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MenuWhat is a good "go to market strategy" to reach potential customers and to get competitive advantage of incumbents?
I'm developing a new product for home to be used for specific function and with the feature to connect home to smartphones. I'll go to a new market with no competitors but the high probability to have incumbents in less than one year.
We have no metrics and no best cases, so we are a bit confused about the first move!
Answers
The best way to launch a product is to start promoting it before you release it on the market. Your strategy also should depend of how are you going to sell the product: online or in store.
Lead all of your marketing activities must lead to your website.
Here are some of the things you can do:
Make a good video explanation of the product. Show to people how it works and focus on the problems that it solves for them.
Build a buyer persona focused website. That is extremely important especially if you're selling online. It will skyrock your conversion rate.
Start building a community on the social media. Focus on building relationships with people, ask for their feedback.
Build a PR buzz around your brand. A great service you can use for that is MuckRack. There you can find journalist that are looking to write a story for exatly what you're looking to sell.
Make a keyword research and run some tests with Google Adwords. Make A/B testing with different landing pages to see what works better.
Focus on SEO and content marketing to bring visitors to your website.
If you tell me more, I will be able to help you better with a more concrete advice. I'm open for a free consultation. I'm sending you a VIP key for a free call.
You're not the only one confused., though I'm certainly interested to learn some more. If you're interested we can jump on a complimentary 30 minute call to see if we can clarify things a bit for you.
Own the language. Anticipate what people will search for in this niche and ensure that YOU will be the majority of what they find.
Here's a concrete example. Suppose that you are launching an innovative new product for helping people quit smoking: The nicotine patch.
If you're the company behind Nicoderm CQ, then you'll enter the market with guns blazing -- a gigantic advertising budget, strong patents, smart executives, and an innovative product that people genuinely need.
Great, right? Yes, but far from perfect. Fast forward to 2013. Patents expire. Nicoderm CQ, like most pharmaceutical brands, must now compete with knockoff generic nicotine patches, offering the same product at lower prices.
As dominant as Nicoderm CQ is, thanks to their brilliant execution of a traditional marketing strategy, they have left themselves exposed to market competition in a ridiculous way.
Specifically, they don't own NicotinePatches.com or NicotinePatch.com. Instead, I do.
In effect, the latecomers to this market niche can take a shortcut to brand authority by building their brand on the most universal descriptor of the product itself. In the long run, the familiarity of "Nicoderm CQ" will wear off. That will happen pretty much as soon as the advertising dollars stop pumping in. After all, there's nothing intuitive about "Nicoderm CQ" -- particularly the "CQ". Meanwhile, people will continue searching for "nicotine patches" online even with no input of advertising dollars whatsoever.
Anticipate. Own the language.
Despite its complexity designing go to market strategy and preparing go to market has some rules that can be generalised for any situation or organisation. Newly founded businesses, SMEs, enterprises, or NGOs could learn a lot from start-ups how to build traction on different channels and how to use rapid experimentation process. On the other hand, start-ups can benefit from understanding and managing complex distribution from large sales or distribution focused organisations, especially when designing marketplaces, platforms, and ecosystems. A start-up is a company designed to grow fast. Being newly founded does not in itself make a company a start-up. Nor is it necessary for a start-up to work on technology, or take venture funding, or have some sort of “exit.” The only essential thing is growth. Everything else we associate with start-ups follows from growth.
A lot of knowledge and wisdom how to design a Go-to-market and build your growth machine comes from venture capital investors and other people since their high-risk investments focus on companies that have high growth potential and they have been through this process repeatedly. The hardest part of designing a go to market strategy is to think about its execution at the same time you are building it. There many go to market frameworks available online that can be used for your specific situation. It can be just a simple diagram that organizes the dimensions of your Go-to market project in a helpful way that you share with your team. Understanding and framing your problem in an approachable way that you share with your team will bring clarity and speed of execution and a good framework enables us to execute better and faster. “Strong Opinions Weakly Held” approach is a framework to overcome biases and is the most effective way to make decisions when faced with complexity, uncertainty, and time pressure. There are lessons to be learned from companies outside your category. You can have an amazing product that is technically superior but with not having the right access to the market you will lose.
Enterprise with better distribution could launch something far inferior but would beat you in this process. Not getting initial traction for your product is often connected with spending too much time on building and not on allocating enough time and resources on distribution and attracting users. Sequoia Capital has followed a basic mantra “Market, product, team.” Understanding your Go-to-market strategy as a function of the primacy of sales or marketing is paramount.
Mark Leslie says, “If you’re marketing-intensive, the product is bought. If it is sales-intensive, the product is sold.” Mark Leslie uses a simple framework to quickly establish whether you have a sales-intensive or marketing-intensive product that you are bringing to the market. Besides smoother Go-to-market strategy, this process will help marketing and sales to better coordinate their efforts to win customers.
Start-ups are commonly instructed to just focus on product market fit in the early days. While I agree in the earliest phases you focus on proving Market Product Fit, that does not mean you can ignore the others. You need to find four fits to grow to $100M+ company in a venture-backed time frame. Market, product, channel, and model all must interact and work together as part of one constant ecosystem and Brian Balfour designed a framework to align all four fits and explained why you cannot think of them separately.
Building a great product is not an answer that your company will grow successfully. Great products have failed, while terrible products have grown to a huge company. “Go-to-Market Strategy is focused on how the organization will put offerings into the market to reach market penetration, revenue and profitability expectations. This charter is a superset of marketing strategy as it impacts all functions within an organization with the goal of preparing the entire company for market success.
A comprehensive GTM strategy includes a detailed analysis of your target markets, customer segments, budget requirements, offers, positioning and can take several weeks or longer to formulate. It is focused on the entire product lifecycle and has to be adjusted and changed when the market conditions change. The strategy includes positioning, brand, targeting, and segmentation. If you want to drive a competitive advantage in your go to market your segments need to be small enough to be actionable but big enough to be meaningful. Minimum viable product comes hand in hand with the minimum viable segment and his great start-up secret is that if your segmentation is based on needs that will lead that customer will reference each other. In the tactical part, the focus is on the marketing and sales cycle, driving to market and results-oriented and measured execution.
Go-to-market is both strategic and tactical and Skok believes just as Rome wasn’t built in a day so too your GTM strategy and tactics shouldn’t. GTM business model is driven through continuous integration and improvement and is results-oriented and execution driven.
When designing your go to market it is important to identify your market stage and the strategy required to cater to that phase. It is not what the seller wants to do but respect what the market needs. As Moore argues in his Crossing the Chasm book that there is a chasm between the early adopters of the product and early majority, therefore, is vital to identify your market stage, strategy required and plan for the next phase of the market.
It is not only the first mover advantage nor product-market-fit to dominate the market. If you figure out how to scale with velocity you can overtake successful players that were already in that market. Gil believes that most successful founders can see what others don’t by almost cloning themselves as a customer. You can crack through the markets by being product centric rather than customer centric.
When designing your Go-to-Market market machine you will have to align your GTM plans in operations, marketing, and sales and figure out how all this will be executed in the end. Initially, the go-to-market plan should only be created after gathering user insights and creating success metrics and that will inevitably mean that in the best of the circumstances you will have to tweak your go-to-market strategy.
Besides if you do have any questions give me a call: https://clarity.fm/joy-brotonath
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