Case Study - Data Sutram - Unedited - 2 - 1648036586963
Case Study - Data Sutram - Unedited - 2 - 1648036586963
Case Study - Data Sutram - Unedited - 2 - 1648036586963
Founder Background
Ankit, Aisik and Rajit were three entrepreneurially driven college students in
Jadavpur University pursuing their Bachelor’s Degree. In their college days, along with
academics, they also worked with Xelpmoc Technologies - a data analytics and design
venture. During their stint, they had the opportunity to work directly under technology
pioneers like Sandipan Chattopadhyay, ex-CTO of Just Dial. During their multiple
interactions with data scientists on projects for multinationals like HDFC and Future
Group, they discovered a persistent problem - while companies had huge mandates to
become data-driven, they were unable to implement the mandates to their potential. On
double-clicking the problem they discovered that most companies do not have access to
information that is needed to create accurate data models to be able to predict the
business outcomes to cater to the business needs.
To address this gap, in September 2018, in their final year of college, Ankit, Aisik and
Rajit set out on a quest to create an ecosystem that would provide quality information
that the market was lacking by building a platform that would connect over 250 plus
data sources, taking in the satellites, mobile phone and every other source of data
layered with proprietary algorithms which would clean, blend and structure data into
valuable information. This led to the inception of Data Sutram.
Data in the early days was collected through surveying and sampling by companies like
Nielsen, IRI, but today it is collected from multiple sources like smartphones, satellites,
IoT devices etc. Every piece of software today is generating data. The fundamental
problem however remains, that unless you are Google, Amazon or Facebook, you do
not have access to the rich data to make informed decisions. Unlike software, data
works on volumes. Unless you have the volumes and the right sources, the data models
will not be accurate. It becomes a case of garbage in, resulting in garbage out.
Thus data scientists require rich and accurate data sources to build data models that
can help their businesses make informed decisions.
Data Sutram chartered their path to becoming that one-stop product company to solve
these challenges.
Data Sutram soon realised that they did not have a direct market fit, that is, they needed
to provide a layer of service on top of their product to become relevant in the market. In
order to find a product-market fit, they acted as a holistic service provider for their first
five customers. They used their data, which was their core product, and added the
required layer of analytics to solve the customer’s business problems. In simple words,
they gave their data context based on the information the customer was looking for. The
business problems could range from the information required for a store opening, for
customer acquisition, for risk modelling, etc. Data Sutram took a unique approach
where they had a customer-first outlook to help them solve their business problem while
having a product-first outlook to polish their core offering.
From zero to one:
Data Sutram started as a company not focusing on any particular sector. Their
customer acquisition strategy was to profile customers into early and late adopters.
Being an innovation first company, they decided to focus on early adopters of
technology resulting in Wellness Forever being one of their first customers. Wellness
Forever is a retail brand chain in Maharashtra with a heavy focus on a data-driven
approach. Data Sutram integrated their data pipelines with Wellness Forever and
helped them build several use cases for marketing, branch opening and other business
units. To make the product relevant for a retail business like Wellness Forever, they had
to add multiple service layers over their product. This resulted in the product shaping up
with a retail lens, deviating from the original vision of the company.
This experience taught them that they should focus more on sectors that do not demand
complete service offerings from Data Sutram and instead can take their product and
build their own solutions on top of it. Harnessing this learning, they approached multiple
sectors like BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance) and pharmaceutical.
The BFSI sector turned out to be a golden ticket for Data Sutram as the industry was
well equipped and capable of dealing with data using its own resources. While Data
Sutram was getting a grip of the BFSI sector they realised that their product was solving
some very real and fundamental problems for multiple sectors. With a lack of sectoral
knowledge and an incomplete solution, they started to brainstorm on how they can
possibly scale across sectors.
While Data Sutram was selling to their first set of customers, they were very happy and
satisfied with the direct sales approach as it validated their product, gave them valuable
feedback and helped them build multiple use cases for their product. However, this
happiness was short-lived as it wasn’t a scalable approach and they needed a more
practical way of entering different industries.
In Rajit’s words, “I'm building a company which can have 30 sectors on top of my
product. I will never have knowledge of 30 sectors. And that's why the channels are
important. That's why the partners are important in each sector because the partners
are going to drive your entire strategy going into that sector.”
Out of the entire universe of channel partners that are available, picking the right
partners was their next task at hand. The partner would have to help Data Sutram
complete the solution for that industry, by building on their core product, as well as
helping them distribute their core product.
To reach its utmost potential Data Sutram used three types of Channel partners:
A brush with channel partners was a goldmine of insights for the founders. They picked
up some valuable lessons and pitfalls to avoid while activating channel partners.
