In the startup world, early growth often feels like lightning in a bottle. You land your first big customers on the strength of relationships, hustle, and a compelling product story. But when it’s time to scale — to hire more salespeople, enter new markets, and build a predictable revenue engine — that same scrappy approach stops working.
That’s exactly where a Greensboro-based B2B software company found themselves when they engaged JL Chapman Group. They had grown from zero to $2M in annual recurring revenue, but growth had slowed and their sales motion had no foundation to scale from. Every rep was doing something different. Deals were unpredictable. Leadership had no real visibility into what was working.
Over the course of an 18-month engagement, John Chapman helped them build the sales infrastructure and team alignment needed to double revenue — and set the foundation for a Series A fundraise.
The Challenge: Founder-Led Sales Hitting a Wall
The company’s founder was a brilliant product mind who had personally closed the first 40 clients. His network, passion, and deep product knowledge made him extraordinarily effective. But as the company hired its first dedicated sales team, none of that translated.
The new reps didn’t have a playbook to follow. There was no ICP, no defined sales process, and no consistent messaging. Win rates hovered around 15%. The average deal took five months to close — far too long for a cash-constrained startup. And leadership’s attempts to course-correct were flying blind: there were no pipeline metrics, no forecast accuracy, and no way to identify which reps were struggling and why.
When the founder reached out to JL Chapman Group, the mandate was clear: “We need to be able to grow without me being in every deal.”
Building a Scalable Sales Engine
John Chapman began with a thorough diagnosis of the company’s sales reality — not the assumptions leadership had about it. He interviewed reps, shadowed discovery calls, reviewed won/lost deal data, and mapped the actual sales process against what was being tracked in the CRM.
What emerged was a clear picture: the company’s best deals shared specific characteristics (company size, budget cycle, and technical maturity) that were being ignored entirely in prospecting. And the sales process had no consistent structure — every rep had their own approach to demos, objection handling, and negotiation.
Drawing on decades of experience scaling sales organizations at Kennametal, Stanley Works, and Coca-Cola, John worked with the team to build a sales system tailored specifically to B2B tech sales:
- A tightly defined Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) to focus prospecting efforts on high-probability accounts
- A 7-stage sales process with clear entry/exit criteria and documented best practices at each step
- A repeatable discovery framework to help reps uncover pain, budget, and timeline consistently
- A demo structure that led with business outcomes rather than product features
- A weekly pipeline review cadence with forecast accuracy accountability
- A rep onboarding and coaching program that reduced ramp time from 6 months to 90 days
Critically, John stayed in weekly contact with the leadership team throughout implementation — not just delivering a strategy deck, but helping them navigate the organizational challenges of actually changing how a sales team operates.
"John didn't just give us a framework — he helped us understand why our existing approach wasn't scaling, and what it would take to fix it. Within a year, our reps were more confident, our pipeline was more accurate, and we were having better conversations at every stage."
Founder & CEO, B2B SaaS Company Tweet
The Results
- 2x revenue growth — from $2M to $4M ARR within 18 months
- Win rate improved from 15% to 34% after implementing structured process
- Average sales cycle reduced from 5 months to 2.5 months
I look forward to seeing how these developments will improve service levels and customer satisfaction in the freight industry!