I was recently explaining to someone in my mentee group that one of the most important things in business, sales, consulting and product management is understanding “why people buy”. Customers rarely buy only because something exists. They buy because they want a problem solved. Sometimes they buy convenience. Sometimes they buy time. Sometimes they buy compliance, expertise, assurance or reduced risk. And sometimes they have a very specific ask that they do not want to solve internally.
This becomes even more important in consulting and outsourcing. When a company gives work to a consultant, agency or service provider, they are not just buying a report, a deck, a system or a deliverable. They are buying relief from a problem. They are hiring someone to reduce complexity, bring expertise, save internal bandwidth and move an issue forward. But if the work comes back to the client in a way that still requires them to fix it, complete it, structure it or think through the basics, then the service has failed the reason it was bought in the first place.
That is where Jobs Theory, or Jobs-to-be-Done, becomes useful. It is an important framework for strategy leaders, consultants, salespeople, product managers, marketers and founders because it helps them understand the real reason customers buy. Instead of looking only at customer segments, industries, features or demographics, Jobs Theory asks a deeper question: “what progress is the customer trying to make in a specific situation?” This shifts thinking from “what product are we selling?” to “what job is the customer hiring us to do?”
In B2B, this is especially powerful because companies do not buy software, consulting, cloud, ERP, AI, procurement platforms or automation tools for their own sake. They buy them to achieve business outcomes such as revenue growth, cost reduction, operational efficiency, risk reduction, compliance, scalability and better decision-making. The real product is not always the tool, document, platform or meeting. The real product is progress.
Jobs Theory also helps companies improve product-market fit because it connects product design, sales messaging and customer value to a real unmet need. Product-market fit is not just about having a good product; it happens when customers repeatedly use and pay for a solution because it solves an important job better than their current alternatives. By studying the customer’s struggle, existing workaround, switching triggers, desired outcomes and barriers to adoption, teams can build better products, prioritize the right features, position more clearly and sell more effectively.
For consultants, salespeople and product managers, this is a powerful mindset shift. Instead of asking, “What are we selling?” we should ask, “What job is the customer hiring us to do?” If the customer is buying time, do not give them more work. If they are buying expertise, do not give them generic thinking. If they are buying compliance, do not create ambiguity. If they are buying confidence, do not create confusion.
For strategy leaders, Jobs Theory reveals where demand and differentiation exist. For consultants, it links services to business outcomes. For salespeople, it improves discovery and deal conversion. For product managers, it ensures the roadmap is built around customer progress rather than random features.
If we take few examples of Jobs theory in B2B Sales or strategy.
Lets take examples of Zomato’s Hyperpure and Company which sells Edge Computing.
Zomato’s Hyperpure
Hyperpure is a B2B sourcing platform for food businesses, offering wholesale restaurant supplies such as fresh produce, groceries, dairy, packaging and other kitchen essentials. Its positioning is around reliable sourcing, quality ingredients, and restaurant supply at mandi-rate style pricing.
The buyer is not simply buying vegetables, dairy, groceries, meat, seafood, packaging, or kitchen supplies. They are “hiring” Hyperpure to make their food business more reliable, predictable, compliant, and profitable.
Jobs Theory for HyperPure
| Layer | Job Hyperpure helps the customer do |
|---|---|
| Functional job | Source ingredients and kitchen supplies regularly from one platform |
| Economic job | Reduce procurement cost, wastage, price volatility and vendor-management effort |
| Operational job | Ensure daily availability of ingredients so kitchen operations do not stop |
| Quality job | Maintain consistency in food taste, hygiene and raw-material quality |
| Risk job | Reduce supplier unreliability, quality issues, stock-outs and food-safety concerns |
| Emotional job | Give restaurant owners and chefs confidence before daily service |
| Social job | Help the business appear more professional, hygienic and scalable |
Example 1: Independent Restaurant
| Buyer | Job they are trying to get done | Why Hyperpure helps |
|---|---|---|
| Restaurant Owner | Keep the kitchen running every day | Reliable supply of ingredients and essentials |
| Head Chef | Maintain taste and quality consistency | Standardized quality of raw materials |
| Procurement Manager | Reduce dependence on multiple local vendors | One platform for recurring kitchen purchases |
| Finance Manager | Control food cost and wastage | Better price visibility and planned ordering |
| Operations Manager | Avoid last-minute shortages | More predictable supply chain |
Example 2: Cloud Kitchen
| Buyer | Job they are trying to get done | Why Hyperpure helps |
|---|---|---|
| Founder / Owner | Scale multiple brands without procurement complexity | Centralized sourcing for all kitchen needs |
| Kitchen Operations Head | Maintain standard recipes across locations | Consistent ingredients across outlets |
| Finance Head | Improve gross margins | Better procurement discipline and wastage control |
| Growth Head | Launch new menu items faster | Faster access to required ingredients |
