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the vast majority of potential customers (leads) are a waste of time, for a million different reasons. they want you to invest in the process because that's the only way to signal you are serious. try doing all of the above, for 12-18 months, and then learning that the customer never intended to go with your solution, but was rather just leading you on to get a price foil for a competitor that he already decided he was going with. you'll be a different kind of angry. a real kind of angry - because there are real consequences and costs, in dollars, and time, to that kind of fuckup. this is very different from a real evaluation, and the only way to avoid that kind of scenario is to get investment from the buyer. a sales organization that runs into that kind of situation with any kind of regularity is dead in the water because they're spending all their time on people who don't want to give them any money. having said that, what you want in a sales process does exist, it's just that it's usually the smaller, younger, hungrier, less "proven" companies that are willing to withstand the abuse to provide it. it'll all sound great, until it's time to sign the contract, then all of a sudden any of a million reasons to not move forward are produced from thin air, and instead, a larger more established competitor that practices universally disliked sales techniques gets the $ and the validation. in short, be the change in the world you want to see. next time, buy from a smaller company that puts your career at risk. it's hard to do when you have large budgets because the purchasing process is basically just a giant a cover-your-ass operation. |
If the company being used in this regard simply had transparent pricing, they wouldn't have to waste those sales resources in the first place.
I also think in this day and age of anonymous online review sites, Quora, Reddit, etc. that a lot of this pricing information gets out there anyway, NDA's be damned. So it almost seems like a futile battle.
I agree though with your statement on types of companies, and ultimately decided not to continue considering the large established enterprise players and focus more on the smaller, younger companies. There was still pricing negotiation and other sales process challenges, but overall the process was much less painful (still not anywhere approaching enjoyable though).