A go-to-market strategy is a plan that defines how a company will reach its target customers, communicate value, and generate revenue from a specific product or market entry, typically covering positioning, channel selection, pricing structure, and sales motion.
A go-to-market strategy answers the question: how does this product reach the buyers who need it, and why will they choose us? It is not a marketing plan (which describes tactics) nor a product roadmap (which describes features). It sits between the two, translating product decisions into market-facing execution.
The core components of a GTM strategy typically include:
A marketing strategy defines ongoing programs to attract and convert buyers. A GTM strategy is often scoped to a specific event: a product launch, entry into a new vertical, or expansion into a new geography. GTM strategies have a time horizon; marketing strategies do not. In practice, the two overlap significantly, and many B2B organizations use the terms interchangeably.
A B2B SaaS company entering the mid-market segment develops a GTM strategy that targets RevOps leaders at companies with 200 to 2,000 employees, uses an inside sales motion led by SDRs, positions against spreadsheet-based workflows rather than incumbent software, and prices on a per-seat model with an annual commitment requirement.
Abmatic supports GTM execution by identifying which target accounts are actively researching solutions, so sales and marketing teams can focus on accounts that are already in-market during a new product launch or segment expansion.
Related: Ideal customer profile (ICP) definition | Demand generation definition