Rajit explained, “I think one of the fundamental things that I missed out on while building
the channel strategy was forgetting how much incentive I bring to my channel partners?
For example, I had one of the largest pharmaceutical consultancy players who was not
really scaling up my product, and I never knew why. Aeons later, I figured out that the
incentives were too small for them. As a monopoly provider in the market, launching
another product did not bring any added value to them. So you need to understand your
partner, what value you bring to the table, and you need to know how to incentivize your
partner and make it very practical for them to sell your product or service.”
A great example of how they entered a sector while building a win-win-win value
proposition for the customer, for the partner and for themselves was their venture into
the manufacturing industry with Accenture as their partner. Companies like ITC and JK
paper were Accenture’s customers at that time. One of the largest paper manufacturers
in India wanted to understand the demand for paper in different areas across the
country. Accenture, their analytics consultant, used Data Sutram’s product to retrieve
information on the stationary shops across geographies, points of consumption, footfall
and other necessary indicators to calculate demand. Accenture added their layer of
analytics on top of this data to provide an indicative number to that demand. The
incentive for Accenture here was the service contract with the client using Data
Sutram’s product while providing a holistic solution for the customer’s business need.
Now it was critical for Data Sutram to build a strategy that had the right mix of direct
sales, growth marketing, referrals and channel partners.
Data Sutram decided to put direct sales on the back burner, and take a channel partner
first approach to fuel growth.
As their second priority, they started building a stronger sales engine on the back of a
marketing strategy. While they started out with outbound only, where their sales
representatives would contact potential customers on various channels like email and
LinkedIn, they began experimenting on activating an inbound strategy. This would
involve building marketing collateral such as case studies and customer stories, blogs,
articles and advertising material. This would help potential customers discover Data
Sutram when a need for their solution would arise. Data Sutram’s goal was to move into
a complete inbound model moving forward.
Teaching Note -
Direct Sales Vs Channel Sales -
https://www.saleshacker.com/channel-sales-direct-sales-strategy/
One of the major differences between a B2C and a B2B buying process is, unlike B2C,
the purchasing decision-maker is usually not the end-user of the product in B2B. The
same was applicable for Data Sutram as well. While the stakeholders in charge of
signing the deal were CXO designations, the everyday users of the product were data
scientists in their organisation.
1. Swooping the CXO level audience off their feet by showcasing positive business
outcomes by using the product
2. Ensuring the user community adopts the product to its fullest capacity to deliver
the promised results
The founders soon realised the power of creating accurate target audience personas to
focus their efforts on. This included profiling the prospects, understanding their needs,
gaps in their current solutions, tangible benefits of using Data Sutram, whether they
required complete solutions or just their core product, as well as potential objections
and roadblocks.
This ensured that they utilised one of their most valuable resources well - the time
invested in approaching the right audience.
They say experience is the best teacher, and Rajit concurs, “I think what I realized is
that we spent a lot of time on certain customers, and I saw my business team really go
ahead and push. Whereas probably the reason for the customer not to convert was that
he or she was not clear on the value. What I feel we did was that we focused on
pushing rather than empathizing with the customer. We have fixed that now.”
This skill helped the team ink more deals, but they noticed the product being
underutilized in many cases.
The value they were able to communicate to the CXO audience was not trickling down
to the end-users. Building customer success teams turned out to be the solution to this
conundrum. The teams spent time with the users, helped them on board and
understand the product and the value it could deliver while making their lives easier.
The journey of creating a new product and hence a new market for the product has
been quite a ride for Data Sutram. The central question that they were asked or rather
expected to answer at every pitch to a new client was - “Why do I need you in my life?”
1) Storytelling: They started building stories around the first few customers and the
successful ways in which their product was used by these customers. The stories
were stitched around the central theme of how the product was able to make the
business better for these clients. These stories enabled them to change the
perspective of the next set of customers.
2) Convey impact by showcasing ROI: The next step was to start backing up all
these success stories with real numbers to give the customers a sense of
quantifiable benefits. The sales team is thus able to convince the buying centre
with actual data on the ROI they can expect by implementing the product.
3) Branding: FOMO or fear of missing out became a strong stimulator for late
adopters to jump on the bandwagon as it creates a sense of not being at par with
their competitors and peers. Having a strong brand is imperative to create this
FOMO effect.
4) The talk about tomorrow: Future-proofing is no longer a buzzword. As customers
build strategies for stronger future growth, the company communicated the role it
could play in that growth story.
These pointers opened doors to many new clients for Data Sutram and accelerated
their growth.