Go-to-Market Strategy
Overview
A go-to-market (GTM) strategy is your plan for how you'll reach customers and generate revenue. It answers: Who's the customer? What's the message? How will you reach them? How will you sell? For solopreneurs, a sharp GTM strategy prevents wasted effort on channels or messages that don't work. This playbook builds a GTM plan that drives customer acquisition efficiently.
Step 1: Define Your Target Customer (ICP)
Before you can go to market, you need to know exactly who you're selling to. A vague target = wasted marketing spend.
ICP (Ideal Customer Profile) template:
DEMOGRAPHICS (if B2C):
Age range, income, location, job type
FIRMOGRAPHICS (if B2B):
Industry, company size, revenue range, location
PSYCHOGRAPHICS:
Pain points, goals, values, fears
BEHAVIORAL:
Where they hang out (online/offline)
How they make buying decisions
What triggers them to look for a solution like yours
Example (B2B SaaS):
ICP: Small SaaS founders (solo or 2-5 person teams)
Industry: B2B SaaS
Company size: Pre-seed to seed stage, $0-$500K ARR
Pain: Spending 15+ hours/week on manual ops work (billing, support, reporting)
Goal: More time to focus on product and growth
Hangouts: Indie Hackers, Twitter, Y Combinator forums
Buying trigger: Hitting $50K ARR and realizing ops is taking over
Validation: Interview 5-10 people who match your ICP. Ask about their pain, current solutions, and what would make them switch. If their answers don't align with your assumptions, refine your ICP.
Step 2: Craft Your Positioning
Positioning is how you want customers to think about your product. It's the foundation of all your messaging.
Positioning statement template (internal, not customer-facing):
For [target customer],
Who [has this problem],
[Your product] is a [category]
That [key benefit / unique value].
Unlike [competitors or alternatives],
[Your product] [key differentiator].
Example:
For solo SaaS founders,
Who waste hours on manual operational tasks,
AutomateOps is a no-code automation platform
That saves 15+ hours per week on billing, support, and reporting.
Unlike Zapier or Make,
AutomateOps is purpose-built for SaaS workflows with pre-built templates.
Why this matters: This statement guides every piece of marketing copy, sales messaging, and product positioning. When in doubt, return to this.
Test your positioning: Can you explain it in 1-2 sentences? If someone hears it, do they immediately understand who it's for and why it's different? If not, simplify.
Step 3: Choose Your GTM Motion (How You'll Sell)
Different products require different sales motions. Pick based on your price point and customer complexity.
GTM motion types:
| Motion | When to Use | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Product-Led (PLG) | Low price ($0-$100/month), self-serve | Free trial or freemium, users sign up and onboard themselves, minimal or no sales involvement |
| Sales-Led | High price ($500+/month or $5K+ deal), complex | Demos, proposals, human touch, longer sales cycles |
| Hybrid | Mid-market ($100-500/month) | Self-serve for small customers, sales assist for larger ones |
| Community-Led | When network effects or peer influence matters | Build a community first (Slack, Discord, forum), monetize through the community |
Selection guide:
- If your product is simple and cheap → Product-Led
- If your product is complex or expensive → Sales-Led
- If your product benefits from user interaction → Community-Led
- If you serve both SMB and enterprise → Hybrid
Example (Solopreneur SaaS):
- Price: $49/month → Product-Led GTM
- Execution: Free 14-day trial, self-serve signup, onboarding via email + in-app tips, upgrade prompts in-app
Step 4: Select Your Channels
Channels are how you reach your target customer. Don't try to be everywhere — pick 2-3 channels and dominate them.
Channel selection framework:
| Channel | Best For | Time to ROI | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEO/Content | High-intent searches, long-term growth | 3-6 months | Low (time) |
| Paid Ads (Google, Facebook, LinkedIn) | Fast traffic, testing, scaling | Immediate | High ($$$) |
| Social Media (LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram) | Building audience, brand awareness | 1-3 months | Low (time) |
| Email Marketing | Owned audience, nurturing leads | Immediate (if you have a list) | Low |
| Community / Forums | Niche audiences, trust-building | 1-6 months | Low (time) |
| Partnerships / Affiliates | Leveraging others' audiences | 1-3 months | Medium (rev share) |
| Outreach (Cold email, LinkedIn DMs) | B2B, direct targeting | Immediate | Low (time) |
| Product Hunt / Directories | Tech/SaaS products, launch spike | Immediate | Low |
How to choose:
- Where does your ICP hang out? If they're on LinkedIn, go there. If they search Google, do SEO.
