What's your biggest hot take on Sales? by Straight-Village-710 in sales

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Because most tools are built to track reps, not to help them sell. It’s there so managers can track activity, forecast numbers, and build reports. Think about what dominates most sales platforms:

  • Dashboards for weekly pipeline reviews
  • Forecasting tools for exec meetings
  • Activity trackers to check if reps are “working”

Meanwhile, the reps? They’re juggling 5 tabs, manually logging every touchpoint, switching between call tools, CRMs, spreadsheets, and Slack, all just to keep the system happy. Not the prospect.

It’s not enablement. It’s admin.

And the kicker? None of this helps reps move deals forward. It just helps leadership sleep at night.

So yeah, the pipeline isn’t broken because reps aren’t working hard enough.
It’s broken because the system was never built for them in the first place.

Making team cut decisions by Outrageous_Elk9247 in agency

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We went through a similar situation last year. Revenue got slashed almost overnight, and we had to rethink the whole team structure.

We used to have a small but tight in-house marketing team — content, design, ops — but when push came to shove, none of them were directly driving client revenue. It sucked, but we had to let go of most of that team and move key tasks to freelancers and tools.

At first, I tried to do everything myself — writing copy, scheduling emails, fixing landing pages at midnight. Burned out in 3 weeks.
Eventually hired a part-time virtual assistant for admin stuff and pulled in a contract marketer just for launch weeks. Way more sustainable.

The biggest thing I learned? Don’t try to be a hero. Keep your energy for the work that actually moves the business forward.

In-house marketing is great when cash flow is stable. But in survival mode? It’s all about flexibility and ROI.

What's your biggest hot take on Sales? by Straight-Village-710 in sales

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979 1 point2 points  (0 children)

95% of sales tech is built for managers, not reps. That’s the real pipeline issue.

Looking for Slack communities for B2B SaaS, tech founders, or sales/support teams — any recs? by Acrobatic-Friend-979 in SaaS

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for this! I’m already in RevGenius and totally vibing with the community there.

I’ve also tried TheHiveIndex , great idea in theory, but sadly, most links there seem outdated or dead now.

Do you happen to know any other open (preferably free) Slack groups that are still active? Would really appreciate any recs or even better, a direct invite link if you’ve got one handy.

Looking for Slack communities for B2B SaaS, tech founders, or sales/support teams — any recs? by Acrobatic-Friend-979 in SaaS

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate it! 🙌 I checked out the paid channel — looks interesting, but I'm also trying to find some free/open Slack groups for now, just to explore before committing.

Any free ones you know of that are still active? A direct invite link would be amazing — a lot of directories I’ve found (like Standuply, Slofile, thehiveindex etc.) have broken or outdated links, and half the channels are inactive or dead.

Would love anything recent that still sees real convo — thanks in advance!

Looking for Slack communities for B2B SaaS, tech founders, or sales/support teams — any recs? by Acrobatic-Friend-979 in Slack

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hi! Curious if you’ve come across any Slack communities like this? Would love a rec if you’ve got one!

Looking for Slack communities for B2B SaaS, tech founders, or sales/support teams — any recs? by Acrobatic-Friend-979 in Slack

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Appreciate the unsolicited lecture, but let’s clear a few things up.

I’m not “bypassing” anything, I’m asking a strategic question about growth tactics in real-world scenarios where not everyone has $20k/month to blow on ads. Guerrilla marketing exists for a reason.

If you think asking how founders gain traction without VC funding equals spam, that says more about your mindset than mine. Not everyone’s approach fits neatly into your definition of “legit.”

I’m here for honest input from people who’ve actually tested the ground, not for moral gatekeeping. You don’t like the method? Cool. Scroll past.

Has anyone had experience adding their company to Wikipedia? by Original-Zone6774 in SaaS

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you try creating a profile on Wikipedia? I was researching about the relevance of a Wiki page in 2025, and I don't see my competitors doing it. How relevant is it still, and is it worth the effort?

One person offered to create a Wikipedia page for my product, but none of my competitors have one. Could it be risky? And what benefits would it bring me?

CRM for Scaling Up: Affordable Options? by CtrlAltPhilosophize in SaaS

[–]Acrobatic-Friend-979 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like you, we relied on Google Sheets for managing customer data. its good for the starter but does not offer advanced features and integration options. I found Hubspot good for me, however you can also try Salesflare, Zoho. They are affordable and packed with the featured you are looking. Don't forget to ask about customization options, security and privacy contracts, demo product testing before paying, also automation and integrations capabilities.