We spent 6 months building for enterprise. Nobody bought it.
We thought we were ready.
Bigger deals. Fewer customers. Better margins. That was the dream.
So we built enterprise features. SSO. Advanced permissions. Audit logs. A whole new pricing tier starting at $2,000/month.
We spent 6 months. Three engineers. One dedicated product manager. Endless meetings about "enterprise readiness."
We launched the tier. Sent emails to our biggest users. Ran LinkedIn ads targeting "Head of IT" and "VP of Infrastructure."
Zero.
Not one signup.
Not even a demo request from an enterprise account.
The real cost
Let me put numbers on it.
Cost category | Amount |
|---|---|
Engineering time (3 people × 6 months) | $180,000 |
Product management | $60,000 |
Marketing (ads, content, emails) | $25,000 |
Opportunity cost (features we didn't build) | ~$150,000 |
Total | $415,000 |
That's what we spent to learn we were wrong.
What we thought we knew
We assumed enterprise customers wanted the same things as our small business users, just more of it. More security. More control. More features.
We never talked to them. We read blog posts. We looked at competitor pricing pages. We guessed.
Here's what we missed:
Procurement cycles. Enterprise deals take 6-12 months. We had 30-day sales cycles. We weren't built for that.
Security reviews. We needed SOC2. We didn't have it. Customers asked. We said "coming soon." They moved on.
Implementation. Enterprise buyers don't sign up and start using it. They need onboarding, training, account managers. We had none of that.
Compliance. Data residency. GDPR. HIPAA. We had nothing. Every deal died in legal review.
We weren't an enterprise company. We were a small SaaS with a big ego.
What the data said
We went back and looked at our own analytics.
Feature | Build time | Customer requests | Actual usage after 3 months |
|---|---|---|---|
SSO | 8 weeks | 4 requests | Used by 2 accounts (both internal) |
Audit logs | 6 weeks | 2 requests | 0 accounts |
Enterprise tier | 10 weeks | 0 requests | 0 signups |
API rate limits | 4 weeks | 47 requests | Used by 89% of power users |
The features nobody asked for took 24 weeks to build. The feature 47 people asked for took 4 weeks. We built the wrong things because we were chasing a dream, not data.
What we learned
1. Customers don't ask for enterprise features until they're ready to pay enterprise prices.
The 4 requests for SSO came from users on our $89/month plan. They weren't enterprise buyers. They just thought SSO sounded cool.
2. The features you imagine are always wrong.
Every enterprise feature we built was based on assumptions. Every assumption was wrong. We should have talked to 10 real enterprise buyers before writing a line of code. We didn't.
3. Your current customers are your roadmap.
The feature 47 people asked for? API rate limits. Not sexy. Not enterprise. But it solved a real problem for our power users. We built it in 4 weeks. Adoption was 89%.
What we did instead
We killed the enterprise tier. Dropped the price back down. Spent the next 3 months fixing the things our actual users were complaining about.
Fix | Time spent | Impact |
|---|---|---|
API rate limits | 4 weeks | 89% adoption among power users |
Faster load times | 3 weeks | 22% drop in support tickets |
Simpler onboarding | 2 weeks | 34% increase in activation rate |
Churn dropped from 8.2% to 5.7%. Referrals went up 41%. Revenue grew 18% without a single enterprise deal.
What this means for you
If you're thinking about building enterprise features, ask yourself three questions:
1. Have you talked to 10 enterprise buyers who are not already your customers?
If not, stop. You're guessing.
2. Do you have the compliance, security, and procurement infrastructure to support enterprise deals?
If not, you're not enterprise. You're just expensive.
3. What does your data say about what your current users actually need?
We ignored the 47 requests for API rate limits. We built SSO instead. That was stupid.
The honest truth
We wanted to be an enterprise company because it sounded impressive. Big logos. Big checks. Big validation.
But we weren't ready. And instead of admitting that, we wasted $415,000 learning a lesson we could have learned in a week of customer calls.
Now we have a rule: no enterprise features until someone from an enterprise pays us first. Not asks. Pays.
What I'm curious about
Have you ever built something for a customer you didn't have? How much did it cost you? What did you learn?
Imed Radhouani
Founder & CTO – Rankfender
Evidence over ego. Retention over requests.


Replies
The useful pre-build test might be: “what non-product work would need to exist for this customer to buy?” If the answer is SOC2, procurement docs, onboarding, a champion, security owner, implementation plan, etc., then the roadmap is not just feature work — it is company-shape work.
That framing makes it harder to hide an enterprise bet inside a normal product sprint.
The rule "no enterprise features until someone pays first" is solid, but it skips the harder problem: most PLG teams can't actually close enterprise even when they do have the features. The sales motion is completely different — you need a champion, a POC process, procurement navigation. Getting the features right is step one of five.
This is the trap every solo founder should read before touching enterprise. I kept Fluxerv focused on individual developers exactly to avoid this — one clear user, one clear problem. The "bigger deal" dream is seductive until you're 6 months in.
Classic build trap — optimizing for the customer you want vs. the one who's actually in pain right now. Enterprise deals look attractive on paper but the sales cycles are brutal for a small team with no runway. An MVP that solves one specific problem for SMBs would have given you real signal much faster and probably paid the bills while you iterated upward. And thanks for sharing your experience
what tier did you drop? looks like you still have top of the range Custom tier here - https://rankfender.com/en/pricing/
but overall I would agree with the sentiment, enterprise focus is what kills startups