Go-to-Market Strategy for SaaS: Build the Machine Before You Scale It

A go-to-market strategy for a SaaS product is the structured plan that determines how you bring a product to a specific market, acquire customers at a repeatable cost, and build the commercial infrastructure to grow beyond your first hundred users. It covers positioning, channel selection, pricing, sales motion, and the feedback loops that tell you whether any of it is working.

Most SaaS companies skip the strategy and go straight to tactics. They run paid search before they have a clear ICP, hire an SDR team before they have a message that converts, and then wonder why CAC keeps climbing while retention stays flat. The machine has to be designed before you scale it.

Key Takeaways

  • Positioning must be resolved before channel decisions. Choosing where to advertise before you know who you’re selling to and why they should care is how SaaS companies burn budget without building pipeline.
  • Most early-stage SaaS performance marketing captures demand that already existed. Sustainable growth requires creating new demand, not just intercepting existing intent.
  • The sales motion (PLG, sales-led, or hybrid) should follow from the product’s complexity and buyer profile, not from what the founding team is most comfortable with.
  • Pricing is a GTM decision, not a finance decision. How you structure and communicate price shapes how buyers perceive value before they ever speak to a salesperson.
  • A GTM strategy without a retention mechanism is a leaky bucket. Acquisition economics only make sense when churn is low enough for LTV to justify CAC.

Before getting into the mechanics, it’s worth grounding this in what GTM strategy actually is and is not. It is not a launch plan. It is not a marketing plan. It is the commercial architecture that connects your product to the people who need it, at a price they will pay, through channels that can be sustained. If you want a broader view of how this fits into growth planning, the Go-To-Market & Growth Strategy hub covers the full landscape.

Why Most SaaS GTM Strategies Fail Before They Start

I’ve worked with SaaS businesses at various stages, from pre-revenue to Series B, and the failure pattern is almost always the same. The founding team has deep product knowledge and genuine conviction about the problem they’re solving. What they lack is commercial clarity: who, exactly, is the buyer, what does success look like for that buyer, and why would they choose this product over doing nothing.

That last point matters more than most people admit. In B2B SaaS, the most common competitor is inertia. The status quo. The spreadsheet that’s been working well enough for three years. If your GTM strategy doesn’t have a credible answer to “why change now,” you will spend a lot of money educating the market without converting it.

The second failure pattern is confusing activity with strategy. Publishing a blog, running LinkedIn ads, and attending a trade show are activities. They are not a strategy. Strategy is the set of deliberate choices about where you will compete, how you will win, and what you will not do. When I ran agencies, I saw this constantly: marketing teams generating impressive-looking reports on impressions and clicks while the sales team had nothing to close.

Define the ICP Before You Touch a Channel

Ideal customer profile work is the most important and most frequently skipped step in SaaS GTM. Not because companies don’t know it matters, but because it requires making uncomfortable choices about who you are not targeting.

A useful ICP for SaaS goes beyond firmographics. Industry, company size, and geography are a starting point, not a destination. The more useful questions are: what does the buyer’s day look like when the problem is acute, what does the internal buying process look like, who has budget authority versus who has influence, and what does success look like six months after implementation.

One framework I’ve used effectively is to look at your existing customer base (even if it’s small) and identify the cohort with the lowest churn, highest NPS, and fastest time-to-value. That cohort is your ICP. Build the GTM strategy around replicating those customers, not around the largest addressable market you can describe in a pitch deck.

For SaaS companies targeting regulated or complex verticals, ICP definition also shapes your content and compliance requirements. I’ve seen this play out in financial services contexts where messaging that works perfectly for a mid-market tech buyer lands completely differently with a compliance-conscious financial institution. The B2B financial services marketing considerations are distinct enough that they warrant their own approach entirely.

Positioning: The Work That Happens Before the Messaging

Positioning is the internal strategic work that determines how your product sits in the market relative to alternatives. Messaging is the external expression of that positioning. Most SaaS companies skip straight to messaging, which is why so many SaaS websites read identically: “the all-in-one platform for [category] teams.”

