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Selling

Strategy and segmentation

Before landing, work with your European Leader to highlight key accounts and sectors to sell into. This may be straightforward – or if your offering is for multiple industries – can be more complicated. Try to leverage existing customers and networks as much as possible.

Evaluate which industries will be most receptive as you land in new markets. Identify your profile of target EMEA customers and the ten killer accounts you want to reach before setting up office.

Kevin Kimber

Former VP EMEA, Zuora

Trying to sell into the whole of Europe is not practical. Europe is generally segmented into key regions because they have different purchasing behaviours and business cultures. Grouping territories maximises efficiency.

NEMEA

UK, Ireland, Nordics, Netherlands

SEMEA

France, Spain, Italy

DACH

Germany, Austria, Switzerland

CEE

Poland, Czech, Slovakia, Hungary, Baltics

Language: Is English enough?

You can sell to Europe in English but will do better with local language skills. Hiring people who speak several languages in your centralised hub will broaden your reach.

Most US startups begin with English speaking countries, and many use English to sell to early adopters in other markets. Scandinavia and the Netherlands in particular are comfortable with English language products and marketing. This will work up to a point but it does limit your audience, so expect to transition to local languages as you grow.

Scandinavia is a huge market for early adopters but you get big points if you speak their language.

Johann Butting

Head of EMEA Sales, Slack

Compensation and ramp up

Compensation for Sales roles is broadly comparable to the US, but Enterprise Sales people may expect benefits or cash compensation in lieu of pension, healthcare, life insurance and car allowance. They will generally be less concerned about options.

Enterprise Salesperson compensation will be about $200K, 50/50 split base/ commission, for five to seven years of experience. Quotas will be comparable to the US, but getting up to speed in a new territory could take between three to six months. For a new Sales person, expect six months minimal revenue and build this into your compensation plan.

What's different in Europe?

Business cycles

There are major summer and winter slowdowns in business activity so forecast accordingly.

Cultural expectation

Britain and America are two nations divided by a common language, but the similarities outweigh the differences.

Traction peaks and troughs

Entering new markets can generate significant initial traction from early adopters. Since this layer is thinner in Europe than the US, you may experience a slowdown before regaining traction as you build localisation, brand and outbound activity.

In the US a Chief Information Officer will ask: ‘What can you do for me?’ In Europe it may be ‘What do you want from me?’

Mark Simon

CEO, The Chemistry Club

Implementation partners and distribution channels in Europe

Europe has a larger number of potential implementation partners and indirect distribution channels than the US. This is particularly true in infrastructure and hardware. Vice Presidents of Customer Success may find it uncomfortable to outsource this part of the business, but your General Manager in Europe should be able to guide you and find the right partners. As a result, the shape of your team may look quite different to the US, with dedicated resource in channel Sales and Marketing and in smaller, non- English speaking markets in Eastern and Southern Europe.

Average order value

These may be smaller in Europe so look at them in aggregate.

Remote implementation

You may have to spend more time on site in Europe than in the US, based on client expectations and levels of internal expertise.

I typically do a six to nine month test with partners in a market or work with them on three projects before signing up. You want partners who feel that your business is important to them.

Kevin Kimber

Former VP EMEA, Zuora

Paradigms from our portfolio

Zendesk

Zendesk was receiving inbound interest from across Europe with 70 - 80% of new business arriving organically. They built a multilingual, multinational Sales team out of their London offices, hiring Sales and Account Management and staffed up two people per quarter. The hiring profile was foreign nationals who were fluent in English plus their native language. The hires were typically entrepreneurially minded, a few years out of college with a little sales experience. Half the total hires had relocated to London to join Zendesk. Hires were sent to the US for an onboarding programme.

As time went on, the company began to see larger deals with more complex procurement processes coming through the pipeline. The Head of Europe handled these deals initially before hiring a specialist and building out a strategic accounts unit.

Elastic

In US Elastic built up a core hub in San Francisco, whereas in Europe they divided their Sales structure into North EMEA based in London and South EMEA based in Amsterdam. Pre-sales is essential because it’s a technical product so there is a 1:2.3 ratio of pre-sales to sales staff. In Europe, the deal sizes were significantly less than the size of the US in terms of annual contract value. Elastic found that the very largest customers required reps to engage face- to-face, whereas smaller customer could be transacted via video-conferencing and screen sharing. The team also runs public developer meet-ups and bespoke marketing events for individual enterprises.

Getting to grips: Germany, France, Spain

Show clients that you are serious about their market. Provide them with local language support or take a large group of people to your meetings.

Germany

In Germany, we needed to engage with external recruiters to find experienced Sales people. There is a lot of competition and working for a US based startup may not appeal to someone who is risk averse.

Lindsey Dale

HR Consultant, Outbrain

France

In France, you can fly in and out for business deals, whereas in Germany you need significant local presence to be taken seriously. This also depends on what stage your market is at.

Simon Edelstyn

Former MD Europe, Outbrain

Spain

People in Spain want to know you and get comfortable before doing business. Often foreigners doing deals in Spain or Italy can come across as too aggressive.

Simon Edelstyn

Former MD Europe, Outbrain

Localisation
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