If you’re asking this before you make product investments, then you’ve already made smarter choices than so many other leaders.
But no matter where you’re at in your product launch process, the following tips and examples will help you learn what to do and what not to do when adding product led growth strategy to an existing service business. In this post, we’re covering:
● How building for internal service teams vs. external clients differs
● A step-by-step guide on how to approach adding product growth
● Handy resources to help guide you on your new product journey
Firstly, the question “Can service businesses adopt PLG?” is a question we get A LOT at ScaleHouse and our counsel is that with the right strategy, a service business is as capable of adopting a PLG (Product Led Growth) motion as any other. As a refresher, PLG means a product that is built to be evaluated, trialed, purchased, and used without any human sales layer. As Wes Bush, author of Product Led Growth further describes, it is “a go-to-market strategy that relies on using your product as the main vehicle to acquire, activate, and retain customers.”
Firstly, let’s tackle an important strategy point. If you are a service led business, it’s important to know whether you are building a product for your internal teams or for a new customer segment.
#1: Know Who You Are Building For
An easy mistake for a service business looking to add PLG is to invest in the building of a product that is going to be used by your internal stakeholders and think that it can automatically be sold externally. The thinking often goes something like, “Why don’t we build the software ourselves to gain efficiency in delivering services to our customers (internal product) and also make it available for customers to buy as well (PLG)?” We’ll refer to that as Scenario A.
Scenario A sounds logical, no? It even bears resemblance to one of the most often quoted origin stories behind successful startups; “I needed a software or product to do a job and realized nobody made it; so, I built it for myself and others.” We’ll call that Scenario B.
The difference between these two scenarios is that B follows one of the golden rules of faster product scaling: build for one persona at a time. In scenario A you are building for a team performing services, and you are also building for a client who is purchasing that software through a PLG motion.
In scenario B, you are looking to buy a product to use yourself, realize there isn’t one, and so you build it for buyers similar to yourself. You, yourself, and others with similar pains, willingness to pay, and user requirements are the persona.
Unless your internal teams have the same pain points, ways of working, and support needs as your external customer persona, you are talking about two distinct personas. You will grow faster and accelerate adoption by investing in separate teams to support the two separate internal vs. external personas.
#2: Steps To Building A Best In Class PLG Strategy
At the highest level, there are 7 elements that I’ve found to be critical to successful PLG strategies:
Service businesses can successfully deploy PLG to enable significant growth in your business, but it will require distinctly different strategies and ways of working than the manner in which you’ve used professional support with past clients. Being clear about the ways that PLG will work differently, and what is expected of the company to succeed in this new area is essential to establish PLG effectively.
Want to talk more about how to implement PLG in your service-based business? Reach out to us.