April Dunford’s framework is the most practically useful I’ve encountered for SaaS positioning. The core questions are: what are the real alternatives (including doing nothing), what are your differentiators relative to those alternatives, what value do those differentiators enable, and who cares most about that value. The answers to those questions define your positioning. Everything else follows.

Where SaaS companies get this wrong is by positioning against the category leader rather than against the real alternatives their buyers are actually considering. If your buyer is currently using a combination of email, a shared spreadsheet, and a weekly standup to manage the problem you solve, positioning against Salesforce is irrelevant. Position against the spreadsheet.

Positioning also informs your pricing narrative. BCG’s analysis of B2B pricing in go-to-market contexts highlights how pricing structure communicates value before a buyer ever speaks to a salesperson. A per-seat model implies the value scales with team size. A usage-based model implies the value scales with outcomes. Neither is inherently correct. The right answer depends on how your buyers think about value.

Choosing the Right Sales Motion

The sales motion question in SaaS has three broad answers: product-led growth, sales-led growth, or a hybrid of both. The right answer is not determined by what’s fashionable. It’s determined by your product’s complexity, your buyer’s risk tolerance, and the economics of your deal size.

Product-led growth works when the product delivers clear, immediate value to an individual user without requiring organisational change or significant onboarding. Hotjar is a good example. A developer or marketer can sign up, install the script, and see data within minutes. The product sells itself because the time-to-value is short and the individual user can make the adoption decision without a committee.

Sales-led growth is appropriate when the product requires configuration, integration, or organisational change before it delivers value. Enterprise HR platforms, complex data infrastructure tools, and anything requiring a procurement process typically fall into this category. Trying to run a PLG motion on a product that requires three months of implementation is a recipe for poor conversion and frustrated prospects.

The hybrid model, where a freemium or free trial creates individual adoption before a sales team converts at the organisational level, works well for products with both individual and team-level value. Figma is the canonical example. Individual designers adopted it, teams followed, and enterprise contracts came later. But this model requires careful sequencing and a clear understanding of when and how to introduce the sales conversation without disrupting the self-serve motion.

For SaaS businesses where the sales cycle is longer and deal qualification matters, pay-per-appointment lead generation can be a useful mechanism to test channel efficiency before committing to a full outbound function. It’s not a long-term strategy, but it’s a reasonable way to validate whether a sales-led motion can generate qualified pipeline at a defensible cost.

Channel Strategy: Where Most of the Budget Goes Wrong

Channel selection in SaaS GTM is where I see the most money wasted. Not because the channels are wrong in principle, but because companies default to the channels they know rather than the channels their buyers use.

Early in my career, I was as guilty of this as anyone. I overweighted lower-funnel performance channels because the attribution was clean and the reporting looked good. Paid search, retargeting, bottom-of-funnel content. The metrics were satisfying. But a significant portion of what those channels were “converting” would have converted anyway. The buyer had already made a decision and was using Google to find the checkout page. That’s demand capture, not demand creation.

Sustainable SaaS growth requires reaching people who don’t yet know they have the problem you solve, or who haven’t yet considered your category as the solution. That’s a different channel problem entirely. It requires content that educates, communities that build familiarity, and brand presence in the places your buyers spend time before they’re in-market. Think of it like a clothes shop: the person who walks in and tries something on is far more likely to buy than the person who walks past. The GTM job is to get more people through the door, not just to optimise the till.

For SaaS products with a defined vertical focus, endemic advertising is worth serious consideration. Placing your message in the specific publications, newsletters, and communities where your ICP is already consuming content creates relevance that broad-reach digital channels rarely achieve. It’s a more expensive CPM, but the audience quality is categorically different.

Semrush’s analysis of SaaS growth tactics is useful here for understanding how different channel combinations have worked across product categories. The pattern that holds across most successful cases is a combination of organic content building long-term demand, paid channels capturing short-term intent, and community or partnership channels creating reach that neither organic nor paid can achieve alone.

The Website as a GTM Asset, Not a Brochure

In SaaS, the website is often the most important sales tool in the GTM stack. It is where buyers form their first impression, where they self-qualify, and where PLG products begin the conversion process. Treating it as a brochure is a significant commercial mistake.

