When rolling out global initiatives, co-create a solution with key markets that addresses 80% of needs. Intentionally leave 20% for local markets to customize, ensuring the strategy is both consistent and flexible enough to work in diverse environments.
To manage enablement across 180 markets, Lenovo avoids a purely centralized or decentralized model. Instead, they focus on "harmonizing" foundational elements like customer data centrally. This creates a unified, reliable data layer that then empowers local teams to execute culturally relevant enablement programs effectively.
Instead of a rigid plan, early-stage companies should establish core GTM "tent poles": a defined ICP, answers to the four essential questions of value, and an engagement model. These elements provide structure but can be flexibly adjusted based on market feedback without causing the entire strategy to collapse.
For global expansion, view countries as having unique attributes like players on a sports team. Outsized returns come from matching your business to a country's inherent 'raw material' strengths—such as leveraging the US for its market liquidity, or Australia for its abundant land and sun for solar projects.
When creating partner marketing assets, avoid bespoke one-offs. Instead, build foundational tools that the partner with the fewest resources can use 'out of the box.' This ensures scalability, as more advanced partners can still adapt and customize the core components for their own needs.
Large tech firms often struggle with global ABM because strategies are dictated by a central, US-centric corporate team. This leads to a disconnect with regional field marketing teams who understand local nuances, cultural differences, and specific account needs, crippling campaign effectiveness.
To scale effectively, resist complexity by using the 'Scaling Credo' framework. It mandates radical focus: pick one target market, one product, one customer acquisition channel, and one conversion tool. Stick to this combination for one full year before adding anything new.
A one-size-fits-all approach stifles innovation in global companies. To build trust and adapt effectively, leaders must empower local teams with decision-making authority. This respects crucial market-specific cultural nuances and consumer behaviors.
Avoid the trap of building features for a single customer, which grinds products to a halt. When a high-stakes customer makes a specific request, the goal is to reframe and build it in a way that benefits the entire customer base, turning a one-off demand into a strategic win-win.
To prevent rigid plans that break, maintain consistency in your high-level strategic pillars for the year. However, build in flexibility by allowing the specific tactics used to achieve those pillars to change quarterly based on performance and new learnings.
To balance execution with innovation, allocate 70% of resources to high-confidence initiatives, 20% to medium-confidence bets with significant upside, and 10% to low-confidence, "game-changing" experiments. This ensures delivery on core goals while pursuing high-growth opportunities.