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go-to-market-playbooks

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Master product launches, positioning, messaging, and GTM strategies. Use when planning launches, entering markets, or positioning products.

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SKILL.md

name go-to-market-playbooks
description Master product launches, positioning, messaging, and GTM strategies. Use when planning launches, entering markets, or positioning products.

Go-to-Market Playbooks

Overview

Comprehensive guide to go-to-market (GTM) strategies, product positioning, launch planning, and market entry tactics.

When to Use This Skill

Auto-loaded by agents:

  • launch-planner - For GTM strategies, positioning, and distribution playbooks

Use when you need:

  • Planning product launches
  • Positioning new products
  • Entering new markets
  • Rebranding or repositioning
  • Competitive differentiation

GTM Strategy Types

1. Product-Led Growth (PLG)

Model: Product drives acquisition, conversion, expansion

Funnel:

Free Signup → Activation → Expansion → Paid → Advocacy

Characteristics:

  • Self-serve onboarding
  • Freemium or free trial
  • Virality built-in
  • Low-touch sales

Examples: Slack, Dropbox, Notion, Figma

When to Use:

  • Low price point (<$100/month)
  • Easy to understand product
  • Quick time-to-value
  • Network effects

Playbook:

  1. Frictionless Signup: Email-only, no credit card
  2. Aha Moment Fast: <5 minutes to value
  3. Viral Loops: Invites, sharing, collaboration
  4. Usage-Based Limits: Paywall at usage threshold
  5. Self-Serve Upgrade: One-click payment

2. Sales-Led Growth

Model: Sales team drives revenue

Funnel:

Lead → MQL → SQL → Demo → Proposal → Close

Characteristics:

  • High price point ($10K+ annually)
  • Complex product
  • Custom implementation
  • Relationship-driven

Examples: Salesforce, SAP, enterprise software

When to Use:

  • Complex sales cycle
  • High contract values
  • Custom solutions
  • Long sales cycles (3-12 months)

Playbook:

  1. Lead Generation: Events, content, partnerships
  2. Qualification: BANT (Budget, Authority, Need, Timeline)
  3. Demo: Customized to pain points
  4. Proof of Concept: Pilot/trial with champion
  5. Procurement: Legal, security, contracts
  6. Onboarding: CSM-led implementation

3. Community-Led Growth

Model: Community drives adoption and revenue

Funnel:

Awareness → Community Join → Engagement → Conversion → Advocacy

Examples: GitHub, HashiCorp, Figma, Discord

When to Use:

  • Developer tools
  • Open-source foundation
  • Network effects
  • Passion-driven users

Playbook:

  1. Build in Public: Share roadmap, engage users
  2. Developer Advocates: Evangelize, educate
  3. Events: Conferences, meetups, webinars
  4. Content: Tutorials, docs, blog posts
  5. Open Source → Enterprise: Freemium model

4. Partner-Led Growth

Model: Partners drive distribution

Examples: Shopify apps, Salesforce AppExchange, AWS Marketplace

When to Use:

  • Complement existing platforms
  • Need distribution
  • Ecosystem play

Playbook:

  1. Integration: Deep platform integration
  2. Marketplace Listing: Optimize for discovery
  3. Co-Marketing: Partner webinars, content
  4. Revenue Share: Align incentives
  5. Partner Enablement: Training, support

Positioning Framework (April Dunford)

The 5 Components

1. Competitive Alternatives What do customers use today if not your product?

2. Unique Attributes What do you have that alternatives don't?

3. Value (Benefits) What value do those unique attributes enable?

4. Target Customer Who cares most about that value?

5. Market Category What context makes the value obvious?


Positioning Process

Step 1: List Competitive Alternatives

Alternatives for Project Management Tool:
- Asana, Monday.com, Linear
- Spreadsheets
- Email + meetings
- Do nothing

Step 2: Identify Unique Attributes

What we have that they don't:
- AI-powered task prioritization
- Real-time async collaboration
- Built-in analytics dashboard

Step 3: Map Attributes to Value

AI prioritization → Save 5 hours/week on planning
Async collaboration → Works across timezones
Analytics → Measure team productivity

Step 4: Find Best-Fit Customer

Who cares most?
- Remote-first startups (20-100 people)
- Product/engineering teams
- Fast-paced, data-driven culture

Step 5: Choose Category

Options:
A. "Project Management" (crowded)
B. "AI Productivity Platform" (new category)
C. "Team Operating System" (abstract)

Choice: B - Differentiated, clear value

Positioning Statement Template

For [target customer]
Who [need/opportunity]
[Product] is a [category]
That [key benefit]
Unlike [alternative]
We [primary differentiation]

Example:

For remote product teams at fast-growing startups
Who struggle with async collaboration and context switching
Acme is an AI-native team productivity platform
That automates busywork so teams ship faster
Unlike Asana or Monday which are just task trackers
We combine planning, collaboration, and intelligence in one tool

Messaging Hierarchy

Structure

Level 1: Company Messaging

  • Mission/vision
  • Brand positioning
  • Core values

Level 2: Product Messaging

  • Product positioning
  • Value propositions
  • Key differentiators

Level 3: Feature Messaging

  • Feature benefits
  • Use cases
  • Proof points

Messaging Formulas

Before-After-Bridge (BAB)

Before: [Current pain]
After: [Desired state]
Bridge: [How product gets them there]

Example:
Before: "Teams waste 10 hours/week in status meetings"
After: "Imagine if everyone knew what's happening without meetings"
Bridge: "Our AI generates status updates automatically from your work"

PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solve)

Problem: [Identify pain]
Agitate: [Make it worse]
Solve: [Your solution]

Example:
Problem: "Your team is drowning in Slack messages"
Agitate: "You miss critical updates, decisions get lost, and new hires can't find context"
Solve: "Acme organizes all team knowledge automatically"

