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Cracking CapEx Heavy Industries Part II: Scale Smarter, Not Harder
If youâve ever tried selling to industries like mining, construction, or oil and gas, you know itâs like steering a giant shipâyou turn the wheel, but nothing happens for what feels like an eternity.
These legacy industries are crucial players in the energy transition and climate change fight, but theyâre notoriously slow-moving, risk-averse, and heavily dependent on multi-stakeholder approvals.
So, how do you get your game-changing tech or product into their handsâand better yet, get them to adopt it at scale? That was the big question at our recent Vancouver Hardware Meetup on Cracking CapEx Heavy Industriesâa continuation of the conversation started during SF Deep Tech Week. MistyWestâs CEO Taylor Cooper moderated this panel discussion where we gathered industry authorities who shared their secrets for navigating this tough terrain.
Hereâs what they had to say.
This event was hosted at Manning Elliott’s downtown Vancouver office
Understand the landscape of slow adoption and long timelines
Before you can even think about selling to a capex-heavy industry, you need to understand the landscape; essentially, that these industries are slow to change and wary of large expenditures. As Michele Wallcraft, Executive in Residence at entrepreneurship@UBC, pointed out, âyouâll often see companies run pilots, even agree on KPIs for success, and then… nothing. No orders. No follow-up. Itâs frustrating, but itâs a reality in these industries.â
The reason? Massive capital expenditures means the stakes are high if something goes wrong. Success here requires persistence and strategy, starting with recognizing when a project is truly progressing. Michele shared some telltale signs:
- Theyâre discussing terms and conditions or drafting contracts.
- A project manager has been assigned.
- Clear milestones and success criteria are mapped out.
If those arenât happening, you might just be stuck in what she calls âperpetual trial mode.â
Trust is the currency of Big Industry
Alicia Lenis, Vice President at Chrysalix, stressed a universal truth: Trust is everything. In industries where decision-making is cautious by design, building strong relationships with stakeholders at all levels is key.
“You have to map out the players—both at the corporate level and the operational level” she said. “It’s not enough to just have one champion; you need buy-in from everyone who has a say in the process.”
Global Head and Chief Operating Officer at Weir-Motion Metrics Mike Funke offered a pro tip for testing a potential customer’s commitment. “Push for a paid trial,” he said. “Even a small amount of funding shows they’re serious and have some skin in the game. It’s also a way to learn their internal funding processes, which will save you headaches down the road.”
MistyWest’s CEO Taylor Cooper moderated the panel discussion
Manage the maze of complex approval processes
Selling to large organizations means navigating approval processes that can feel like an endless obstacle course; one panelist said they required over two dozen signatures for a program to be approved!
How can you avoid getting stuck? Identify who needs to sign off and engage them early. Work with your advocate to map out the entire approval process. Stay proactiveâdonât just wait for things to move forward on their own.
By identifying where the bottlenecks are, you can help your customer and guide them through the process.
Get from early adopters to early majority
Getting one customer is hard enough, but scaling across the industry is another beast entirely.Â
The secret can be found in your reference customers, otherwise known as your proof of concept. Their success can be used to build your own credibility and pull others on board.
Not all customers are created equal, however. ââYou want customers who are willing to work with you and have a bit of an innovation mindset,â shared Jason Williams, Director of Software Development at Vancouver Airport Authority (YVR). âTheyâll be more forgiving if your product isnât perfect yet.â
And donât overlook the power of peer influence. Michele noted, âbig companies love to follow their peers. If they see a competitor adopting your product and succeeding, theyâll start to feel the pressure to keep up.â
Left to right: panelists Mike Funke, Jason Williams, Michele Wallcraft and Alicia Lenis
The art of prototyping is fast, but not loose
When it comes to hardware, prototyping is where the rubber meets the roadâor sometimes, where the wheels fall off. On Motion Metricsâ approach, Mike reflected that âweâre great at getting to beta quickly, but scaling that to a perfect, reliable product is another story. You canât scale with a product that makes your sales team look bad.â
Taylor shared a practical framework: âStart by identifying your riskiest unknowns. Donât build an entire product to test one featureâhack an existing system to prove it works.â
For startups, this lean approach can save critical time and resources, especially when facing the high costs of manufacturing and inventory.
Donât trust too easily and protect your IP
A sobering reality about working with Big Industry: they might love your tech, but if they can reverse-engineer it or work around your patents, they will.
âNever trust anyone with your secrets,â Mike cautioned. âKeep your competitive edge by safeguarding your intellectual property at all costs.â
Alicia added, âItâs not just about protecting your IPâitâs about knowing whatâs core to your business and what you can safely share. Get clear on whatâs proprietary and lock it down in your contracts.â
Yours truly during the audience Q & A
Scale smarter, not harder
Breaking into these industries is tough, but scaling requires a whole new level of strategy. The panel emphasized the importance of a robust ecosystem of supportâfield service, training, and customer successâso your customers feel confident adopting your product at scale.
âItâs not just about the product. You need to support it,â summed Jason. âIf customers donât feel confident in your ability to help them succeed, your product wonât scaleâno matter how good it is.â
Final Thoughts
Breaking into capex-heavy industries is a long, challenging journey. Itâs about more than just having great techâitâs about building trust, navigating complex systems, and proving your value over and over again.
As Michele put it: âThese industries are hard to crack, but the rewards are worth it. If you can solve their pain points and make yourself indispensable, youâre not just selling a productâyouâre building a partnership that can last decades.â
With persistence, strategy, and a little bit of grit, you can make your markâand help shape the future with breakthrough technology.
Want to attend our next panel discussion?
We host four Vancouver Hardware Meetups a year with local tech and business leaders to discuss the latest trends and developments across many industries and sectors. Join our group to be notified about the next event.