Executive Summary
Enterprise products (sold to large organizations, $1K-$100K+/month contract values) require different strategy than SMB or individual products. Enterprise selling cycles are 6-12 months, customers require integrations and customization, procurement involves multiple stakeholders, and contract negotiations complex. Enterprise customers are sticky (switching costs high, long-term relationships) but demanding (want white-glove support, custom features). Enterprise products require: multiple feature tiers (different organizations have different needs), robust APIs (deep integration), security/compliance (HIPAA, SOC2, GDPR), and enterprise-grade support. Companies that master enterprise (Salesforce, Workday, Slack) achieve high ARR per customer ($50K-$500K+/customer), strong retention (90%+), and market dominance. Those that ignore enterprise stay small (can’t reach large deals, limited growth). Enterprise product strategy is different beast—requires different team, different processes, different go-to-market.
Enterprise strategy roadmap: Years 1-2 (SMB focus, some enterprise interest), Years 2-4 (deliberate enterprise strategy, build features), Years 4-6 (enterprise go-to-market, sales team), Years 6-10 (enterprise dominance, enterprise revenue >50%).
By the end, you’ll understand how to build enterprise product strategy.
Part 1: Enterprise vs. SMB Product Strategy
Key Differences
Customer profile:
– SMB: 10-100 people, faster buying, price-sensitive, self-service orientation
– Enterprise: 500-10,000+ people, slower buying, ROI-focused, need support, willing to pay premium
Sales process:
– SMB: Sales cycle 1-3 months, single stakeholder, credit card buying
– Enterprise: Sales cycle 6-12 months, 5-10 stakeholders, legal/procurement approval
Product requirements:
– SMB: Self-serve, simple features, affordable pricing
– Enterprise: Customization, integrations, security, compliance, support
Revenue model:
– SMB: Smaller contract values ($100-1,000/month), high volume of customers
– Enterprise: Large contract values ($5K-100K+/month), smaller number of customers
When to Pursue Enterprise
Good timing to pursue enterprise:
– Product mature (not still figuring out product-market fit)
– SMB revenue stable/profitable (not dependent on next logo)
– Team capable (experienced VP Sales, customer success team)
– Have resources (enterprise pursuit resource-intensive)
Red flags for premature enterprise pursuit:
– Product still early, unstable
– SMB still declining (chasing bigger deals while losing SMB customers)
– Sales team inexperienced in enterprise selling
– Don’t have resources for enterprise support
Part 2: Enterprise Product Architecture
Feature Tiers
Tiering strategy (different features for different segments):
– Starter tier: Core features, basic integrations, limited support
– Target: SMB, single team usage
– Price: $500-2,000/month
- Professional tier: Advanced features, APIs, more integrations, priority support
- Target: Mid-market, multi-team usage
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Price: $2,000-10,000/month
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Enterprise tier: Custom features, SLAs, dedicated support, white-label options
- Target: Large organizations, mission-critical
- Price: $10K-100K+/month or custom
Tier design:
– Clear value difference between tiers (customers understand why they pay more)
– Easy to expand (customers can move to higher tier)
– Prevent downgrade (once in enterprise, hard to move down)
– Upsell path clear (each tier shows path to next)
APIs & Integrations
Enterprise API requirements:
– REST API (standard enterprise integrations)
– OAuth (secure third-party access)
– Webhooks (real-time event notifications)
– GraphQL (advanced query capability)
– SDK support (SDKs for common languages)
Integration ecosystem:
– Salesforce integration (most enterprises use Salesforce)
– Azure AD / Okta (enterprise identity management)
– Slack / Teams (enterprise communication)
– Data warehouse integration (Snowflake, BigQuery)
– BI tool integration (Tableau, Looker)
API-first roadmap:
– Year 1: REST API, basic integrations
– Year 2: OAuth, webhooks, SDK
– Year 3: GraphQL, advanced integrations
– Year 4+: Enterprise integration platform
Security & Compliance
Enterprise requirements:
– SOC2 Type II compliance (security audit)
– HIPAA (if healthcare customers)
– GDPR (if European customers)
– Data residency (ability to keep data in specific region)
– SSO (single sign-on for enterprise)
– Audit logs (who accessed what, when)
Building security/compliance:
– Hire security engineer (build security from day one)
– Regular security audits (external audits, penetration testing)
– Compliance team (manage HIPAA, GDPR, etc.)
– Documentation (document security practices)
– Certifications (get SOC2, HIPAA if needed)
Part 3: Enterprise Go-to-Market
Sales Organization for Enterprise
Enterprise sales team:
– VP Enterprise Sales: Leads enterprise sales effort
– Enterprise Account Executives: Sell large deals (each person owns territory or vertical)
– Sales Development Reps: Identify and qualify opportunities
– Solutions Engineers: Proof of concepts, technical validation
Sales process:
1. Prospecting: Identify target accounts, outreach
2. Discovery: Understand needs, get stakeholder mapping
3. POC: Proof of concept, show value
4. Negotiation: Contract terms, pricing
5. Implementation: Onboarding, setup, training
Marketing for Enterprise
Enterprise marketing:
– Account-based marketing: Target specific accounts, personalized outreach
– Case studies: Show impact with customers like them
– Events: Industry events, conferences, webinars
– Thought leadership: Your executives as industry experts
– Content: Whitepapers, guides on enterprise topics
Messaging:
– ROI focus (enterprise customers need business case)
– Integration capability (integration with existing systems)
– Security/compliance (assurance on security)
– Support (assurance on implementation, ongoing support)
Customer Success for Enterprise
Enterprise customer success:
– Dedicated CSM: Each large customer has dedicated customer success manager
– Onboarding: 30-90 day implementation plan
– Training: Train customer team on product
– Adoption: Drive feature usage, value realization
– Expansion: Find expansion opportunities (upsell to other departments)
Part 4: Enterprise Sales Excellence
Deal Size & Economics
Enterprise deal economics:
– ACV (Annual Contract Value): $10K-100K+ per customer
– CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost): $20K-100K per deal (sales commissions, etc.)