- What's your budget? If $0, focus on organic (SEO, social, community). If $1K+/month, test paid ads.
- What's your timeline? If you need customers this month, use outreach or paid ads. If you can wait 6 months, build SEO.
Recommended solopreneur stack (choose 2-3):
- B2B SaaS: SEO + LinkedIn + Cold Outreach
- B2C Product: Instagram/TikTok + Paid Ads + Email
- Service/Consulting: LinkedIn + Cold Outreach + Referrals
- Info Product: Email + Twitter + YouTube
Rule: Pick 2 primary channels. Master them before adding a third.
Step 5: Build Your GTM Execution Plan
Strategy without execution is just ideas. Build a 90-day GTM plan with specific tactics, owners (you), and metrics.
90-Day GTM Plan Template:
GOAL: [What you want to achieve in 90 days — revenue, users, leads?]
Example: Acquire 50 paying customers at $49/month = $2,450 MRR
CHANNEL 1: [Primary channel]
Tactic 1: [Specific action]
Metric: [How you'll measure]
Owner: [You]
Timeline: [Weeks 1-4, 5-8, 9-12]
Tactic 2: [Specific action]
Metric: [How you'll measure]
Owner: [You]
Timeline: [Weeks 1-4, 5-8, 9-12]
CHANNEL 2: [Secondary channel]
[Same structure]
SALES/CONVERSION:
Tactic: [How you'll convert leads to customers]
Metric: [Conversion rate target]
Example (B2B SaaS, Product-Led GTM):
GOAL: 50 paying customers in 90 days = $2,450 MRR
CHANNEL 1: SEO
Tactic 1: Publish 12 blog posts targeting low-competition keywords
Metric: 2,000 organic visitors/month by Week 12
Timeline: 1 post/week, Weeks 1-12
Tactic 2: Build 3 content clusters around top pain points
Metric: 5 posts ranking in top 10 by Week 12
Timeline: Weeks 1-12
CHANNEL 2: Cold Outreach
Tactic 1: Send 500 personalized LinkedIn messages to ICP
Metric: 15% reply rate, 25 demo bookings
Timeline: 50 messages/week, Weeks 1-10
CONVERSION:
Tactic: Free 14-day trial with onboarding email sequence
Metric: 25% trial-to-paid conversion rate
Timeline: Ongoing
Weekly check-in: Review metrics. Are you on track? If not, what needs to change?
Step 6: Set Your Pricing and Offer
Pricing is part of your GTM strategy. The right price can accelerate adoption; the wrong price kills momentum.
Pricing considerations:
- What's the value you deliver? (See pricing-strategy skill)
- What are competitors charging?
- What's your target CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)?
- Do you want to optimize for volume (lower price) or margin (higher price)?
Launch offer (optional but effective):
- Early-bird discount (20-30% off for first 100 customers)
- Lifetime deal (one-time payment for lifetime access — good for cash flow, bad for MRR)
- Free tier or trial (reduces friction, increases signups)
Rule: Don't underprice to "get customers fast." Cheap customers are often low-quality and high-churn. Price at the value you deliver.
Step 7: Measure and Iterate
GTM is not set-it-and-forget-it. Track performance and adjust every 30 days.
Metrics to track:
| Metric | What It Tells You | Where to Track |
|---|---|---|
| Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) | How much you're spending to acquire one customer | Marketing spend / new customers |
| Conversion rate | % of leads/visitors that become customers | Analytics + CRM |
| Channel ROI | Which channels are profitable | Revenue per channel / spend per channel |
| Time to first customer | How long it takes from launch to first sale | Manual tracking |
| Customer feedback | Are you solving the right problem? | Surveys, interviews, support tickets |
Monthly GTM review (30 min):
- Did you hit your 90-day goal milestones for the month?
- Which channels performed best? (highest ROI, lowest CAC)
- Which channels underperformed? (high spend, low return)
- What should you double down on? What should you cut?
- What did you learn about your ICP or positioning?
Iteration: Every 30 days, adjust your tactics. If a channel isn't working after 30 days, pivot or cut it. If a channel is crushing, put more resources there.
GTM Mistakes to Avoid
- Not defining ICP clearly. "Everyone" is not a target customer. Narrow it down.
- Trying too many channels at once. Spreading thin = mediocre everywhere. Pick 2-3 max.
- Launching without positioning. If you don't know how you're different, customers won't either.
- Not tracking metrics. You can't improve what you don't measure. Set up analytics before launch.
- Giving up too early. Most channels take 30-90 days to show results. Don't panic after Week 1.
- Ignoring customer feedback. If customers tell you your messaging is confusing or the pricing is off, listen and adjust.