Outbound sales
Contents
Woah woah woah, we're doing outbound?
Yes! But do not be afraid:
- We are not doing this to 'go enterprise' - for now we're trying to reach more of our ICP.
- Our investors did not ask us to do this - we came up with it ourselves.
So why are we doing it now? I thought our inbound pipeline was good?
Outbound sales is a thing we will need to get really good at as we continue to scale PostHog, as 100% inbound eventually dries up. We are not going to be the first company in history to build a huge Saas business with zero outbound, and most companies like us start thinking about outbound around our ARR. Even the largest, most beloved devtool products of all time do this - they just do it in a smart way.
We want to start doing outbound now because, if we wait til inbound slows down, we’ll panic and make bad decisions, trash the brand, and copy and paste what other boring companies have done in a short-sighted way that doesn't work for our audience.
Outbound is helpful because it is a good way to generate more leads in a semi-predictable way - and there are lots of cool ways to do it in 2025 using GTM engineering, agents etc. We should view outbound as a type of hyper-focused marketing that generates sales opportunities.
Let's get on the same page - what is outbound?
‘Outbound’ means a few different things. This is how we think about it in relation to customers:
- Using PostHog and spending a lot of money
- Using PostHog and spending a little money
- Using PostHog with good engagement/high ICP, but not spending any money
- Person signed up at some point, but not really using, usually just kicking the tires
- Not signed up, but has heard of PostHog
- Not signed up, never heard of PostHog
None of these people are currently talking to us - that's why they are under the umbrella of 'outbound'.
We’ll call 1-3 ‘warm’ outbound and 4-6 ‘cold’ outbound. Technical Account Managers are responsible for managing leads from warm outbound, in addition to their book of business. Technical Account Executives are responsible for managing leads from cold outbound, in addition to inbound leads (which comprise 90% of leads today).
We are building a BDR function that will generate leads, mainly focused on cold outbound to start. (A BDR, or business development rep, is someone who gets leads for sales by doing outbound activities.)
What we're doing today
Our focus today is on three categories: inbound leads, getting much better at warm outbound (we have a huge number of leads that we could be converting better), and experimenting with colder outbound. Dmytro Sitalo is leading our experiments today with the
Check out the leads page for more detail on lead types and where they go.
If you're reading this after getting outbounded by PostHog, blink twice you can opt out here
We've linked to this section because you've been included in our first few experiments. We want to work together, but not at the expense of you hating us.
So, if you'd rather we didn't reach out, you can opt out with this button: Opt out of outbound
No forms, no 'are you sure?', no hurt feelings. You can always change your mind later by reaching out to us directly. We would note that you're on our list because we think you're a good fit for PostHog, but that's for you to judge.
Most SaaS companies would likely just blast you with emails, calls and DMs without your consent. If you can’t already tell, PostHog does things differently.
What will we do on our calls? A simple outbound sales process
As we begin to run outbound sales meetings set via Dmytro Sitalo’s efforts and our own, we need a lightweight, human-first approach to managing outbound conversations.
Remember, we contacted them — be transparent about our process and who we build for. How well we do discovery in our initial conversations will dictate how well (or poorly) we position PostHog.
If they’re interested, we’ll show them how to try PostHog and help them along the way; if they’re not a fit, we’ll say so honestly. We need to earn the right for each step and not assume their interest.
So, what does that mean for a first conversation? We:
- Do research & get context
- We are human & transparent when we meet them
- Explore their role & current state/stack
- Qualify or disqualify
- With explicit permission, give a brief PostHog pitch
- Ask the hard question
- Provide a relevant next step & schedule it on the call
- Action the task
- Rinse, lather, and repeat
Goal: help them decide if PostHog solves a real problem, not close in one call.
In order:
1. We do research & get context
Do basic account research:
- Prompt your LLM of choice for facts (especially with MCP access). Ask:
- What's their tech stack? (Job postings, BuiltWith/Wappalyzer, 1Password)
- Recent company news (funding, launches, hiring)
- Their role + tenure (LinkedIn, their website)
- Why did they agree to this meeting? (Read Dmytro Sitalo’s notes in the New Business Slack)
- What problem or pain did Dmytro Sitalo flag?
Use this to form a call hypothesis.
2. We are human & transparent when we meet them
We contacted them. This call only makes sense if we can solve a real problem for them. Start with:
Often this is enough. If they’re vague or skeptical, get specific with your pre-prepared hypothesis:
If they answer clearly, set a simple agenda:
3. Explore their role & current state/stack - find the pain
As Charles Cook says, companies don’t buy software; humans do. Start with their role/team.
Then move to the trigger/use-case:
Other prompts:
You’re digging for pain, urgency, and priority in this part of the conversation. Drill in as needed:
- What's the pain and is it urgent/quantified? - "You mentioned [pain]. Help me understand the impact. What's that costing you - in staff time, in missed opportunities, in money?"
- Is it a priority, and do they have a sense of timeline? - "How much is [frustration] actually getting in the way? Is it blocking you or just annoying?" "Is there a timeline or trigger that makes solving this more urgent?"
- What does the decision process look like? - "Hypothetically, if you did decide to switch tools, how does that work at [company]? Who gets involved?" "Who controls the budget for this kind of thing?" "Have you ever bought a tool like this before at [company]? What was that process like?"
4. Qualify or disqualify
Run a quick mental evaluation of their answers on the call. Assess four factors:
- Specific pain identified
- Line of sight to impact (time/money)
- Timeline (next 6 months)
- Authority or direct line to buyer
If unclear, ask directly, e.g. timeline:
Their answer tells you if this is a priority.
If you have fewer than four, disqualify politely.
If you have all four, ask permission to pitch.
Disqualify outbound tasks that won’t convert.
Bonus: end early if they’re disqualified or disinterested. If highly qualified and eager, skip the pitch and go straight to a next step.
5. With explicit permission, give a brief PostHog pitch
Open with what you heard and ask for permission to pitch:
Pivot to a tailored elevator pitch (below is generic):
6. Ask the hard question
Ask:
If they’re uncertain, emphasize the free trial:
Wait. Embrace the pause. And, get their answer. If we don't solve a problem for them, this isn't worth continuing.
7. Provide a relevant next step & schedule it on the call
If qualified and interested, propose a next step and book it on the call:
If hesitant or marginal, ask:
If they disqualify themselves post-pitch, disqualify:
8. Action the task in PostHog's Salesforce
This is internal hygiene. Track tasks to reflect the opportunity:
- If qualified + next step, create an opportunity in
Problem Agreementand use stage exit criteria - If marginal/no next step, switch task from
In progresstoNurturingand progress them toward an opportunity - If not qualified, disqualify with reason and share feedback with Dmytro Sitalo in Slack
9. Rinse, lather, and repeat
You should always aim to get them into a shared Slack channel or establish a regular communication cadence with them (call/email). Nothing will happen if we aren't talking.
Where else you take a qualified outbound sales opportunity is dependent on the specifics of your conversation.
Your process may resemble later stages of the inbound sales process.
Otherwise, you can:
- Book a technical demo with the person’s team
- Ask for an introduction to the best contact at the company
- Record a Loom of specific features to show how PostHog works
- Ship them documentation and a code sample to demonstrate how PostHog can be configured
- #domoreweird in a delightful way
- Schedule a kickoff to get their trial started
- Ship them merch
What won’t change: qualify each step, solve a real problem, and don’t assume interest just because a task became an opportunity. Stay focused on their pain and you’ll earn the right to keep moving.