Product-led Sales

Last updated:

|Edit this page

A large proportion of our paying customer base sign up to a paid plan without ever talking to the Sales team. We don't want to force these customers through a sales process if they don't need it, but we also know that having a human to help them through the process on hand is likely to maximize the chances of retaining them as a paying customer long term.

We think that product-led sales is going to be extremely important to how PostHog goes, so we will be iterating on this process a lot as we learn. Feel free to edit this page at any time with things that you have found work/don't work.

Product-led lead generation

Product-led leads can be generated in different ways:

  1. Customers who have an active subscription in Stripe, and are forecasted to pay a first time bill of $500 or more.
  2. Customers who have a high lead score (>=20) with 50+ employees, and have more than 1 user in the organization and started sending events, but haven't yet subscribed.

They follow the normal territory assignment rules in Salesforce.

Working with the customer

Just as with the inbound sales process, it's on you to decide how you qualify the lead. If you think they have potential to end up paying more than $20k a year then you should reach out to introduce yourself and offer help. As they have likely done a lot of research themselves, they may not need a demo so a 30-minute discovery is probably more appropriate here.

Getting people already happily using PostHog to talk to you can be challenging - here are a few things you might want to try.

If it's a viable opportunity then you should convert the lead to an opportunity and then follow the New sales process. Bear in mind that you can join it at any point depending on where the customer is at in their buying journey (e.g. you might skip product evaluation if they are ready to buy).

Even if after speaking with them you think they may end up at $20k+, you should educate them on how to get help, as well as the value of adding our Teams and Enterprise plans.

Getting recognized on the deal

As they have already shown intent by signing up/subscribing, you will need to demonstrate that you have actively worked on the opportunity to include it in your book of business. We will use a common sense approach here but sending a couple of emails and 1 call won't be classed as 'actively working'. Simon will make the call here, escalating if needed.

Questions?

Was this page useful?

Next article

Retention & Expansion

As an AE, you'll spend as much time managing your existing book of business as you will closing new deals . Your first priority is retaining them - we have to work twice as hard if we're trying to close new deals and make up for lost customers. You'll typically be assigned a bunch of customers who are paying monthly - this means they could turn off PostHog at any time. Once you're confident that a customer isn't going anywhere, then you want to think about how you can expand their usage…

Read next article