Customer retention means keeping customers using and buying your products after the initial sale. But more importantly, it’s the strategy you’ll use to keep them there.| GTM Alliance
The customer journey is one of the most important aspects of your Go-to-Market strategy. We’re talking about the journey your customer goes on from first finding out about your brand, to purchasing your product, to being a lifelong advocate of your business.| GTM Alliance
As a function, product marketing can sit between other departments involved in GTM and connect them. As with any function, you won’t get the most out of product marketing unless you can measure, track and build on it. That’s where product marketing metrics come in.| GTM Alliance
There’s a tremendous need for customer success, but unfortunately, not everyone allocates the resources toward implementing a customer success function. According to recent studies, 37% of companies don’t have a clearly defined customer strategy in place. What can we do to remedy this failure?| GTM Alliance
When we’re talking about products, how can we not talk about the consumer? Who you’re selling to has an impact on every step in your Go-to-Market strategy from how you position the product to your, messaging, pricing and yes, even your sales strategy.| GTM Alliance
Creating a clear, concise, and compelling value proposition is perhaps the most critical component of your go-to-market strategy. Without a well-developed value proposition, your marketing materials and product messaging risk contradicting each other or failing to hit the target audience's needs.| GTM Alliance
Go-to-Market is the strategy that takes you from the first spark of an idea, to a successful product or feature launch and beyond, to the market success of your product. Put simply, it’s the process of launching a new product.| GTM Alliance