From Early Adopters to Enterprise: BrightHire’s Framework for Landing Dream Logos
Landing enterprise logos as a startup usually requires a polished product, extensive social proof, and years of market presence. BrightHire took a different approach: they made their early prospects part of their product development journey.
In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, BrightHire CEO Ben Sesser revealed their unconventional strategy for winning over major tech companies by involving them early in the company’s development.
Starting with Market Validation
Rather than building in isolation, BrightHire engaged potential customers from day one. As Ben explains: “The first great clients that we brought on board started pretty early in our company formation process. These were folks that we talked to early on to validate the concept, to get feedback as we built the business and built the product such that when it was the right time to put something in their hands that could work functionally, they were already bought in.”
Finding the Right Early Adopters
BrightHire’s success with enterprise clients wasn’t accidental. They identified companies that shared specific characteristics: “All the companies on our site that you’re looking at and the rest of our clients, they share some common traits and principles. And primarily they are very talent, forward organizations that want to treat hiring as a discipline, as something that should be a competitive advantage and certainly a strength of their organization because they know the stakes are really high.”
Solving a Fundamental Problem
The company’s ability to win over major logos stemmed from addressing a core business challenge. As Ben notes: “If your team is the most important grief for your success. And hiring is how you build your team. Then hiring is among the most important activities that you do as a business. But the way it’s done day to day doesn’t necessarily reflect that at all times.”
This disconnect between importance and execution created an opening: “At the heart of the hiring process is a series of conversations and decisions that drive every outcome. And those conversations and decisions are our black box and kind of random.”
Building Credibility Through Innovation
BrightHire positioned themselves at the intersection of inevitable technological change and critical business needs. Ben explains their thinking: “Did we believe that five years from now all of that would exist but hiring would still be pen and paper notes and people’s memories? That was not a feature that we felt reasonable.”
The Sales Evolution
As they moved upmarket, BrightHire’s sales approach evolved. Instead of traditional feature-benefit conversations, they focused on deeper discovery: “If we are bringing a slightly different, newer version of something that people are already using today with existing budget, we would be having much more of a features, functionality, and pricing conversation… But for us, there’s a lot more discovery and then there’s a lot more conversation that we have where we’re connecting the value our product delivers back to pain.”
Creating Category Champions
BrightHire’s strategy wasn’t just about landing logos – it was about creating category champions. As Ben emphasizes: “No amount of marketing is going to create a category. What’s going to create a category is extremely happy customers telling their peers how great something is, and more people adopting it such that it hits a tipping point and goes to that sort of classic adoption curve.”
For founders looking to land enterprise clients early, BrightHire’s approach offers several key lessons:
- Involve potential customers in product development from day one
- Focus on organizations that already prioritize your problem space
- Address fundamental business challenges, not just feature gaps
- Position your solution as part of an inevitable technological shift
- Invest in deep discovery conversations rather than traditional sales pitches
The path to enterprise adoption doesn’t always follow the traditional playbook. Sometimes, the best way to win over major logos is to make them partners in building the future they want to see.