In twenty years inside HR technology and workforce businesses, I have seen the same thing happen over and over again.
A company builds a better product than the incumbent. The demo is strong. The use case is real. The buyer pain is obvious. The team assumes the market will eventually figure it out.
Then adoption moves slowly. Sales cycles drag. Partnership conversations stall. The company burns months trying to create demand that should already exist.
Most of the time, the product is not the problem.
The distribution is.
HR tech is not a simple software category. The buyer is often not the daily user. The decision-maker is influenced by peers, brokers, HCM partners, consultants, benefits advisors, finance, procurement, and whatever system of record already sits at the center of the company.
By the time a founder gets a meeting, the buyer may already have a quiet shortlist shaped by conversations the founder was never part of.
That is the part most companies miss.
The three gatekeepers nobody talks about
When founders say "distribution," they usually mean sales motion.
Outbound. Pipeline. Demo conversion. Forecast discipline. Those things matter. But they are only part of the work.
In HR tech, the harder part sits with three groups that quietly shape who gets considered.
- The HCM and payroll platforms. Workday, ADP, UKG, Rippling, Gusto, Paycom, and others influence the market far beyond their own products. Their partner teams, marketplaces, account executives, and product roadmaps all affect which vendors get oxygen.
- The practitioner communities. Senior HR and People leaders talk constantly. They ask each other what is working, who to avoid, which vendor overpromised, and which founder actually understands the problem. If a company is not part of those conversations, it may never make the shortlist.
- The consulting, broker, and advisor orbit. Benefits brokers, HR consultants, advisory firms, and implementation partners often sit between the vendor and the buyer. They recommend. They filter. They negotiate. They influence who gets in the room.
What this costs
A credible HR tech company can spend nine to fourteen months moving from first meeting to signed contract. Sometimes longer.
A company with the right access, the right category credibility, and the right partner path can compress that cycle meaningfully. Not because the product magically changes, but because the company gets to the right conversation faster, with more trust already in the room.
That difference compounds.
A few months saved on each serious opportunity can change a fundraise. It can change hiring plans. It can change whether the company has enough time to reach the next stage.
I have watched strong products lose to weaker competitors because the weaker competitor had better distribution. That is not rare. It happens constantly.
Distribution cannot be faked
This is what makes HR tech different from many other SaaS categories.
You cannot simply buy this kind of distribution with ads. You cannot hire it overnight. You cannot create it by being loud on LinkedIn. You cannot manufacture trust in a quarter.
The relationships that matter are built through repeated exposure, useful work, good judgment, and showing up in the market long before you need something.
That is frustrating for founders because it means distribution has a time component. It is also the opportunity. If you can access the right relationships before your competitors do, the advantage is real.
What founders should do
There are three moves worth taking seriously.
First, treat distribution as a build problem, not a spend problem. If outbound is not working, more volume may not fix it. You may not have a volume problem. You may have a credibility, access, or sequencing problem.
Second, find operators who already understand the market. Advisors, fractional leaders, investors, and partners can be valuable, but only if they have real context. Ask who they know. Ask where they have helped. Ask them to explain the buyer dynamics before you let them near the strategy.
Third, build the HCM and ecosystem strategy deliberately. Partnerships do not happen because you appear in a marketplace. They happen because there is a clear reason for the platform, the account team, the buyer, and the vendor to care.
The companies that figure this out early have an advantage that is hard to catch. The ones that do not often spend years building a product the market should want, but never learns how to buy.



