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The weekly top 10 for B2B tech operators · Every Friday

Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending July 26 2024

Friday 09:00 NZT Curated by Jon Davies
Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending July 26, 2024

EXPONENTIAL GROWTH

It's all marketing hype and doesn't exist in real life. Take a look at this article, which explains it more by taking a deep dive into the numbers of "Exponential" companies such as Slack ($0-$10m ARR in 10 months!!), Facebook, and HubSpot. According to McKinsey, despite the sector's image as a bastion of hypergrowth, only a tiny share of SaaS companies sustains growth rates above 30 to 40 percent.

INDUSTRY

Public software markets saw some sharp declines last month, and according to Tomasz Tunguz, it was all due to declining revenues. Growth rates for many public tech companies have halved in the past 18-24 months (even though revenue increased from $124B to $592B. Giants like Salesforce face growth challenges, but private market data still shows strong potential.

SALES

Do technical products need a different sales process than traditional enterprise SaaS products? Check out this guide on Tech SDRs. Understanding developer needs is key for these reps to selling DevTools efficiently.

RED QUEEN EFFECT

I'm running my first presentation on AI this week, and during my research, I came across this great article from Clouded Judgement talking about AI and its impacts. The Red Queen Effect analogy was used, referencing Lewis Carroll's "Through the Looking-Glass," where the Red Queen says, "It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place." I couldn't agree more, and neither can the 85%-ish of B2B SaaS companies currently building AI into their product sets. Businesses must constantly invest and evolve to stay competitive. Immediate benefits may not be clear, but long-term gains in efficiency, innovation, and market relevance are highly likely. The potential downsides to not doing all the running you can do are massive.

DISASTER

If you were not sleeping under an IT rock last weekend, you probably noticed that many Tech Workers had a VERY insane week fixing a massive global Windows outage caused by just one publicly traded SaaS Company, Cloudstrike. From many accounts, it was a total shit show of anti-malware malware that poor or ill-prepared Business Continuity Plans, lack of redundancy, and risk management compounded. This was the real Y2K, 25 years late, and today is the second-best day (the best being before last weekend) to revisit your BCPs; checkGitLab's BCP for an example of a real one. Here are some teachable lessons for all of us. Ironically, Crowdstrike has a great incident response checklist.

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