A very real dilemma facing the majority of early stage, pre-critical mass companies is how best to commercialise their technology. Most companies grossly underestimate the time and expense to first productise and then again to commercialise their IP. Depending on the physical form factor of the “product” to be commercialized (i.e. software vs. hardware vs. semiconductors), the cost of productisation may be in the tens of millions of dollars.
But this is what engineers do, they build. Damn the torpedos, full speed ahead. But taking an “If we can build it, they will come” view of the opportunity is dangerous and naive. Getting product to market is exceedingly difficult; often more so than building the product in the first place. Companies present rosy market forecasts to their potential investors, but building up a sales force and a channel that is adequate for coverage and sales capacity to get anywhere near most projections is very expensive and time-consuming.
How much quota are the reps going to carry? What’s a reasonable ramp? If it’s an evangelical sale, it’s unlikely that any rep will get anywhere near quota for at least 18 months. What is the per rep revenue number that you expect to bring in? What headcount do you need to support this...Marketing to create programs and demand generation, Finance to manage a growing payroll, along with accounts payable and receivable, Customer Service and Technical Support to scale to the projected number of customers required by the projections, etc.
What is the market window? If it takes 2-4 years to build a highly functioning sales channel, what percentage of the market opportunity has already passed?
Lastly, young companies almost always underestimate the stickiness of vendor/supplier relationships, especially if they’ve got a component that they’re trying to embed in someone else’s device. Imagine how difficult it is to sell into a risk adverse industry like the automotive industry, where their product roadmaps extend beyond 15 years, while yours are lucky to extend 15 months. Security of supply, financial stability, and corporate longevity are just three, of many, considerations that a start-up must contend with in order to close a sale of this type.
Next, I’ll talk about IP licensing as a go-to-market strategy.
That’s my .02!
Martin

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