Why your prospects don't know you (and it's not a product problem)
Associated Flowdake use case: Sales Teams & Founders

It's a frustrating but common situation: a good product, satisfied customers... but limited awareness. The instinctive reaction is often to question the product. Yet in most cases, the problem lies elsewhere.
Visibility precedes credibility
A prospect can't judge the quality of a product they don't know. Before comparing, they must first recognize.
According to an Edelman study, 81% of consumers say brand trust is a decisive purchase factor.
If no one sees you, no one believes you.
The bias toward visible brands
When choosing, prospects often favor: brands they've already seen, those that seem established.
This is why technically inferior companies can sometimes dominate a market: they're simply more visible.
Faced with a risky choice (picking a B2B provider is always a risk), people favor what feels familiar. Brands that are "part of the landscape" — the ones you see go by in your feed or in the press — enjoy a built-in assumption of reliability and trust.
Your competitor isn't necessarily better. They're just more visible.
Consistency as a key factor
Visibility isn't built on a one-time splash. It's built through repetition.
According to the Marketing Rule of 7, a prospect must see a message at least 7 times before taking action.
• Recognition: "Oh yes, I've seen that name before."
• Legitimacy: "If they're this visible, they must be solid."
• Top-of-mind: being the first name that comes up the moment the need arises.
Marketing's role in the sales cycle
Marketing isn't just a lead generator. It prepares the ground.
According to LinkedIn, companies with strong social media presence shorten their sales cycle by 20%.
• The barrier of distrust is gone.
• You no longer have to prove who you are — only what you can do for them.
• The sales cycle shortens dramatically.
Stop leaving your expertise in the shadows. Put it out there.