Manager Advocacy: The Growth Lever Most GTM Teams Ignore
Manager advocacy is the practice of equipping middle managers to actively champion a product, initiative, or go-to-market motion within their teams and upward through the organisation. When it works, it accelerates adoption, reduces internal friction, and creates a multiplier effect that no amount of top-down messaging can replicate. When it is absent, even the best-funded GTM strategies stall at the point where strategy meets execution.
Most organisations treat this as a communications problem. It is not. It is a commercial problem, and solving it requires thinking like a marketer, not a change manager.
Key Takeaways
- Manager advocacy is a GTM execution lever, not an internal comms exercise. Teams that treat it as the latter consistently underperform at launch.
- Middle managers are the highest-leverage audience in any organisational change or product rollout. They decide whether strategy becomes behaviour.
- Advocacy cannot be mandated. It has to be earned by giving managers the context, confidence, and commercial rationale to speak credibly on your behalf.
- The absence of manager advocacy is one of the most common and least diagnosed reasons B2B GTM strategies fail to hit their numbers.
- Treating managers as an internal audience, with the same rigour you apply to external audiences, is the single biggest shift most marketing teams need to make.
In This Article
- Why Manager Advocacy Gets Overlooked in GTM Planning
- What Middle Managers Actually Do in a GTM Motion
- The Difference Between Compliance and Advocacy
- How to Build a Manager Advocacy Programme That Works
- Manager Advocacy in a B2B GTM Context
- The Measurement Problem
- Where Manager Advocacy Fits in the Broader Growth Architecture
- The Practical Starting Point
Why Manager Advocacy Gets Overlooked in GTM Planning
Go-to-market planning tends to be outward-facing by instinct. You map the customer experience, build the messaging architecture, align the sales playbook, and brief the channel owners. The internal organisational layer, specifically the managers who will carry the strategy into daily team behaviour, rarely gets the same rigour. They are briefed, maybe. They are given a deck, sometimes. They are asked to cascade the message, often without being told why it matters commercially or what they personally stand to gain by advocating for it.
I have seen this pattern in almost every large organisation I have worked with across 20 years. A strategy gets signed off at leadership level, a launch plan gets built, and then it hits the middle of the organisation and slows to a crawl. Not because the strategy was wrong. Because the people responsible for translating it into action were never properly activated.
This is worth understanding in the context of broader growth strategy. If you are interested in how go-to-market thinking connects to long-term commercial performance, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers the full landscape, from positioning to scaling to organisational readiness.
What Middle Managers Actually Do in a GTM Motion
Middle managers are the connective tissue between strategic intent and operational reality. They interpret, filter, and reframe everything that comes from above before it reaches the people doing the work. That is not a criticism. It is a structural reality of how organisations function.
When a manager is genuinely bought in to a GTM motion, several things happen. They repeat the message with conviction in their own language, which is far more credible than any corporate communication. They make space for the new initiative in team priorities, which is where most strategies actually die. They surface early signals from the front line that allow you to adapt before problems compound. And they model the behaviour that signals to their team that this is real, not another initiative that will quietly disappear in six weeks.
When a manager is not bought in, the opposite happens. They comply without committing. They answer questions with “I think the idea is…” rather than “here is what we are doing and why.” They protect their team’s time from the new initiative because they do not believe it will last. And the strategy, however well-designed, never gets traction.
Early in my career I worked on a product launch where the internal briefing process was treated as a formality. Senior leadership was aligned, the external campaign was strong, and the sales team had been through a two-day training programme. What nobody had done was sit with the regional sales managers and help them understand how this product changed their commercial story. Within six weeks, the sales team was defaulting to the old product because their managers were not actively redirecting them. The campaign was performing. The business was not. Those are two very different things.
The Difference Between Compliance and Advocacy
This distinction matters more than most GTM frameworks acknowledge. Compliance is a manager doing what they have been asked to do. Advocacy is a manager doing it because they believe it is the right thing to do and are willing to say so in their own words.
Compliance produces passive execution. The message gets forwarded, the training gets attended, the new process gets nominally followed. Advocacy produces active amplification. The manager brings it up unprompted. They connect it to their team’s specific context. They defend it when challenged and reinforce it when momentum dips.
The gap between these two states is almost always a function of how the manager was engaged in the first place. If they were told what to do, you get compliance at best. If they were brought into the thinking, given the commercial rationale, shown how success would be measured, and asked for their perspective before the plan was finalised, you have a much better chance of genuine advocacy.
I ran agencies for a significant part of my career, and the same dynamic played out in client relationships. When a client’s internal marketing manager was brought into a campaign early, when they understood the strategic logic and felt some ownership of the direction, they championed the work internally. When they were handed a finished product and asked to present it upward, they presented it neutrally and it often died in committee. The work was identical. The outcome was not.
How to Build a Manager Advocacy Programme That Works
The word “programme” can make this feel more complicated than it needs to be. At its core, building manager advocacy is about applying the same audience-first thinking to your internal stakeholders that you apply to your customers. You need to understand their motivations, their constraints, and what a credible message looks like from their perspective.
Start with the commercial case, not the communications brief. Managers respond to commercial logic. They need to understand why this initiative matters to the business, how success will be measured, and what their team’s contribution looks like in that context. If you cannot give them a clear answer to “what does good look like in 90 days,” you are not ready to activate them.
Give them the narrative, not the script. A manager who reads from a corporate script sounds like a manager reading from a corporate script. What you want is a manager who has internalised the core argument and can express it in their own voice, in response to whatever their team actually asks. That requires a different kind of briefing, one that explains the reasoning, not just the conclusion.
