In the last couple of years, we have worked with a wide range of IT and software consulting firms that deliver critical solutions to enterprise clients. We observed a shared challenge across the ecosystem: the default tendency to lead with technology.
It makes sense. Many of them offer powerful products. Teams are trained on them. There’s a strong sense of ownership around features and capabilities. But clients rarely buy technology for its own sake. They’re not experiencing a tool problem. They’re facing delays, complexity, risk, and performance gaps.
This provides a vital opportunity for software vendors to move from technology-centric messaging to problem-oriented, outcome-driven service propositions.
In our work with high-performing service teams, this transition has proven to be the most significant factor in establishing credibility, delivering value, and achieving long-term client impact.
Many vendor-aligned services teams still focus on implementation and optimisation. “We’ll help you get the most from the software or the platform.”
This isn’t a differentiated value proposition. It assumes the client already believes the tool is the answer. But if the real problem hasn’t been identified or the business context hasn’t been clarified, services risk becoming reactive, commoditised, and hard to grow.
We encourage technology providers to move upstream, lead the conversation, and translate technology into meaningful business progress. This begins by rethinking how services are framed.
We have seen repeatedly that clients don’t buy tools. They buy progress. The most successful service proposals start by identifying a problem. A bottleneck. A risk. A source of friction. Only once that’s understood does the discussion move to solutions. Only then does the technology come into play, not as the main focus, but as an enabler.
This order matters.
We see that the strongest software and implementation providers are adopting this model. Not just in messaging but in how they design, price, and deliver their services.
We recognise that this isn’t an easy pivot. Software and implementation businesses are often founded on extensive product expertise. Sales enablement, technical teams, and service models are all centred around software or platforms.
But the service opportunity is elsewhere. Clients don’t want a simple walkthrough of features. They seek assistance in overcoming the real obstacles in their environment.
The shift from being a tool expert to a problem solver isn’t superficial. It alters how services are designed and delivered and opens up a very different kind of client relationship.
From our vantage point, here’s what works:
These shifts elevate the services conversation. They make it easier to engage earlier, land larger deals, and stay involved longer.
Clients remember the impact, not the feature list.
The software solutions and implementation providers that grow most effectively aren’t just selling software; they’re designing services that eliminate real business friction. That’s what builds trust, enhances reputation, and creates long-term opportunities.
So here’s the invitation: Lead with the issue. Define the desired outcome. Allow the tool to be introduced at the right moment, not as the starting point.
Issue. Outcome. Tool.
That’s the order that wins.
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