You’ve built something great — now what?
A strong go-to-market (GTM) strategy bridges the gap between your product and paying customers. Without it, even the best ideas die quietly.
Whether you’re launching a new startup or entering a new market, this guide will show you how to build a GTM plan that actually works.
🧭 What is a Go-To-Market (GTM) Strategy?
A GTM strategy is a step-by-step plan to launch your product, reach your target audience, and generate revenue.
It defines:
- Who you’re targeting
- Where you’ll reach them
- How you’ll convert them
- Why they should care
🛠️ GTM Strategy Framework: The 7 Essentials
- Target Audience (ICP & Personas)
Define your ideal customer profile (ICP), decision-makers, and influencers. - Value Proposition
What pain do you solve? Why should they choose you over the alternatives? - Pricing Strategy
Freemium? Usage-based? High-ticket? Your model must align with buyer psychology. - Channel Strategy
Will you go inbound, outbound, PLG (product-led), or partner-driven? - Customer Journey Mapping
Visualize how buyers move from awareness → decision → success. - Sales & Marketing Alignment
Shared KPIs, lead scoring, and a seamless handoff process. - Launch Plan
Tactics + timeline. Think campaigns, messaging, positioning, and onboarding.
🚀 GTM Example: B2B SaaS
GTM Component | Strategy |
---|---|
ICP | Series A tech startups |
Value Prop | Cut CAC by 30% with AI ads |
Channel | LinkedIn outbound + webinars |
Pricing | $1K/mo SaaS + onboarding fee |
Launch Plan | Waitlist → webinar → pilot |
⚠️ Common GTM Mistakes to Avoid
- Skipping research — launching with assumptions
- Misaligned sales and marketing
- Too many channels, too little focus
- Ignoring onboarding and retention
🧠 Final Thoughts: GTM is Not a Launch Plan — It’s a Growth Engine
A good GTM strategy isn’t a deck — it’s a system that adapts as you scale.
👉 Need help building yours?
OnDemandCXO matches startups with Fractional CMOs and CROs who’ve launched GTM strategies that drive millions in revenue.
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