Create a feedback loop, not a cascade. The traditional cascade model treats managers as a distribution channel for information. A genuine advocacy programme treats them as a source of intelligence. Building in structured moments for managers to surface what they are hearing from their teams, what is landing and what is not, turns them from passive recipients into active participants. That shift in role changes how they engage with the initiative entirely.
Recognise advocacy visibly. This does not mean a leaderboard or a certificate. It means that when a manager’s advocacy produces a measurable outcome, that connection gets made explicitly. People repeat behaviours that are noticed and attributed. If advocacy is invisible in your performance culture, it will remain inconsistent.
When I was growing the agency from around 20 people to over 100, the managers who accelerated that growth were not the ones who were most technically skilled. They were the ones who understood the commercial direction of the business and could translate it into team behaviour. Building that capability deliberately, rather than hoping it emerged organically, was one of the more consequential decisions I made during that period.
Manager Advocacy in a B2B GTM Context
In B2B, the stakes of manager advocacy are particularly high because the sales cycle is longer, the number of touchpoints is greater, and the internal coordination required to close a deal is more complex. A buyer who encounters inconsistent messaging across different parts of your organisation, sales saying one thing, customer success saying another, the product team describing it differently again, will lose confidence in your ability to deliver.
Manager advocacy is what prevents that fragmentation. When managers across functions are genuinely aligned on the commercial story and equipped to reinforce it, the buyer experience becomes coherent. That coherence is a competitive advantage, and it is one that almost no amount of external marketing spend can compensate for when it is absent.
There is also a pipeline dimension that gets underappreciated. Research from Vidyard on GTM team performance points consistently to internal alignment as a driver of revenue potential, particularly in organisations where the handoff between marketing and sales is mediated by managers who may or may not be pulling in the same direction. When that alignment is absent, pipeline leaks at the handoff points, and it is rarely visible in the data until the damage has already been done.
For teams thinking about how to build scalable GTM execution, BCG’s work on scaling agile organisations is worth reading for the structural lessons it contains about where execution breaks down in complex organisations, even when strategy is sound.
The Measurement Problem
One reason manager advocacy gets deprioritised is that it is genuinely difficult to measure. You cannot put a UTM parameter on a manager conversation. You cannot attribute a deal to the fact that a regional manager reinforced the value proposition in a team meeting three months before the contract was signed.
This is a real limitation, but it is not a reason to ignore the lever. It is a reason to be honest about how you are evaluating it. Proxy metrics matter here. Adoption rates for new initiatives, time-to-competency for new hires, consistency of messaging across customer touchpoints, internal NPS for strategic initiatives, these are all observable signals that manager advocacy is either working or not.
I spent a long time in performance marketing environments where attribution was treated as a proxy for truth. It is not. It is a perspective on reality, and a partial one at that. The same discipline applies here. You will not get a clean causal model for manager advocacy. You can get a coherent picture of whether the conditions for advocacy are present and whether the outcomes you would expect from strong advocacy are materialising.
Teams building out their measurement frameworks around growth initiatives might find Hotjar’s thinking on growth loops and feedback mechanisms useful for understanding how to build observability into processes that are inherently qualitative.
Where Manager Advocacy Fits in the Broader Growth Architecture
Manager advocacy is not a standalone tactic. It sits within a broader architecture of how organisations create and sustain growth. That architecture includes your positioning, your channel strategy, your product-market fit, and the operational systems that allow strategy to be executed consistently at scale.
What manager advocacy does is close the gap between the architecture and the execution. You can have a sound strategy, a compelling product, and a well-funded GTM motion, and still underperform because the human layer that connects strategy to customer is not activated. That is not a strategy problem. It is an execution problem, and it requires a different kind of intervention.
I judged the Effie Awards for several years, which gives you an unusual vantage point on marketing effectiveness. The campaigns that won were almost never the ones with the biggest budgets or the most creative ambition. They were the ones where everything was pulling in the same direction, where the internal organisation was as aligned as the external message. Manager advocacy is a significant part of what makes that alignment possible.
For a broader view of how these elements connect across the full GTM lifecycle, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers positioning, scaling, and the commercial decisions that determine whether a strategy actually delivers growth or just activity.
Teams that want to understand how growth hacking and rapid experimentation intersect with internal execution might also find value in Semrush’s analysis of growth hacking examples, particularly for the lessons about where internal friction tends to kill external momentum.
The Practical Starting Point
If you are reading this as someone responsible for a GTM initiative that is not gaining the traction it should, the first question to ask is not “what is wrong with the strategy.” It is “who are the managers who need to be advocates for this, and do they have what they need to play that role.”
In my experience, the answer to the second part of that question is almost always no. Not because anyone made a deliberate decision to exclude them, but because the internal audience rarely gets the same investment of time and thinking as the external one. Fixing that imbalance is usually faster and cheaper than any other intervention available to you.
There was a moment early in my agency career, a brainstorm for a major drinks brand, where the founder had to leave unexpectedly and handed me the whiteboard pen with the room still full. The instinct was to defer, to wait, to manage the situation rather than lead it. What I learned from doing it anyway was that the people in that room did not need more information. They needed someone to give them a direction they could commit to. Managers in your organisation are in that position constantly. They are waiting for someone to give them a reason to commit. Your job is to give them one.
For teams building out their GTM capabilities more broadly, BCG’s framework for product launch planning offers a useful structural lens on how internal readiness connects to external execution, even outside the biopharma context it was written for.
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.
