Connect with us
March 14, 2026

Foundations Course – Lecture 9 – Sales

By Yonatan Stern| 2.6 Hours| English| Part of the Foundations Course
How to Build a Successful Company: <br />
Profitable, fast growing and on a small investment<br />
<br />
Yonatan Stern talks about why and how to start your sales process before having a product<br />
Given in September 29th, 2024 by Yonatan Stern
  • Customers are your biggest asset: Your customer base and users are the most valuable part of your company. You must own your customers directly and not rely on resellers, retailers, or partners to generate demand for you.
  • Start selling before you build the product: Begin your sales, branding, and lead generation processes when you only have an idea. This allows you to discover real market roadblocks, understand what customers actually want to buy, and avoid making an incredibly expensive pivot later.
  • Lead generation is your ultimate growth engine: Generating your own inbound leads is the most important growth engine you can build. When prospects ask you to call them, it simplifies your hiring process because you can hire average (“B-minus”) salespeople to close deals instead of paying a premium for people who do cold calling.
  • Build a simple product first: Many founders try to build a complex product with endless features to conquer the world, but customers usually just want a simple problem solved. Start with a simple product to win your first customers.
  • B2B sales are highly complex: B2B sales cycles take a long time (often up to two years before you see cash in the bank) because you are navigating multiple decision-makers, company politics, and purchasing departments.
  • Keep your prices up: It is significantly easier to make money and reach profitability if you maintain high prices rather than giving into the temptation to offer discounts.

What's covered in the slides

  • The Biggest Asset: A company’s most valuable asset is its customers and users, not its technology. This is why companies like LinkedIn, WhatsApp, and Waze were acquired for billions of dollars based purely on their user base, even before they had strong revenue streams.
  • Sales Channels (Direct vs. Indirect): An overview of selling directly (via e-commerce or salespeople) versus using indirect channels like retailers, resellers, and partners. The speaker emphasizes that third parties will rarely sell for you; you must create your own demand and own your customers.
  • E-commerce vs. Salespeople: E-commerce is ideal for self-explanatory, lower-priced products, whereas salespeople are mandatory for complex, high-priced B2B products (since you must charge high prices to cover their commissions). The ideal hybrid strategy is using a free/cheap online product to generate leads, then having salespeople call those users to upsell corporate features (like Zoom or Slack).
  • The Complex B2B Sales Cycle: B2B sales are “two-dimensional” because the company pays, but a maze of different people actually make the decision. The sales cycle involves navigating the “Champion,” skeptical end-users, the legal department, and the purchasing department (whose entire job is to demand discounts).
  • B2B Pricing Psychology: Business buyers are surprisingly less sensitive to raw price than they are to internal risk (“Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt” or FUD), product performance, and the disruption it will cause to their organization. You can overcome price shock by “trivializing” the cost, such as breaking it down to the cost of a cup of coffee per day.
  • Lead Generation as a Growth Engine: Generating inbound leads is drastically more efficient than cold calling because it allows you to hire average (“B-minus”) salespeople whose only job is to close deals rather than prospect. Crucially, leads must be called back within 5 minutes before the prospect loses interest.
  • Case Study (Intellichain): A look at a supply chain startup that was failing to sell its software because the target market was uneducated. They successfully pivoted by selling paid educational courses first, dropping free trials, and raising their software price from $10,000 to $50,000.
  • Sell Before You Build: Because the sales cycle takes a very long time, founders (specifically the CEO) must start selling the product when it is just an idea. Trying to sell early reveals exactly what the market actually wants to buy, preventing expensive “pivots” and potentially saving millions of dollars in wasted development.
Foundations Course – Lecture 9 – Sales – March 14, 2026

Given September 29th, 2024 by Yonatan Stern

Okay, so we are at lecture number nine, which is pretty impressive. I think, that we got all the way to here. And this time I would like to talk about sales. But before that, the usual introduction about our team, Ruti Ayala, Libya, sitting there. And I, again, what is the program? I think that everybody here knows it, so I can skip it. And as many of you know, when you give a lecture or presentation, you have to tell everybody what they’re going to hear about. Then you tell them, and then you remind them. So that’s what we’re going to do. I’m going to tell you what we’re going to talk about, then we’ll talk about it. And then I’ll give you the takeaways. The main things that I. I would really like you to remember. So we’re going to talk about sales.

And sales is a very complex subject because it has many situations and facets. And so the first thing I wanted to do is divide it into two categories, direct sales and indirect sales, or sales channels. So, direct sales also divides into two options. Option number one is e commerce. Many of you know it. You gonna go, you want to buy something, you go on the web with your credit card and you buy it. And obviously, there are salespeople. Usually, salespeople are called direct sales, but because I used the term already, I didn’t call it again. But if I say direct sales many times, I probably mean salespeople. Okay? And then there are sales channels. So, for example, when we sold cardscan, we had direct sales, but most of the sales were through retail. Then there are resellers, there are distributors, and there are partners.

Share this page