AgentSkillsCN

founder-led-sales-playbook

为早期创业者提供一套战术框架,助其从冷启动的陌生接触,顺利过渡到签署合同的良性循环。适用于你作为Pre-seed/Seed阶段的创始人首次开展销售工作、当冷邮件的转化率偏低,或当你首次需要应对企业级采购流程时。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: founder-led-sales-playbook
description: A tactical framework for early-stage founders to transition from cold outreach to signed contracts. Use this when you are a pre-seed/seed founder doing your first sales, when conversion rates on cold emails are low, or when you need to navigate enterprise procurement for the first time.

Founder-Led Sales Playbook

Founder-led sales is not about revenue on day one; it is about learning as fast as humanly possible to earn the right to sell. This framework leverages the founder's unique position as a visionary and subject matter expert to turn "non-consumers" into customers.

Phase 1: High-Relevancy Outreach

Before automating with tools, manually identify 30 prospects. Focus on relevancy over personalization. If an email is read on a mobile device, the recipient should not have to scroll.

The 4-Part Outreach Structure

  1. Relevancy: State why you are reaching out to them specifically right now (e.g., a recent role change, a specific team expansion, or a technical shift in their industry).
  2. Counterintuitive Insight: Lead with a "Novel Insight" that challenges the status quo. Avoid saying you are "better"; say you are "different."
  3. Problem Focus: Describe the problem you are solving, not the features of your product.
  4. Conciseness: Keep the total length to 3-4 sentences.

The "Audio Test": Highlight your draft in Gmail and use the "speak" function. If it sounds passive-aggressive or overly wordy when read aloud, rewrite it.

Phase 2: The Vulnerable Discovery Call

The goal of the first call is to validate the problem, not to demo the product.

Execution Steps

  • Lead with Vulnerability: Say: "I'm an early-stage founder. We are deeply passionate about [Problem], but we have a lot to learn. Can we gain your insight into how this manifests on your side?"
  • Identify Priority: Ask questions to determine if the problem is widening:
    • "Are you currently measuring or managing this problem?"
    • "How have you tried to solve for it previously (headcount, tools, manual workarounds)?"
  • The No-Demo Rule: Avoid showing the product on call one. If you show the product too early, the "dreaminess" fades and the prospect stops visualizing how it fits their specific needs.
  • The Close: Never end a call without the next one on the calendar. If they say "Email me," it is usually a polite "No."

Phase 3: Co-Authoring and the "Service Bridge"

In the early stages, 40-50% of B2B SaaS deals require a service component to "bridge" the gap to a technology purchase.

The Co-Authoring Process

  1. Ask for Guidance: Invite the prospect to co-author the Scope of Work (SOW). This turns them from a "buyer" into a "guide."
  2. Sell the Education: If the prospect doesn't have a process in place to use your tool, sell a 90-day consulting engagement or "service contract" to design that process.
  3. Time-Box Services: Limit service engagements to 90-day increments. This earns the logo and the revenue while setting the stage for the technology contract.

Phase 4: Navigating Enterprise Procurement

Procurement professionals are professional buyers. Your job is to make their job easy so your small deal doesn't get sidelined.

Procurement Tactics

  • Early Identification: Ask the business lead early: "Who is the final signatory and how long does IT due diligence usually take?"
  • The "Queue" Strategy: Ask for their internal forms and fill them out yourself. Don't wait for them to do the paperwork.
  • Truncate Contracts: If IT due diligence is backed up 90 days, split the contract into a "Service/Prep Contract" (which can start immediately) and a "Technology Contract" (which goes through the long queue).
  • The CFO Bullet Points: When the contract reaches the CFO, provide 3 bullet points explaining exactly what the company is buying and why. If they have to ask "What am I signing?", you lose your spot in the queue.

Examples

Example 1: Cold Outreach (Novel Insight)

  • Context: Reaching out to a VP of Sales after a Seed round.
  • Input: Founder of a sales training platform.
  • Application:
    • Subject: Zero-to-one sales talent
    • Body: "I noticed you just raised your Seed and are hiring your first reps. At [Company], we've found that 'zero-to-one' sales talent actually doesn't exist in the traditional market—it has to be built. We're solving the problem of founder-to-first-rep knowledge transfer. Would you be open to sharing how you're planning to handle that transition?"
  • Output: High response rate due to the counterintuitive hook and relevancy.

Example 2: Closing the First Call

  • Context: Ending a 30-minute discovery session where the prospect showed high interest.
  • Input: Prospect mentioned they struggle with data silos.
  • Application: "It sounds like the data silo between marketing and sales is your biggest bottleneck. Based on what you said, I want to show you how we visualize that on a second call. Does next Tuesday at 2:00 PM work to walk through that specifically? Also, who else on the marketing side should see this so it becomes a team win?"
  • Output: Meeting booked with additional stakeholders included.

Common Pitfalls

  • Using "Better" instead of "Different": "Better" requires a long, measurable proof of concept. "Different" or "Counterintuitive" sparks curiosity and bypasses comparison with existing vendors.
  • Asking Generic Questions: Never ask "What keeps you up at night?" or "If you had a magic wand..." These questions signal that you haven't done your research.
  • Negotiating with Yourself: Don't offer a discount just to get a deal done. If you offer a 30% discount, ask to remove 30% of the value/scope in return.
  • Over-Engineering Tools Too Early: Founders often spend weeks setting up Clay, Apollo, and automated sequences before they have a message that resonates. Manually write 30 notes first.