Developers Control Purchasing
Individual developers can make purchasing decisions for tools under $200/month without procurement approval in their organisations.
The Assumption
PLG (product-led growth) assumes developers can self-serve. But can they actually pay? In many organisations, developers don’t have purchasing authority. Even a $50/month tool might require:
- Manager approval
- Procurement review
- Security assessment
- Vendor onboarding
If developers can’t buy without friction, PLG fails. We’d need enterprise sales from day one.
Evidence
Supporting signals:
- Vercel, Netlify, Supabase grew through individual developer purchases
- Many developers have corporate cards for small tool purchases
- “Shadow IT” exists—developers buy tools and expense them
- Startups and small teams have minimal procurement friction
Counter-signals:
- Enterprise security increasingly blocks unapproved tools
- Zero-trust security models require vendor review
- Developers at big companies often lack purchasing authority
- Remote work increased security scrutiny on tool usage
What Would Prove This Wrong
- Most deals stall at procurement review
- Average sales cycle exceeds 30 days even for small amounts
- Enterprise security consistently blocks SmartBoxes
- Developers self-report no purchasing authority in surveys
Impact If Wrong
If developers can’t buy, PLG doesn’t work. We’d need to:
- Sell to enterprises top-down
- Build for procurement (SOC 2, security questionnaires, legal review)
- Accept longer sales cycles and higher CAC
- Price higher to cover sales costs
Testing Plan
Early signals:
- Track time from signup to paid conversion
- Ask in onboarding: “Do you have purchasing authority?”
- Monitor where deals stall in the funnel
Validation:
- Over 50% of conversions without procurement involvement
- Average signup-to-paid under 7 days
Kill criteria: If less than 20% of signups can self-convert, pivot to sales-led.
Related
Depends on:
- PLG Works For Infrastructure — this is a hidden prerequisite
Affects:
Assumption
Individual developers can make purchasing decisions for tools under $200/month without procurement approval in their organisations.
Depends On
This assumption only matters if these are true:
- PLG Works For Infrastructure — 🟠 ⚪ 50%
How To Test
Customer interviews about purchasing authority. Track signup-to-paid conversion by company size.
Validation Criteria
This assumption is validated if:
- Over 50% of conversions happen without procurement involvement
- Average time from signup to paid under 7 days
- Developers self-report purchasing authority in surveys
Invalidation Criteria
This assumption is invalidated if:
- Most deals stall at procurement review
- Enterprise security blocks unapproved tools
- Average sales cycle exceeds 30 days even for small deals
Dependent Products
If this assumption is wrong, these products are affected: