I prefer a broad definition, and believe that an organisation's go to market model ought to embrace all the elements that enable them to identify, engage with, persuade, and profitably satisfy a growing customer base.
From this perspective, a successful go-to-market model needs to go far beyond defining sales channels and establishing pricing policies - it has to capture the essence of how a company chooses to do business, and help to align the entire organisation behind this.
12 Key Questions
With that in mind, I'd like to share 12 key questions that I have found very useful in encouraging clients to think though some of the most important elements of their go-to-market model. I hope that you might find them similarly helpful:
- What are the common characteristics of your most valuable customers and prospects?
- What are the most significant issues you enable your prospects to address?
- What are the common trends and trigger events that might cause your prospects to start searching for solutions?
- How and why do your prospects choose to buy, and what are the key stages in their decision making process?
- What terms would your prospects use to describe what they are looking for when they search for solutions?
- What are your prospect’s most significant alternative options for solving their identified issues?
- What key business benefits will your prospects enjoy as a result of implementing a solution to the issue they have identified?
- What unique advantage does your solution offer over other options available to your prospect?
- What are the most effective ways of connecting with your most valuable prospects and generating qualified sales opportunities?
- How do you intend to systematically convert qualified sales opportunities into customers?
- Which people, and which organisations, are most influential in shaping your prospect's thinking - and influencing their buying behaviour?
- What are the key measures, metrics and goals you are going to use to measure the success of your go-to-market model?
Download Our Latest Guide
If you'd like to learn more, I encourage you to read our latest guide to building an effective go-to-market model, which expands on each of 12 questions - you can download a copy here.



