] UK-AL|11 years ago|reply
The sales funnel has been commons sales parlance for decades, its not new.

Most of the stuff he talked about is not new(most established companies do it), he just put it all together on a simple guide.

[+] 147|11 years ago|reply
Is there a way to access the links on the slides somehow?
[+] fritsbits|11 years ago|reply
All the links are clickable. I might follow up with a blog post and will include them there.
[+] AznHisoka|11 years ago|reply
Has anyone used BuzzSumo or Moz? Would love to hear if they're worth the money.
[+] gk1|11 years ago|reply
The usefulness of Moz depends on how much time/effort you're putting towards SEO. If SEO isn't a top source of traffic/customers for you, then I'd say don't bother. Otherwise, it's useful mostly for tracking keyword rankings.

(It's too bad they don't have any plans smaller than $99. At that price, I'm constantly wondering whether I'm getting enough use out of it to justify the cost. If it was any lower, say, $49, I wouldn't even second-guess it.)

[+] johnsonmkj|11 years ago|reply
I've used Moz. It's worth it if you have time and resources to follow the advice that they give. It's not one of those tools that is a fire and forget, because you still have to make the effort when it comes to content marketing or linkbuilding.
[+] fritsbits|11 years ago|reply
Try the free plan of BuzzSumo. It's sufficient for our needs.
[+] jsfour|11 years ago|reply
Great presentation.