Nothing looked broken.
The product worked. Customers were buying. Revenue was growing.
So the company decided to improve sales.
New messaging. New ICP. New go-to-market motion.
All sensible decisions on paper.
Then performance changed.
Leadership initially assumed the issue was execution.
It was not.
The business had accidentally changed the reason customers bought in the first place.
That distinction matters more than most teams realise.
In many B2B environments, customers are not buying because of strategy language, transformation narratives, or category positioning.
They are buying because they are trying to reduce risk.
Very often the real buying conversation sounds closer to:
“If this goes wrong, it lands on me.”
That emotional and political layer is frequently what drives the actual decision.
The business did not break the product.
It broke the commercial translation layer between the customer problem and the buying decision.
Once the wrong message scales, predictable patterns appear:
The issue is rarely visibility.
The issue is message-to-decision alignment.
Before changing positioning, ICP, or commercial strategy, leadership should stop and ask:
Why did the last ten customers actually say yes?
Not:
Why buyers actually moved.
That distinction changes everything.
Because once the original buying logic becomes unclear, businesses start to scale assumptions rather than evidence.
That is when growth becomes expensive.
The strongest commercial systems are usually built from observed buyer behaviour, not internal positioning exercises.
The companies that scale effectively understand:
Growth compounds when the organisation scales the real reason customers buy.
Not the reason they wished they bought.
There is one place where the gap between evidence and assumption is impossible to hide: the homepage. A brief can survive on assumption. A page a buyer scans in ten seconds cannot.
The Shift90 X-Ray reads a B2B website the way a buyer reads it; in the first ten seconds, before they decide whether to keep reading. Thirty seconds to run. A 30-point readout that tells you whether buyers can recognise their situation, see why you are different, and find a reason to act now.
Run the X-Ray on your homepage.