GTM Strategy·May 29, 2026·8 min read

Go-To-Market Best Practices: What the Best Companies Do Differently

Go-To-Market Best Practices: What the Best Companies Do Differently

Go-to-market is not a strategy document. It is a system of decisions that determines how the company wins. Here are the practices that separate the best from the rest.

Every company has a go-to-market strategy. Very few have a go-to-market system. The difference is that a strategy is a document. A system is a set of decisions, processes, and measurements that operate continuously. The companies that win are not the ones with the best strategy decks. They are the ones with the best systems.

The best practices below are not theories. They are the patterns I have observed in companies that consistently outperform their competitors. They are not easy to implement. They are the hard work that most companies skip because it feels less urgent than the next quarter's target.

A go-to-market strategy is what you say you will do. A go-to-market system is what you actually do every day. The gap between the two is where most companies lose.

Best Practice One: Define the ICP with Precision

The best companies know exactly who they serve. Not a demographic. Not a vertical. A specific profile with firmographic, situational, and behavioral characteristics. The ICP is not a marketing exercise. It is the foundation of every decision in the go-to-market system.

The precision matters. A company that says "we serve mid-market healthcare" is not serving anyone specifically. A company that says "we serve hospitals with 200 to 500 beds that are undergoing a digital transformation and have a specific compliance deadline" is serving a real customer with a real need.

Best Practice Two: Align Marketing and Sales Around Revenue, Not Leads

The best companies do not measure marketing by leads and sales by revenue. They measure both by revenue. Marketing is accountable for the revenue generated by the leads they produce. Sales is accountable for the revenue generated by the pipeline they manage. The shared metric is revenue, and the shared process is the handoff.

Best Practice Three: Build the Playbook, Then Execute It

The best companies do not let each rep invent their own approach. They build the playbook. They train the team. They measure adherence. And they update the playbook based on what works. The playbook is not a restriction. It is a platform. It gives reps the foundation to improvise from, not the requirement to start from scratch.

Best Practice Four: Measure the System, Not Just the Output

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The best companies measure leading indicators, not just lagging ones. They track pipeline velocity, stage conversion rates, customer acquisition cost, customer lifetime value, and sales cycle length. They know that revenue is the output of a system, and they manage the system.

Best Practice Five: Iterate Quarterly, Not Annually

The best companies do not set the go-to-market strategy once a year and hope it works. They review it every quarter. They adjust based on what the data tells them. They kill what is not working. They double down on what is. The go-to-market system is a living system, not a static plan.

Best Practice Six: Build the Team Before You Need It

The best companies hire the next stage of leadership before the current stage breaks. They hire the VP of Sales before the founder is overwhelmed. They build the marketing team before the lead volume stalls. They invest in customer success before the churn rate spikes. The go-to-market system is built in anticipation of growth, not in reaction to it.

The Ultimate Best Practice

The ultimate best practice is the discipline to do the unglamorous work. Document the process. Train the team. Measure the metrics. Update the playbook. Review the strategy. The companies that win are the ones that do this work consistently, quarter after quarter, even when it feels like there are more urgent things to do.

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Jeff Bounds

Jeff Bounds

Revenue growth advisor to growth-stage founders and CEOs.

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