The Zenity Playbook: Building Enterprise Trust Through Knowledge-Sharing Instead of Sales
Most enterprise security startups compete for attention through aggressive sales tactics and fear-based messaging. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, Ben Kliger revealed how Zenity took the opposite approach: building trust through deep knowledge sharing before asking for the sale.
The Knowledge-First Strategy
“We believe that we need to show value to our prospects clients, whether it’s with their thought leadership activities, content, publications that we’re doing participation in respectful security organizations, top leadership organizations such as OWA, such as Mitre,” Ben explains. This wasn’t just content marketing – it was a comprehensive approach to building enterprise trust.
Moving Beyond FUD
In the security industry, Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt (FUD) is the default marketing language. But Zenity deliberately chose a different path. “We never try to scare people off. It’s not the way that we operate at Zenity. It’s not like a FUD motion,” Ben emphasizes.
Instead, they focused on education and enablement. As Ben notes, “What’s very unique about our story is that it’s a story of enablement… Organizations need Zenity for a win situation in order for them to feel comfortable to make sure that they empower their end users.”
Building Deep Industry Knowledge
Rather than rushing to market with surface-level understanding, Zenity invested in building deep expertise about their market. This knowledge helped them identify significant trends, like the fact that “Gartner estimated that by 2025, 75% of development in enterprises will be carried by citizen developers, not by professional developers.”
This insight shaped their entire approach to market education and thought leadership.
The Three Pillars of Knowledge-Based GTM
Zenity’s approach to building enterprise trust rested on three key elements:
- Industry Organization Participation Working closely with respected security organizations helped establish credibility. As Ben explains, they focused on “participation in respectful security organizations, top leadership organizations such as OWA, such as Mitre.”
- Analyst Relations “Analysts are of course, very meaningful… It’s important to work closely with those respectful organizations such as Gartner and Forrester and IDC. They have such an amazing perspective on the industry,” Ben notes. These relationships helped validate their category and approach.
- Customer Listening “When you talk to these leaders and it’s not like just, ‘hey, I want to sell you this and that,’ when you actually listen to what they have to say, to their feedback, especially when you’re early in your journey, that helps you get better,” Ben shares.
From Knowledge to Enterprise Trust
This knowledge-first approach helped Zenity win over major enterprises. “The ICP for us today, we target very large enterprises, I want to say a Fortune 1000 type of organizations who are relying heavily on major SaaS platforms,” Ben explains.
Looking Forward
The strategy has positioned Zenity for significant growth. “We went to solve a problem that, first of all, huge. And with that, of course, there is a large opportunity to build something massive here, like a real company,” Ben notes.
Lessons for Enterprise Founders
For founders building enterprise startups, especially in technical markets, Zenity’s approach offers several key insights:
- Prioritize deep market knowledge over quick sales
- Build relationships with industry organizations
- Use thought leadership to establish credibility
- Focus on education and enablement rather than fear
- Listen deeply to customer feedback
The key lesson is that in enterprise markets, especially for complex technical products, trust is built through knowledge sharing, not sales tactics. As Ben’s experience shows, when you consistently deliver value through education and insights, enterprise sales conversations become much easier.
For early-stage startups targeting enterprise customers, this might mean a longer path to revenue, but it creates a stronger foundation for sustained growth. The trust built through knowledge sharing doesn’t just help win initial customers – it helps create advocates who can testify to your expertise and approach.