Every year, millions of startups are launched around the world. Yet the reality is sobering—only about 10% survive beyond ten years, and only a very small fraction, roughly 1%, reach the coveted unicorn status.
Contrary to popular belief, most
startups do not fail because of poor technology or weak products. They
fail because they struggle to:
- Identify the right customer
- Communicate the true value of their product
- Acquire customers efficiently
- Build a repeatable and scalable revenue model
In other words, many startups
fail due to inadequate Go-To-Market (GTM) strategy or ineffective execution
of that strategy.
If startups can significantly
improve the effectiveness of their GTM strategy and its implementation, the
success rate of startups could increase dramatically.
In this article, I discuss a
framework that can help startups design better GTM strategies or validate
existing ones. The framework acts like a mirror, highlighting
potential gaps between what the company believes customers need and what
customers actually value.
This framework is called the Differentiated
Needs Pyramid.
It analyzes customer needs at
multiple levels. Depending on whether these needs are satisfied or not,
customers respond differently—by trying, buying, rejecting, continuously buying,
or recommending a product.
Before exploring how this
framework improves GTM effectiveness, it is useful to understand the typical
components of a startup GTM strategy.
Key Components of a Startup GTM Strategy
A GTM strategy for a startup
defines how the company will reach target customers, generate demand, and create
revenue in a repeatable and scalable way. It aligns product, marketing,
sales, and customer success around a clear plan to acquire and retain
customers.
The key components of a strong
GTM strategy include:
1. Target Market Definition
This
determines who the startup will sell to first, covering Total
Addressable Market (TAM) giving full market opportunity, Serviceable
Available Market (SAM) giving segment which can be realistically served and
Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM) mentioning near-term target.
This creates
focus for start-up and prevents it from lure of selling it to every one
2. Ideal Customer Profile
(ICP)
Defines the type of company/customer
most likely to buy and succeed with the product e.g. Midsize retail company
with high support volume operating in North America market.
This ensures sales and marketing focus
on high-probability buyers
3. Buyer Persona Definition
Identifies who inside the
organization makes or influences the purchase decision. VP procurement can
be decision maker on commercial side and CIO could be decision maker on
technical side where as Customer Experience Manager could be influencer.
Understanding personas helps tailor
messaging and sales approach
4. Value Proposition
Defines why the customer
should buy your product instead of alternatives. It should answer questions
like What problem do we solve? For whom? And why are we better?
This is the core message
across sales and marketing.
5. Product Positioning
Defines how the product is perceived relative to
competitors; How we differentiate against competition.
Clear positioning enables customers understand the product
quickly
6. Competitive Strategy
It is important for a startup to define how they will
compete in the market. It could be a low-cost alternative or it could be
high quality alternative or it could be faster deployment (value to customer)
or it could be niche servicing or any combination of such things.
Strategy provides direction for marketing and sales
activities
7. Pricing and Packaging
Defines how the product is
sold and monetized. It defines Pricing model like subscription or user
based etc.; Bundles /packages like starter/ experienced/ premium or it could be
individual/ small org/enterprise and type/structure of contracts that company
would engage with its customer.
Well defined pricing & packaging
strategy simplifies sales conversations.
8. Sales Strategy
Defines how the startup will sell the product. It
details how the product would be made available to the customer before the
decision is made, it could be downloading software for a limited period of time
and getting in to contract if customer likes the product or it could be sales
person reaching out to customer and goes through multilevel customer engagement
till the decision is made.
A company can use different strategy for different segments and
well-defined sales strategy helps sales team to prioritize their efforts.
9. Demand Generation Strategy
Defines how the startup creates awareness and pipeline.
Which channels it will use to create interest in PULL as well as PUSH scenarios.
It also defines if company will be using partners to generate the demand.
The demand generation strategy is usually a combination of
all these three strategies in varying % based on the needs of product.
10. Distribution Channels
This defines how the product reaches customers. It
could be Direct to customer or through Partner or through distributor.
Clear understanding of distribution channel preference helps
team in moving the sales cycle forward.