| Quality Head | Reduce customer complaints | Better input quality and consistency |
Hyperpure Jobs-to-be-Done Matrix
| Business situation | Customer struggle | Job-to-be-done | Hyperpure-style value proposition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restaurant needs daily supplies | Too many vendors, inconsistent quality | Simplify procurement | One platform for restaurant supplies |
| Food cost is rising | Prices fluctuate across local suppliers | Improve cost control | Transparent wholesale-style sourcing |
| Kitchen faces stock-outs | Ingredients are not available on time | Improve operational reliability | More predictable supply chain |
| Taste varies across days | Ingredient quality changes | Maintain consistency | Standardized quality inputs |
| Chain wants to scale | Procurement becomes complex across locations | Build scalable sourcing | Centralized B2B supply platform |
| Food business wants hygiene | Local sourcing may be inconsistent | Reduce quality and safety risk | Better controlled sourcing process |
| Owner spends time in mandi/vendor follow-ups | Procurement takes too much founder time | Free up management bandwidth | App/platform-led ordering |
| Cloud kitchen has multiple brands | Different menus need different supplies | Simplify multi-SKU sourcing | Broad catalogue of kitchen essentials |
Edge Computing Solution
Core Jobs Theory View
| Layer | Job |
|---|---|
| Functional job | Process data faster near the source |
| Economic job | Reduce downtime, cloud cost, bandwidth cost, and operational losses |
| Risk job | Avoid latency, network outage, security, compliance, or data-sovereignty risk |
| Emotional job | Give CIO/COO confidence that operations will not fail during critical moments |
| Social job | Help leadership appear modern, resilient, automation-led, and future-ready |
Example 1: Manufacturing Company – Edge Computing Solution
| Buyer | Job they are trying to get done | Why edge computing helps |
|---|---|---|
| COO / Plant Head | Prevent machine downtime and improve throughput | Real-time machine monitoring and predictive maintenance |
| CIO | Modernize plant IT without sending all data to cloud | Local processing, secure connectivity, hybrid architecture |
| CFO | Reduce production loss and maintenance cost | Lower downtime, lower bandwidth cost, better asset utilization |
| Quality Head | Detect defects earlier | Computer vision at the production line |
| CEO | Improve plant productivity and competitiveness | Higher output, better margins, faster decision-making |
Example 2: Retail Chain
| Buyer | Job they are trying to get done | Why edge computing helps |
|---|---|---|
| Retail Operations Head | Improve store operations across hundreds of outlets | Local analytics for footfall, queues, shelf availability |
| CIO | Run store applications even when network is unstable | Local compute with cloud sync |
| CFO | Reduce revenue leakage and operating cost | Fewer stockouts, lower bandwidth cost, better store productivity |
| CMO | Personalize in-store customer experience | Real-time offers, customer movement analytics |
| Security Head | Improve surveillance and loss prevention | Video analytics at the store edge |
Whom does studying Job theory help ?
| Role | Why they should study Jobs Theory | What it helps them do better | Practical shift in thinking |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strategy leaders | To understand where real demand, differentiation and growth come from. | Identify underserved customer jobs, real competitors, growth gaps and sharper market opportunities. | From “Which market/category should we enter?” to “Which customer job is underserved?” |
| Consultants | To connect consulting services to the business outcomes clients actually buy. | Position ERP, cloud, AI, cyber, analytics or transformation around control, growth, risk reduction, efficiency and scalability. | From “We provide consulting services” to “We help clients achieve a specific business outcome.” |
| Salespeople | To improve discovery, qualification and deal conversion by understanding the customer’s real struggle. | Ask better questions around trigger, pain, current workaround, cost of inaction, buyer motivation and success outcome. | From “Do you need this product?” to “What problem is forcing you to consider change now?” |
| Product managers | To build what customers actually need, not just what internal teams think is useful. | Prioritize roadmap, features, pricing, adoption and retention around real customer progress. | From “What features should we add?” to “Which feature helps the customer get the job done better?” |
| Marketers | To create sharper messaging, positioning and campaigns that speak to the buyer’s real motivation. | Move messaging from product features to outcomes such as time saved, risk reduced, cost controlled or revenue improved. | From “We offer a platform” to “We help customers make progress in a painful situation.” |
| Founders | To find product-market fit faster by understanding the painful job, current workaround and willingness to switch. | Validate whether the problem is important enough, whether alternatives are weak and whether customers will repeatedly hire the product. | From “I have a great idea” to “Which urgent customer job can we solve better than alternatives?” |
| Customer success teams | To ensure customers achieve the outcome they bought the product or service for. | Improve onboarding, adoption, retention, expansion and value realization by tracking customer progress. | From “Is the customer using the product?” to “Is the customer achieving the job they hired us for?” |
In the end, people buy because they want to move from a current struggle to a better state. The closer we are to understanding that struggle, the better we become at building, selling and delivering value.
Cheers !!!!