I use a structured approach when assessing how well a website is working as a GTM asset. The checklist for analysing a company website for sales and marketing strategy is a useful starting point. The questions that matter most are: does the homepage communicate a clear value proposition in plain language, does the navigation reflect how buyers think about the problem (not how the product team thinks about features), and does the conversion path match the sales motion.

For PLG products, the conversion path should be as short as possible. Every additional click between landing and sign-up is a drop-off risk. For sales-led products, the website should be doing qualification work: surfacing the right content for the right buyer stage, making it easy to book a demo, and providing enough information that a qualified buyer arrives at the sales conversation already convinced of fit.

One pattern I’ve seen repeatedly in SaaS is the mismatch between the website’s messaging and the sales team’s pitch. The website promises one thing, the salesperson delivers another, and the buyer arrives at onboarding expecting a third. That inconsistency is a GTM problem, not a marketing problem or a sales problem. It reflects a failure to align the commercial narrative across the entire buyer experience.

Retention Is a GTM Decision, Not a Post-Sale Problem

The economics of SaaS only work if retention is strong. This is well understood in theory and frequently ignored in practice. GTM strategies that are built entirely around acquisition, with retention treated as a customer success problem to be solved later, tend to produce businesses that grow on the surface while quietly bleeding underneath.

Retention starts in the GTM strategy because retention starts with who you acquire. If your acquisition motion is optimised for volume rather than fit, you will acquire customers who churn. If your messaging promises outcomes the product cannot deliver for the buyer’s specific context, you will acquire customers who churn. The best retention investment a SaaS company can make is sharper ICP definition and more honest positioning.

I’ve seen this play out in turnaround situations. A SaaS business I worked with had strong top-of-funnel numbers and a conversion rate the team was proud of. The problem was that 40% of customers were churning within six months. When we dug into the data, the pattern was clear: a specific segment of customers, acquired through a particular channel with particular messaging, were churning at twice the rate of the rest. The acquisition motion was optimised for that segment because it converted cheaply. It was also destroying the business.

Forrester’s intelligent growth model makes a related point: growth that comes from retaining and expanding existing customers is structurally more valuable than growth from new acquisition alone. In SaaS terms, net revenue retention above 100% means the business grows even without a single new customer. That’s the commercial outcome a well-designed GTM strategy should be building toward.

Measuring What Actually Matters in SaaS GTM

Measurement in SaaS GTM is a field full of false precision. Attribution models that credit the last click before conversion, pipeline reports that count every lead regardless of quality, and CAC calculations that exclude half the costs involved. I’ve sat in enough board meetings to know that the numbers presented with the most confidence are often the ones most worth questioning.

The metrics that actually matter for GTM health are: CAC by channel and segment (not blended), LTV by cohort (not average), time-to-value (because it predicts retention), and NRR. These four numbers, tracked honestly over time, will tell you more about GTM performance than any dashboard full of vanity metrics.

Before committing significant budget to a GTM strategy, it’s also worth doing the kind of structured assessment that catches the problems you haven’t thought to look for. Digital marketing due diligence is particularly valuable when a SaaS business is preparing for investment, acquisition, or a significant strategic pivot. The gaps that seem manageable at Series A have a way of becoming expensive at Series C.

Vidyard’s research on GTM pipeline and revenue potential highlights a consistent gap between the pipeline teams think they have and the pipeline that is actually progressing. The implication for measurement is that quantity-focused pipeline metrics create a false sense of GTM health. Qualified pipeline, moving at a predictable velocity, is what matters.

Scaling the GTM Model: When to Invest and When to Wait

The pressure to scale GTM investment before the model is proven is one of the most common and most expensive mistakes in SaaS. Venture-backed companies feel it acutely because growth metrics drive valuation. But scaling a GTM model that doesn’t yet work reliably just produces more of the same problem at higher cost.

