In 2016, I launched HeyTaco as a simple Slack add-on that made thanking people fun and rewarding. My app was listed in the Slack App Directory, allowing anyone to install and use it instantly. As many businesses were transitioning to Slack and Microsoft Teams for communication, HeyTaco took advantage of the conversations on these platforms to effortlessly foster peer-to-peer recognition among teams.
For companies using HeyTaco, leadership didn't need to tell their employees to recognize peers through some recognition tool; people were already doing it within Slack and Microsoft Teams, with HeyTaco as their cheerleader.
This bottom-up approach starts with the people using your product. And unlike my competitors, I wasn't selling to HR leaders. I just made my software available for anyone to try. Anyone from the summer intern to the CEO could install HeyTaco and try it out.
In traditional software sales, leaders decide on the company's tools and then deploy them across the organization, usually with a rollout strategy. Even though this approach may work for some, it has limitations, especially with user adoption and engagement. Many have low engagement with little adoption. Most people want to avoid being told what tools to use. They would instead choose what works best for them and their team.
Unlike Top-down software, bottom-up software enables employees to try out tools, learn their value, and then naturally advocate for their adoption within the company. This allows employees to connect to the tool more profoundly and increases user adoption and engagement. Top-down software typically leads to lower employee buy-in, misalignment with actual needs, slower adoption, cost inefficiencies, and a disconnect between leaders and end users.
The rationale for the bottom-up software is that employees are better brand ambassadors than leaders.
Many factors play a role in bottom-up success, such as where your software can be found, its positioning, and your target audience. Here are five things you can do to reposition your product as more bottom-up:
Anyone building a SaaS product should consider a bottom-up approach. This strategy drives adoption and creates loyal users who are invested in the product's success. As HeyTaco has shown me, when you put the power in the hands of your users, great things can happen.
Thanks for reading! 🌮
If you found this article valuable, please share it with your friends and colleagues.