The theme of my conversations recently seems to be SMB SaaS moving to sell into the enterprise.

One question that comes up when planning to move upmarket is what type of collateral and content is needed to sell to enterprise accounts.

I love the forethought the question indicates. While it can seem in the weeds, executional details like this often go overlooked, which causes a lackluster rollout and low sales rep adoption of the new enterprise strategy. So often, a company leadership team makes changes in direction without thinking through the operational tasks needed to bring the strategy to fruition.

When entering the enterprise market, more sales enablement resources are needed (in most cases)—not a ton more, but more. Sales cycles are longer, buying committees are bigger, and price points are usually higher. The complexity of implementation, training, support, and integration also increases. The right resources can support these characteristics of the enterprise sale.

Having sold an enterprise product and subscribed to many as well, this is my shortlist of what is needed to sell into the enterprise and why.

All of the above can be digital, not necessarily actual printed collateral. In my experience, you don’t need printed material often—everyone wants a digital web-based experience or a PDF that can easily be passed around. Perhaps a single “leave” behind for salespeople who do in-person meetings and something sales can mail to get the attention of key prospects.

The exception would be if you do trade shows (in enterprise software sales, trade shows can be a big part of creating and capturing demand), then you should have printed collateral to give to booth visitors. I usually like to have a thought leadership piece, as well as a combined features/benefit brochure, in the trade show booth. This helps me hit a prospect no matter if they are high funnel (awareness) or low funnel (ready for product and solution details).

What’s most important about enterprise sales content

What matters most is that everything is designed to stand alone and communicate to a wide audience. There are many stakeholders across the organization that may participate in your sales process, so everything needs to be designed to be understood, digested, and meaningful for a wide variety of roles in the organization and different awareness levels as well. You never know where your content will end up and what context will be available. People you never have the chance to interact with will see your content, so your content needs to sell for you.