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Successful products require a dedicated "Go-to-Market Triad" (Marketing, Sales, Product) working in parallel with the traditional Product Triad (PM, Design, Engineering). This ensures market positioning, distribution, and sales strategy are considered from day one, not after the product is built.
The archetypes for building software—Prototyper, Builder, Sweeper, Grower, Maintainer—can be directly mapped to go-to-market functions. For sales, this looks like prototyping new pitches, building scalable playbooks, and maintaining a disciplined pipeline. This framework provides a novel way for revenue leaders to structure teams for innovation.
Founders must consider their sales motion (e.g., PLG vs. enterprise sales-led) when designing the product. A product built for one motion won't sell effectively in another, potentially forcing a costly redesign. This concept extends "product-market fit" to "product-market-sales fit."
Effective product marketing is not a downstream function. It is a strategic role that sits at the intersection of product management, go-to-market teams (sales), and external influencers (analysts). It synthesizes inputs to shape both product strategy and market messaging.
An Ideal Customer Profile is the central concept unifying the entire go-to-market organization, including marketing, sales, customer success, and product development. This holistic alignment is why successful modern companies build a 'go-to-market system' rather than just optimizing a 'sales system' for one department.
The "build it and they will come" mindset is a trap. Founders should treat marketing and brand-building not as a later-stage activity to be "turned on," but as a core muscle to be developed in parallel with the product from day one.
For companies with multiple products, positioning cannot begin until the go-to-market strategy is set. You must first decide if you have a lead "wedge" product with add-ons (like early Salesforce) or if you're selling an integrated platform. This foundational business decision precedes any messaging work.
Frame your go-to-market strategy as an engineering problem. Create a dedicated 'GTM engineering team,' including actual engineers, to build a programmatic stack and apply a rigorous test-and-learn mindset to every GTM motion, from outbound campaigns to event strategy.
Instead of debating whether Product Management or Product Marketing "owns" positioning, teams should treat it as a critical point of shared alignment. It's a collaborative space where the entire team agrees on the product's value and market strategy.
To ensure new products succeed, the CPO's scope should expand beyond product and engineering. By owning functions like product marketing and sales enablement, product leaders can ensure tight alignment on messaging, objection handling, and market launch strategy from day one.
To create successful products, designers must understand the entire go-to-market process. Direct sales experience reveals how decisions on pricing and packaging impact retailers and customers, preventing the creation of great products that never reach their audience due to commercial roadblocks.