– LTV (Lifetime Value): $200K-500K+ (customers stay 3-5+ years)
– LTV:CAC ratio: 3-5x (enterprise deals should have high LTV:CAC)
Deal cycle management:
– Large deals take 6-12+ months to close
– Multiple stakeholders need approval
– Budget cycles matter (sell before year-end budgeting)
– Quarterly targets (focus on closing before quarter end)
Negotiation & Contracts
Common enterprise negotiation points:
– Price: Negotiate discount from list price
– Volume discounts: Lower price if commitment for multiple seats
– Multi-year commitment: Lock in longer terms
– Custom features: Customer wants specific features built
– SLA terms: Uptime guarantees, response times
– Termination clauses: How easy to exit contract
Strategy:
– Start high (list price is negotiation starting point)
– Understand what matters to customer (price, features, support?)
– Package value (combine features, discounts to increase perceived value)
– Walk away (willingness to walk away gives you leverage)
Part 5: Enterprise Implementation
Implementation Excellence
Implementation phases:
– Pre-sale phase: Discovery, POC, understanding needs
– Sales phase: Contract negotiation, deal closure
– Implementation: Setup, integration, training, data migration
– Go-live: Customer production use, monitoring
– Optimization: Post-launch optimization, expansion planning
Timeline:
– Small enterprise: 30-60 days
– Mid-size: 60-120 days
– Large: 120-180+ days
Success factors:
– Clear project plan (timeline, milestones, owners)
– Executive sponsor (customer executive driving internally)
– Technical integration (APIs, data, system connections)
– Change management (helping customer embrace product)
– Training (ensuring team knows how to use)
Customer Onboarding Program
Onboarding structure:
– Kick-off meeting: Establish relationship, set expectations
– Discovery sessions: Understand customer process, needs
– Configuration: Set up system for customer
– Integration: Connect to customer systems
– Data migration: Migrate customer data
– User training: Train customer team
– Testing: Customer tests in production environment
– Go-live support: Support during production launch
– Post-launch optimization: Help customer optimize usage
Part 6: Enterprise Expansion
Expansion within Accounts
Expansion strategies:
– Horizontal expansion: Expand within same department (more users)
– Vertical expansion: Expand to other departments (wider use)
– Deepening: Upgrade to higher tier (richer features)
Example:
– Initial sale: HR department, 100 users, $5K/month
– Expansion 1: Expand to Finance department, +100 users, +$5K/month
– Expansion 2: Upgrade from Professional to Enterprise tier, +$3K/month
Expansion playbook:
– Map customer organization (understand departments, stakeholders)
– Identify expansion opportunities (other departments, use cases)
– Create expansion proposal (specific recommendations, ROI)
– Drive expansion (work with sponsor to expand)
Account Management
Large accounts require ongoing management:
– Quarterly business reviews: Review progress, satisfaction, expansion
– Executive relationships: CEO/CFO staying connected
– Advisory board: Customer advising on roadmap
– Joint planning: Co-planning next quarter/year
Part 7: Enterprise Product Roadmap
Enterprise-Focused Innovation
Enterprise features by priority:
1. Table-stakes features: Security, compliance, integrations
2. Competitive differentiators: Features competitors don’t have
3. Expansion features: Features enabling upsell to other departments
4. Innovation features: New capabilities ahead of market
Example roadmap:
– Year 1: Salesforce integration, SOC2 compliance, SSO
– Year 2: Advanced APIs, custom fields, white-label
– Year 3: BI tool integrations, data warehouse connectors
– Year 4: Advanced AI features, predictive analytics
Conclusion
Enterprise product strategy requires different approach than SMB: larger deal sizes, longer sales cycles, deeper customer relationships, custom features, robust infrastructure. Companies that master enterprise achieve high revenue per customer, strong retention, and market dominance. Enterprise is constraint-raising strategy (add enterprise features, support, compliance) that enables capturing much larger deals.
Enterprise roadmap:
– Years 1-2: SMB focus with some enterprise interest (validate market)
– Years 2-4: Deliberate enterprise strategy (build features, hire sales team)
– Years 4-6: Enterprise go-to-market (scale enterprise sales)
– Years 6-10: Enterprise dominance (majority revenue from enterprise)
Key principles:
– Enterprise is different (different sales, features, support)
– Product maturity required (don’t pursue enterprise too early)
– Proper team essential (experienced VP Sales, customer success)
– Customer success critical (customers must succeed, expand)
– Expansion is core (grow within accounts, not just new logos)
This is enterprise product strategy: building products for large organizations.
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