For its new B2B irrigation product, Rainbird briefs specifiers like landscape architects 3-4 months before launch. This 'rolling thunder' approach ensures the product is already designed into future projects when it becomes available, creating immediate demand and bypassing the typical slow ramp-up period.
A product launch isn't merely a release date; it's a strategic, coordinated campaign. Its primary goal is to change the market's perception, generate demand, and create momentum across the entire funnel, moving beyond a simple product announcement.
By sharing its innovation with distribution partners early, Pella earned their enthusiasm. This resulted in partners offering to showcase the new product in their own booths at the International Builder Show, dramatically increasing Pella's presence and impact beyond its single, small booth.
For seasonal offers like a gardening course, create a marketing "runway" that begins when customers are in their planning phase. This allows you to build an audience and nurture leads with relevant freebies (e.g., a garden planning guide) before the peak season's real urgency kicks in.
At Rainbird, engineers build the first 'production intent' units for field trials themselves, on the actual assembly line. This serves two critical functions: it produces the necessary test units and simultaneously allows the engineering team to validate and debug the manufacturing process before scaling up.
Rainbird hosts 'fly-in' events, bringing customer groups (like architects or contractors) to its headquarters. These events include an 'innovation lab' where product managers showcase early-stage concepts under NDA. This institutionalizes customer feedback, making it a predictable and recurring part of the development process.
Instead of ad-hoc campaigns, Qualified's marketing team organizes its rhythm around monthly and quarterly product launches. This cadence aligns the entire company, creates a constant "why now" for sales, and ensures the corporate narrative continually evolves.
Go-to-Market (GTM) and launches are not interchangeable. GTM is the broader commercial strategy covering pricing, packaging, and segmentation. A launch is a specific, event-based moment within that GTM plan designed to create urgency and capture buyer attention.
In every industry, a few established enterprises—like Costco for HR software—act as 'tastemakers' by adopting new technology early. Winning these key accounts first provides crucial validation and influences other companies in the vertical to follow, creating a powerful go-to-market advantage that bypasses smaller customers.
Instead of a generic 'ideation' phase, Rainbird's stage-gate process begins with a 'Basis of Interest.' This forces teams to articulate *why* a problem is interesting and worth solving for customers and the business before defining a solution.
Rainbird live-streamed customer focus groups back to its engineering team. This allowed engineers to hear feedback directly, eliminating skepticism and creating immediate alignment on necessary design changes without requiring them to travel.