Hyperscalers are new ecosystem marketplaces, not just advanced distributors. They have fundamentally changed the B2B customer journey, invalidating traditional sales and marketing playbooks. Established tech companies must adapt to new co-selling motions or risk becoming obsolete.
Buyers now use AI to arrive with a full research dossier on your product, pricing, and competitors. This changes the GTM role from persuading customers with clever messaging to enabling their decision-making. The new focus is helping buyers quickly experience your product's value on their own terms.
The traditional B2B marketing mix of SEO, paid search, and content is no longer sufficient. Modern growth relies on activating word-of-mouth through a superior product, leveraging founder social presence for authenticity, and investing heavily in the creator economy (especially YouTube) to reach engaged B2B audiences.
Direct AI disruption is a minimal concern for telecom companies. The more significant threat comes from hyperscalers like AWS and Azure, which already dominate Europe's B2B cloud market with an 85% share. The real risk is these giants leveraging their cloud infrastructure to enter the B2C telecom space via virtualized networks.
Incumbents are disincentivized from creating cheaper, superior products that would cannibalize existing high-margin revenue streams. Organizational silos also hinder the creation of blended solutions that cross traditional product lines, creating opportunities for startups to innovate in the gaps.
The B2B sales channel has evolved from a linear reseller model to a complex ecosystem. Deals are now shaped by multiple, often unknown, partners like consultants and system integrators. Vendors must act like detectives to map this hidden influence network to succeed.
As AI and no-code tools make software easier to build, technological advantage is no longer a defensible moat. The most successful companies now win through unique distribution advantages, such as founder-led content or deep community building. Go-to-market strategy has surpassed product as the key differentiator.
The next evolution of partner marketing is a shift from one-to-one campaigns to an 'ecosystem-centric' model. This involves weaving together technology alliances, distributors, and service partners into a single, cohesive 'better together' narrative. This multi-partner storytelling is far more impactful and resonant for customers than siloed vendor messages.
As digitally-native Gen Z buyers become primary decision-makers, they will favor seamless, self-service online experiences over personal sales calls. This will force a dramatic shift in the channel, potentially making the traditional relationship-based account manager role obsolete.
AI is making buyer journeys non-linear and compressed. Instead of a linear funnel, GTM strategy must shift to a continuous, customer-centric "flywheel" model. Buyers conduct deep research upfront, making direct sales engagement optional for some and requiring an always-on, value-first approach.
Smaller software companies can't compete with giants like Salesforce or Adobe on an all-in-one basis. They must strategically embrace interoperability and multi-cloud models as a key differentiator. This appeals to customers seeking flexibility and avoiding lock-in to a single vendor's ecosystem.