The signal that a GTM model is ready to scale is repeatable, predictable conversion at a CAC that the LTV can support. Not impressive conversion in a single quarter. Not a few exceptional deals closed by a founder who knows everyone in the industry. Repeatable conversion by a normal salesperson or a normal paid channel, at a cost that makes the unit economics work.

BCG’s work on scaling organisations makes a point that applies directly to SaaS GTM: the processes and structures that work at 20 people rarely work at 100. The same is true of GTM models. A founder-led sales motion that closes the first 50 customers through relationships and conviction will not scale to 500 customers through the same mechanism. Building the repeatable infrastructure, the playbooks, the enablement, the channel discipline, before you scale headcount is how you avoid the common trap of growing revenue while margins collapse.

For SaaS businesses with multiple product lines or distinct market segments, the question of how to structure the GTM function is also worth addressing explicitly. The corporate and business unit marketing framework for B2B tech companies provides a useful structure for thinking about where to centralise and where to give business units autonomy. Getting this wrong creates duplication, inconsistent messaging, and internal competition for budget that serves no customer.

There is also a product question embedded in every GTM scaling decision. Marketing can do a great deal to acquire and convert customers, but if the product is not genuinely delivering value, the GTM strategy becomes a machine for accelerating churn. I’ve seen this more times than I’d like. The product has a real problem, the team knows it, but the instinct is to invest in marketing rather than fix the product. Marketing is not a substitute for product-market fit. It amplifies what’s already there, good or bad.

For SaaS companies handling vertical-specific GTM challenges, the structural issues can be particularly acute. Forrester’s analysis of healthcare GTM struggles illustrates how regulated verticals require a fundamentally different approach to channel, messaging, and sales motion. The same principles apply to legal tech, fintech, and any SaaS product where the buyer’s procurement environment is shaped by compliance requirements.

If you’re working through the broader strategic questions that sit behind these GTM decisions, the Go-To-Market & Growth Strategy hub covers positioning, channel architecture, and commercial planning in more depth across a range of SaaS and B2B contexts.

About the Author

Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a go-to-market strategy for a SaaS product?
A go-to-market strategy for a SaaS product is the structured commercial plan that defines who you are selling to, how you will reach them, what you will charge, and how you will convert and retain them. It covers ICP definition, positioning, sales motion selection, channel strategy, pricing structure, and the metrics used to assess whether the model is working. It is distinct from a marketing plan, which is a subset of the broader GTM strategy.
When should a SaaS company choose product-led growth over sales-led growth?
Product-led growth is appropriate when the product delivers clear, immediate value to an individual user without requiring significant onboarding, integration, or organisational change. If a user can sign up, use the product, and experience a meaningful outcome within minutes or hours, PLG is viable. Sales-led growth is more appropriate when the product is complex, requires configuration, or involves a buying committee. The choice should follow from the product’s nature and the buyer’s decision process, not from the founding team’s preference.
How do you define an ideal customer profile for a SaaS product?
Start with your existing customer base and identify the cohort with the lowest churn, highest satisfaction scores, and fastest time-to-value. Look beyond firmographics (industry, size, geography) to understand the buyer’s day-to-day context, their internal buying process, and what success looks like for them six months after implementation. The ICP is not the largest market you can describe. It is the specific type of customer for whom your product delivers the most reliable, repeatable value.
What metrics should a SaaS company track to assess GTM performance?
The four metrics that matter most are: customer acquisition cost by channel and segment (not blended), lifetime value by cohort (not average), time-to-value (because it predicts retention), and net revenue retention. These four numbers, tracked honestly over time, provide a clearer picture of GTM health than volume-based metrics like total leads or total pipeline. Blended or averaged metrics often obscure the performance of specific segments and channels that are either driving or destroying unit economics.
How does pricing fit into a SaaS go-to-market strategy?
Pricing is a GTM decision because it communicates value before a buyer speaks to a salesperson. The structure of your pricing model (per seat, usage-based, flat fee, tiered) signals how value scales and who the product is for. A per-seat model implies value that grows with team size. A usage-based model implies value tied to outcomes. The right structure depends on how your buyers think about value, not on what is easiest to administer. Pricing should be resolved as part of positioning work, not as a separate finance exercise.

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