7 Go-To-Market Lessons from Scaling a Sustainable Design Platform to 70% Market Penetration

Learn 7 actionable go-to-market lessons from Cove.tool CEO Sandeep Ahuja on pivoting business models, content marketing, customer listening, and scaling from consulting to AI-powered services.

Written By: Brett

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7 Go-To-Market Lessons from Scaling a Sustainable Design Platform to 70% Market Penetration

7 Go-To-Market Lessons from Scaling a Sustainable Design Platform to 70% Market Penetration

Most founders obsess over picking the right business model from day one. Sandeep Ahuja, CEO of Cove.tool, has proven there’s a better approach: evolving your model as your market evolves. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, Sandeep shared how his company achieved 70% penetration of the top 100 architecture firms by making counterintuitive go-to-market decisions that most SaaS playbooks would reject.

Lesson 1: Don’t Fear the Second Pivot

The conventional wisdom says pivoting once is traumatic enough. Sandeep did it twice — and both times made the company stronger.

First, Cove.tool transitioned from consulting to software, unlocking the ability to support 100,000 projects annually instead of just 100. Then, as AI capabilities matured, they reintroduced services. “We’ve actually made that switch twice now because we went from services to software, and then we’ve gone from software to software and services that are AI powered,” Sandeep explains.

The key insight: your business model should serve your market, not your ego. When customers started comparing their experience to ChatGPT, demanding answers instead of tools, Cove.tool adapted. “Folks no longer wanted software that they didn’t want to learn a thing and then do a study in it. They just wanted the study done.”

This created what Sandeep calls “sassified services” — service delivery with SaaS economics and go-to-market motion. It’s not a retreat from software; it’s an evolution that combines the best of both worlds.

Lesson 2: Use Extreme Market Segmentation for Content

Generic content dies in crowded markets. Cove.tool’s approach to content marketing is ruthlessly specific, targeting micro-communities with tailored messages that address exact pain points at exact moments.

Sandeep shares a concrete example of their California campaign: “We wanted to reach out to all of the architects that are specifically within California and not just all the architects, all of the principal architects. So that’s very specific persona, very specific geography.”

They built an entire campaign around recent California energy code changes, creating articles, webinars, and panels all focused on that singular issue for that singular audience. “We could drip kind of that campaign out and folks would get nurtured. Even if the first set of folks weren’t interested in a blog, perhaps they’re interested in a webinar.”

This requires being “extremely data driven almost to the contact level” to ensure the right message reaches the right person. It’s more work than broadcast marketing, but the conversion rates justify the effort.

Lesson 3: Lead with Value, Not Capability

Cove.tool’s land-and-expand strategy works because they remove risk from the buying decision. Rather than forcing customers to commit large budgets upfront, they encourage small initial projects.

“It’s okay if they only come to us with their $10,000 project, their $50,000 project, and we show them how wonderfully we can execute on that. And then they love the cost savings that they get, and they come back for more,” Sandeep notes.

The economics speak for themselves: Cove.tool charges about a quarter of traditional consulting rates and delivers in one week instead of four to six weeks. Once customers experience this value, expansion becomes inevitable. “The same deal that might have started out as 10k is over 100k by the end of the year.”

This approach works especially well in down markets. With the architectural billing index down for four consecutive quarters, cost efficiency isn’t a nice-to-have — it’s a survival mechanism.

Lesson 4: Never Stop Listening to Customer Calls

As companies scale, founders naturally delegate customer interactions. Sandeep argues this is a critical mistake, calling customer call listening “the single most important thing, I think that has changed everything for me.”

He admits there was a period when rapid growth pulled his attention away from customer calls entirely. Returning to this practice revealed a fundamental market shift. “For example, in our market, the folks wanted software a few years ago. I mean, that’s why we became the de facto software. But with the AI revolution, our market evolved, too.”

This insight — that customers wanted done-for-you solutions instead of do-it-yourself software — only emerged from direct customer listening. No amount of usage data or NPS scores could have revealed this shift as clearly as hearing customers articulate their frustrations and desires in their own words.

Lesson 5: Quality Over Volume in Email Marketing

When Sandeep’s marketing leader proposed slashing email volume from hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands, he disagreed. But he let her execute the strategy anyway — and the results proved him wrong.

“I was going to let the chef cook and I did. And I think it was really fun to watch our click through rates, our open rates, heck, our pipeline, all of that rise drastically because just sending a lot of cold emails, we were warming folks up, we were sending them on nurtures.”

The lesson isn’t just about email volume. It’s about creating space for your leadership team to prove their expertise, even when it contradicts your instincts. Sandeep’s philosophy: “If I’m spending the amount of money that I spend to bring on an excellent, incredible VP for any given department, what is the whole point if I don’t even collaborate with them, if they don’t even let them do their job?”

Lesson 6: Accept That Making People Uncomfortable Means You’re Solving Real Problems

Disruption isn’t just a buzzword — it means threatening established players. Cove.tool’s value proposition directly undercuts traditional sustainability consultants on both price and speed. This inevitably creates enemies.

Sandeep’s perspective: “I honestly believe that if you’re not making anyone uncomfortable, you’re probably not creating something that’s entirely too valuable because no one actually probably needed it.”

This mindset frees you from seeking universal approval. If established players in your market feel threatened by your offering, it’s validation that you’re creating something customers genuinely need — something that solves problems better than existing solutions.

Lesson 7: Know Your Buyer Persona Deeply, Then Evolve Beyond It

Cove.tool achieved dominant market penetration by understanding their initial buyer persona better than anyone else. “I know that no one can take that learning away from me, and I know that by listening to the folks,” Sandeep notes.

But market dominance also revealed the limitation of that persona. “The folks that will use the software are not the folks that will go win the project.” This realization drove their evolution toward services that appeal to firm leaders who control budgets, not just practitioners who use tools.

The lesson: deep persona knowledge gets you market share, but recognizing the limits of that persona lets you expand into new revenue streams.

These seven lessons form a cohesive go-to-market philosophy: stay close to customers, be willing to evolve your model, segment aggressively, lead with value, and accept that real disruption makes people uncomfortable. It’s not a playbook for overnight success, but it is a framework for building durable market position in competitive spaces.