Launch Strategy

Launch Tiers

Tier 1: Major Launch

  • New product
  • Major rebranding
  • Strategic pivot
  • Full PR, events, marketing

Tier 2: Feature Launch

  • Significant new capability
  • Blog post, email, social
  • Targeted outreach

Tier 3: Improvement

  • Bug fixes, small features
  • Release notes, changelog

Launch Timeline (Tier 1)

T-minus 8 weeks: Preparation

  • Define positioning and messaging
  • Create launch plan
  • Assemble launch team
  • Set goals and metrics

T-minus 6 weeks: Asset Creation

  • Landing page
  • Product video
  • Demo scripts
  • Sales collateral
  • Press kit

T-minus 4 weeks: Beta Program

  • Recruit beta users
  • Gather feedback
  • Capture testimonials
  • Refine product

T-minus 2 weeks: Enablement

  • Train sales team
  • Train support team
  • Internal launch
  • Press briefings

T-minus 1 week: Final Prep

  • Go/no-go decision
  • Asset review
  • Monitoring setup
  • Rollback plan

Launch Day

  • Feature flag on
  • Announcement (blog, email, social)
  • Press release
  • Monitor metrics
  • War room for issues

Post-Launch (Week 1-4)

  • Daily metrics review
  • Feedback triage
  • Bug fixes
  • Amplification (webinars, case studies)

Launch Channels

Owned:

  • Website/landing page
  • Blog
  • Email list
  • In-app notifications
  • Social media

Earned:

  • Press (TechCrunch, VentureBeat)
  • Product Hunt
  • Hacker News
  • Industry publications
  • Influencers

Paid:

  • Google Ads
  • Social ads (LinkedIn, Twitter)
  • Retargeting
  • Sponsored content

Partnerships:

  • Co-marketing
  • Integration announcements
  • Channel partners

Market Entry Strategy

New Market Assessment

TAM/SAM/SOM:

TAM (Total Addressable Market): Everyone who could use product
SAM (Serviceable Available Market): Segment you can reach
SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market): Realistic target

Example:
TAM: All project management users = $50B
SAM: Remote startups 20-100 people = $2B
SOM: 1% market share in 3 years = $20M

Market Entry Checklist:

  • Market size validation
  • Competitive landscape
  • Regulatory requirements
  • Localization needs (language, currency, compliance)
  • Distribution partners
  • Pricing for market

Beachhead Strategy (Geoffrey Moore)

Concept: Dominate one narrow segment before expanding

Process:

  1. Identify Beachhead: Narrow, winnable segment
  2. Dominate: Become #1 in that segment
  3. Expand: Adjacent segments

Example:

  • Facebook: Harvard → Ivy League → All colleges → Everyone
  • Amazon: Books → Electronics → Everything
  • Salesforce: Sales teams → All CRM → All cloud software

Competitive Strategy

Competitive Intel

What to Track:

  • Product features and roadmap
  • Pricing and packaging
  • Marketing messages
  • Customer reviews
  • Funding and news

Sources:

  • Competitor websites, blogs
  • G2, Capterra reviews
  • LinkedIn (hiring = roadmap hints)
  • Earnings calls (public companies)
  • Customer conversations

Battle Cards

Format:

# Competitor X

## Overview
- Company size, funding
- Target customers
- Key strengths

## When They Win
- [Scenario where they're strong]

## When We Win
- [Our advantages]

## Differentiation
- Feature comparison
- Positioning vs them

## Objection Handling
Q: "Why not use [Competitor]?"
A: "[Response emphasizing our unique value]"

## Proof Points
- Customer wins from competitor
- Case studies

Pricing & Packaging

Pricing Models

Freemium:

  • Free tier + paid upgrade
  • Examples: Slack, Dropbox, Notion

Free Trial:

  • 14-30 day trial + paywall
  • Examples: Netflix, SaaS tools

Usage-Based:

  • Pay for what you use
  • Examples: AWS, Stripe, Snowflake

Tiered:

  • Good/Better/Best packages
  • Examples: HubSpot, Salesforce

Per-Seat:

  • Price per user
  • Examples: Zoom, Asana

Packaging Strategy

3-Tier Model (Good-Better-Best):

Starter: $10/user/month
- Core features
- Email support
- Target: Small teams

Professional: $25/user/month
- All Starter features
- Advanced features
- Priority support
- Target: Growing teams

Enterprise: Custom pricing
- All Professional features
- Custom integrations
- Dedicated support
- SLA
- Target: Large organizations

Value Metric: What you charge for

  • Per user (Slack)
  • Per event (Segment)
  • Per API call (Stripe)
  • Storage (Dropbox)

Choose metric that scales with value delivered


GTM Playbook Summary

Choose GTM Motion:

Low-touch, self-serve → PLG
High-touch, complex sale → Sales-Led
Developer product → Community-Led
Platform complement → Partner-Led

Then:
1. Position (find differentiation)
2. Message (communicate value)
3. Launch (create awareness)
4. Optimize (iterate and scale)

Key Success Factors:
- Clear positioning
- Focused beachhead
- Aligned team
- Measured results

Resources

Books:

  • "Obviously Awesome" - April Dunford (positioning)
  • "Crossing the Chasm" - Geoffrey Moore (market entry)
  • "Product-Led Growth" - Wes Bush (PLG strategy)
  • "The Mom Test" - Rob Fitzpatrick (customer discovery)

Frameworks:

  • April Dunford positioning canvas
  • Jobs-to-be-Done framework
  • Lean Canvas (market fit)

Tools:

  • Competitors: Crayon, Klue
  • Launches: Product Hunt, BetaList
  • Analytics: Mixpanel, Segment