Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
The Endorsement Trap
Logos reassure. They signal you’re not a risky bet. But they don’t prove what matters: that your approach consistently delivers outcomes under defined conditions. In crowded categories, that difference is decisive. 6sense notes that 81% of business-to-business (B2B) buyers arrive at first contact already favouring a supplier, which raises the bar for evidence that changes a set preference. Endorsements may open the door; proof earns the right to set terms and shape the conversation.
The practical question for leadership is simple: what will convince a buyer who’s already leaning elsewhere? Proof that explains cause, defines limits, and holds up to scrutiny.
Proof As Capability
Treat proof as an organisational capability, not a slide. It should connect strategy to delivery and be reproducible at pace. That means designing how you create, store and deploy evidence across the lifecycle, not just collecting quotes when a deal closes.
- Macro: Show outcome trails with baselines, timeframes, and constraints. Tie impact to revenue, risk, or efficiency so boards can see durability.
- Micro: Codify the method, decision points and guardrails. Prove repeatability with simple controls, clear ownership and consistent handovers.
- Market: Compare against realistic alternatives using independent benchmarks, third-party audits and dated, contextualised results.
Commercial Consequences
When proof is thin, buyers price for uncertainty. When it’s strong, you reduce perceived risk and expand choice. The ripple effects are material.
- Pricing: Evidenced performance supports premium positioning and protects margins in negotiation.
- Pipeline: Comparative proof filters opportunities and shortens cycles by aligning stakeholders on outcomes, not features.
- Talent: Clear methods and measures help you onboard faster, align roles, and keep delivery consistent under pressure.
Most organisations we work with unlock disproportionate return on investment (ROI) when they link proof assets to specific segments and use-cases, rather than generic claims spread everywhere.
Building Verifiable Signals
Start where scrutiny is highest. For a priority segment, define the baselines you’ll measure, the counterfactual you’ll compare against, and the independent lens you’ll use. Capture the operational learnings as much as the headline result; the former makes the latter scalable. Then decide how evidence flows: what sits in the pitch, what a third party certifies, and what your customer quotes in their language.
The organisations that systemise proof will convert endorsements into strategic separation—competing on outcomes others can’t credibly claim, and making every new win compound the next.
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