Understanding B2B Product Staleness and Its Impact
Most B2B products don’t just die; they slowly become irrelevant while still making money. These products stop solving real-world problems and get stuck in the previous era. This is normal for the m...

Source: DEV Community
Most B2B products don’t just die; they slowly become irrelevant while still making money. These products stop solving real-world problems and get stuck in the previous era. This is normal for the majority of products. The interesting part is that the team knows it, and the leadership knows it too, but they often only realize it once they’ve already fallen behind. Think of it this way: a product is built by a founder to solve a problem. That problem can be niche or common, but the product is designed to solve it. Over time, however, that problem spawns many new challenges. Take, for example, an Entity Management Software. It lets corporate clients onboard different entities on its platform. Initially, it automates everything, saving clients from manual work—sounds like a solid long-term idea, right? Well, it is… until it isn’t. The product solves the initial problem, but then all focus shifts to maintaining the onboarding process. It takes months of effort, and there’s little room for n