// Master product launches, positioning, messaging, and GTM strategies. Use when planning launches, entering markets, or positioning products.
| name | go-to-market-playbooks |
| description | Master product launches, positioning, messaging, and GTM strategies. Use when planning launches, entering markets, or positioning products. |
Comprehensive guide to go-to-market (GTM) strategies, product positioning, launch planning, and market entry tactics.
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launch-planner - For GTM strategies, positioning, and distribution playbooksUse when you need:
Model: Product drives acquisition, conversion, expansion
Funnel:
Free Signup โ Activation โ Expansion โ Paid โ Advocacy
Characteristics:
Examples: Slack, Dropbox, Notion, Figma
When to Use:
Playbook:
Model: Sales team drives revenue
Funnel:
Lead โ MQL โ SQL โ Demo โ Proposal โ Close
Characteristics:
Examples: Salesforce, SAP, enterprise software
When to Use:
Playbook:
Model: Community drives adoption and revenue
Funnel:
Awareness โ Community Join โ Engagement โ Conversion โ Advocacy
Examples: GitHub, HashiCorp, Figma, Discord
When to Use:
Playbook:
Model: Partners drive distribution
Examples: Shopify apps, Salesforce AppExchange, AWS Marketplace
When to Use:
Playbook:
1. Competitive Alternatives What do customers use today if not your product?
2. Unique Attributes What do you have that alternatives don't?
3. Value (Benefits) What value do those unique attributes enable?
4. Target Customer Who cares most about that value?
5. Market Category What context makes the value obvious?
Step 1: List Competitive Alternatives
Alternatives for Project Management Tool:
- Asana, Monday.com, Linear
- Spreadsheets
- Email + meetings
- Do nothing
Step 2: Identify Unique Attributes
What we have that they don't:
- AI-powered task prioritization
- Real-time async collaboration
- Built-in analytics dashboard
Step 3: Map Attributes to Value
AI prioritization โ Save 5 hours/week on planning
Async collaboration โ Works across timezones
Analytics โ Measure team productivity
Step 4: Find Best-Fit Customer
Who cares most?
- Remote-first startups (20-100 people)
- Product/engineering teams
- Fast-paced, data-driven culture
Step 5: Choose Category
Options:
A. "Project Management" (crowded)
B. "AI Productivity Platform" (new category)
C. "Team Operating System" (abstract)
Choice: B - Differentiated, clear value
For [target customer]
Who [need/opportunity]
[Product] is a [category]
That [key benefit]
Unlike [alternative]
We [primary differentiation]
Example:
For remote product teams at fast-growing startups
Who struggle with async collaboration and context switching
Acme is an AI-native team productivity platform
That automates busywork so teams ship faster
Unlike Asana or Monday which are just task trackers
We combine planning, collaboration, and intelligence in one tool
Level 1: Company Messaging
Level 2: Product Messaging
Level 3: Feature Messaging
Before-After-Bridge (BAB)
Before: [Current pain]
After: [Desired state]
Bridge: [How product gets them there]
Example:
Before: "Teams waste 10 hours/week in status meetings"
After: "Imagine if everyone knew what's happening without meetings"
Bridge: "Our AI generates status updates automatically from your work"
PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solve)
Problem: [Identify pain]
Agitate: [Make it worse]
Solve: [Your solution]
Example:
Problem: "Your team is drowning in Slack messages"
Agitate: "You miss critical updates, decisions get lost, and new hires can't find context"
Solve: "Acme organizes all team knowledge automatically"
Tier 1: Major Launch
Tier 2: Feature Launch
Tier 3: Improvement
T-minus 8 weeks: Preparation
T-minus 6 weeks: Asset Creation
T-minus 4 weeks: Beta Program
T-minus 2 weeks: Enablement
T-minus 1 week: Final Prep
Launch Day
Post-Launch (Week 1-4)
Owned:
Earned:
Paid:
Partnerships:
TAM/SAM/SOM:
TAM (Total Addressable Market): Everyone who could use product
SAM (Serviceable Available Market): Segment you can reach
SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market): Realistic target
Example:
TAM: All project management users = $50B
SAM: Remote startups 20-100 people = $2B
SOM: 1% market share in 3 years = $20M
Market Entry Checklist:
Concept: Dominate one narrow segment before expanding
Process:
Example:
What to Track:
Sources:
Format:
# Competitor X
## Overview
- Company size, funding
- Target customers
- Key strengths
## When They Win
- [Scenario where they're strong]
## When We Win
- [Our advantages]
## Differentiation
- Feature comparison
- Positioning vs them
## Objection Handling
Q: "Why not use [Competitor]?"
A: "[Response emphasizing our unique value]"
## Proof Points
- Customer wins from competitor
- Case studies
Freemium:
Free Trial:
Usage-Based:
Tiered:
Per-Seat:
3-Tier Model (Good-Better-Best):
Starter: $10/user/month
- Core features
- Email support
- Target: Small teams
Professional: $25/user/month
- All Starter features
- Advanced features
- Priority support
- Target: Growing teams
Enterprise: Custom pricing
- All Professional features
- Custom integrations
- Dedicated support
- SLA
- Target: Large organizations
Value Metric: What you charge for
Choose metric that scales with value delivered
Choose GTM Motion:
Low-touch, self-serve โ PLG
High-touch, complex sale โ Sales-Led
Developer product โ Community-Led
Platform complement โ Partner-Led
Then:
1. Position (find differentiation)
2. Message (communicate value)
3. Launch (create awareness)
4. Optimize (iterate and scale)
Key Success Factors:
- Clear positioning
- Focused beachhead
- Aligned team
- Measured results
Books:
Frameworks:
Tools: