Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
The False Hedge
Serving two markets can feel like prudence. It spreads risk, keeps options open, and buys time with boards. Yet in positioning terms, that hedge acts more like fog than safety. Buyers look for a decisive signal of relevance and advantage. When your story straddles, each audience hears a diluted version of itself, and neither sees a reason to act now. The commercial impact appears later: firmer competitors set the agenda while your team is left negotiating on features and time, not value.
Clarity is a strategic asset because it concentrates proof: one buyer, one problem, one decisive outcome. That concentration doesn’t narrow ambition; it accelerates it.
The Quiet Tax
The real cost of straddling is cumulative. It spreads across decisions and then compounds. Complexity becomes the operating model without anyone choosing it. From our experience this normally shows up as:
- Generic offers that invite comparison and discounting; conversions soften, cycles extend.
- A swollen roadmap serving incompatible needs; delivery slows and confidence ebbs.
- Fading referrals as buyers struggle to place you; reputation becomes fuzzy rather than sharp.
None of this announces itself loudly. It accrues in weekly prioritisation meetings, in the extra slide you add to suit the second market, and in the cautious language sales adopts to avoid alienating anyone.
Choose Your Beachhead
The practical alternative is not smallness; it’s chosen advantage. Pick the market where you can credibly win now, then sequence out from strength. In our experience with mid‑market organisations, this decision becomes cleaner when leaders establish a simple lens and commit to it for two quarters.
- Decide on the dominant use case you resolve best, the buyer with urgent demand, and the proof only you can show.
- Narrow what you sell and where you sell it; pause features and channels that don’t serve the beachhead.
- Reset success measures around revenue quality: pricing resilience, shorter cycles, steadier forecasts.
Expect some internal friction as expectations reset. That’s the price of alignment, not a signal to retreat.
Clarity That Compounds
Focus also has an external dividend. Specialists tend to outperform because markets reward clear bets: Level Ventures notes that specialist early‑stage firms reach top‑decile returns roughly 25% of the time, almost double generalist peers at 12.7%, underscoring the value of concentration.
When you compress attention around one buyer and one outcome, messages resonate, partners know where to place you, and teams move faster with fewer meetings. Over time, this tight loop deepens expertise and authority, making the next market easier to enter on your terms. The momentum you bank today is what protects you when conditions turn tomorrow.
Sources: