AdvancedAg grew a biological technology business across Western Canada without venture capital. Five B2B sales strategy lessons from a bootstrapped agtech business.
Most companies think the breakthrough is the big order. Sometimes it is the thing that costs you six years.
I sat down with Joshua Day Chief, CEO of AdvancedAg, for a recent episode of Driving Growth. AdvancedAg is a family-owned biological technology company that uses microbes to improve soil health and nutrient cycling for farmers. They entered Canadian agriculture in 2015 with no local research and 50 acres of peas in Schuler, Alberta. Today, their products are applied across more than half a million acres in Western Canada.
They built that without a venture capital runway. What Joshua shared about their B2B sales strategy applies well beyond agriculture.
When AdvancedAg first started working with farmers, the team made a deliberate choice: show up to learn, not to sell.
Farmers were open to something different, but only because the team arrived without all the answers. As Joshua put it: "You are not there to tell them what to do. You are there to listen and find their pain points."
That orientation shaped three things that held up over time:
Joshua's view is that this never stops. The market shifts constantly. The founders who stay close to their customers as they grow are the ones who can adapt when conditions change.
Customer understanding is also the first component of a functioning Go-To-Market (GTM) system. Without it, every investment in the sales process, channel strategy, and forecasting is built on unstable ground.
AdvancedAg ran third-party replicated trials across multiple plots before scaling. Most early-stage companies use research to impress customers. For AdvancedAg, the value was internal.
The trials taught the team:
Winning on four out of five plots did not translate to every farm type. But it gave the sales team the operational clarity to set accurate expectations with growers and sell with confidence.
In any B2B market where buyers talk to each other, trust travels faster than your sales team does. Knowing your product's limits before your customer discovers them is a long-term sales strategy, not just a research expense.
AdvancedAg signed an exclusive wholesale and retail channel deal that came with a million-dollar order. It looked like a breakthrough. It cost them six years.
Once products were in the channel, AdvancedAg lost:
Joshua eventually pulled back and rebuilt direct customer relationships. The channel had delivered volume. It had also disconnected AdvancedAg from the market knowledge that made growth sustainable.
Before signing any channel agreement, ask:
Joshua sees too many agtech founders chasing venture capital before they have done the work of understanding their market and demonstrating traction.
His view: get boots on the ground first. Talk to your customers. Go sell your product.
Selling before raising gives you:
Bootstrapping is harder and slower. But once you have done it, Joshua says, you have more of a seat at the table. AdvancedAg is now building toward a Series A with the capital in service of a business that already works.
Founder-led sales is how most B2B companies build their early customer base. It is also how trust gets established and how the company learns what it is selling and to whom. The problem is when founders do not plan for the transition out of it.
Transitioning out of founder-led sales requires having documented answers to:
Joshua noted that AdvancedAg only started using a CRM two years ago and is now approaching $6 million in sales. The right people, process, and platform have to come together before growth outpaces your systems.
The family-owned culture that built AdvancedAg is part of what differentiates them with farmers. Protecting it requires two things: documenting what it looks like in practice, and hiring people who reflect it.
These five lessons are different in detail but connected at the root. Each one is about understanding your customer deeply before you try to grow, and building the sales infrastructure that protects that understanding.
Get them right, and your B2B sales strategy becomes something you can manage with confidence. Get them wrong, and you spend years unwinding the consequences.
AdvancedAg did both.
Some of these lessons cost AdvancedAg years. None of them cost you anything to apply.
This article is based on Season 2, Episode 11 of the Driving Growth podcast. Joshua Day Chief shares the full story, including the channel mistake, the research process, and his view on what founders get wrong about raising capital.
Listen HereThe lessons Joshua shared map directly to what we assess inside Roadmap's Go-To-Market Readiness Index. If your customer understanding, channel strategy, or sales process is holding back your growth, the Index gives you a clear baseline to work from.
Roadmap developed the Go-To-Market Readiness Index to give B2B leaders a clear, objective view of how well their go-to-market systems support growth. Through a structured diagnostic, companies can benchmark performance, identify gaps across strategy, metrics, and execution, and define where to focus next.
The 2025 GTM Readiness Benchmark Report brings together data from Canadian B2B companies to show how go-to-market systems are structured and where gaps most often appear. It gives leaders a clear view of how peers are performing, highlights common constraints, and shows where systems tend to fall short.
Podcast Episode S2E12: B2B Sales Tech Stack: 5 Layers for Predictable Revenue
June 17, 2026