11. Customer Journey Design
It is important to define the end-to-end process for buying
and adoption experience. What would be the stages and how company will
interact with customer organization to provide greatest experience during the
sales process as well as post sales usage.
A well-designed journey improves conversion and retention.
12. Customer Success & Expansion
Revenue doesn't stop after the first sale. Company must
define its Land and Expand strategy upfront so that structure is
created to onboard the customers, measure their success and identify expansion
opportunities.
13. Metrics & KPIs
Every GTM strategy must define how success is measured.
Key metrics are defined in three areas - Sales (Pipeline, win rate, etc.)
Marketing (Cost of Acquisition of customer (CAC), Lead Conversion ratio, etc.) and
Customer Success (Retention, Expansion Revenue, NPS etc.).
These metric help measure progress and guide the whole
process throughout the life cycle.
14. Execution Roadmap
GTM strategy is always accompanied with a roadmap for
execution i.e. how it will be rolled out over time. E.g. 0-3 months ICP
definition, 3-6 months sales team formation, etc.
Clear definition of execution roadmap provides the necessary
milestones to track.
15. Organizational Alignment
Startup GTM requires alignment
across various departments like Product, Sales, Marketing, Customer success,
etc.
Alignment ensures everyone understands
their role and work toward the same customer outcomes.
Why GTM Strategies Fail
Despite having structured plans,
startups often experience failures across multiple GTM components.
Examples include:
- The target
market (SOM) may not prioritize the problem the product solves.
- The ICP
may be incorrect, resulting in low product traction.
- Buyer
personas may be misunderstood, leading to ineffective engagement
strategies.
- The value
proposition may not address the most critical customer need.
- Demand
generation strategies may not match the buying behavior of the target
segment.
At the core of these problems is
a mismatch between what the company believes customers need and what
customers actually value.
Startups therefore require a
mechanism to validate their understanding of customer needs before executing
their GTM strategy.
This is where the Differentiated
Needs Pyramid becomes valuable.
The Differentiated Needs Pyramid
The Differentiated Needs Pyramid
helps organizations analyze and categorize customer (it could be Market Segment
or Individual Customer or Buyer persona or specific buyer/decision maker) needs
across multiple (5) Levels. Each level
depicting specific aspect of the customer. This categorization provides clarity
in terms of what are table stakes needs, what are safety/security/risk/performance
related needs or it could be needs making real differentiation to buyer.
It also determines the impact it
will have if these needs are satisfied or partially satisfied or not satisfied.
This impact influences buyer decision which could be - try, buy, reject, continuously
buy or recommend.
Company can create
Differentiated Needs Pyramid for buyer categories like Target Market
identified, ICP, Buyer Personas, and specific decision makers.
By comparing these pyramids with
GTM assumptions, startups can identify gaps and refine their strategy. In some
cases, this analysis also reveals opportunities to enhance the product
itself, strengthening its value proposition and competitive advantage.
I have explained how to create
Differentiated Needs Pyramid in my earlier blog post Can a Product Manager
create a Perfect Product in first go and keep it running forever- Dream or
Reality? https://personalandprofessionalexcellence.blogspot.com/2025/10/can-product-manager-create-perfect.html
Applying the Differentiated Needs Pyramid to GTM Strategy
The framework can enhance
multiple GTM components. These are explained in the table below
|
Sr
No |
Component
of GTM Strategy |
How
to use Differentiated Needs Pyramid |
|
1 |
Target Market Definition |
Create a Differentiated Needs Pyramid at Market segment level to
crosscheck if our product is addressing the ‘Right’ needs of the segment Validate whether the segment’s most important needs are addressed |
|
2 |
Ideal Customer Profile |
Create a Differentiated Needs Pyramid at Customer Profile level.
In case of B2B scenario, we can create Pyramid specific to any large customer
that we may be considering as anchor customer. This will refine the product based on critical needs at customer
level |
|
3 |
Buyer Persona Definition |
Needs of different buyer roles are different and creating
Differentiated Needs Pyramid at each role level shows us the mirror as to
what each one is expecting in the product. When we are dealing with a large
contract or expansions, it is beneficial to create Differentiated Needs
Pyramid specific to a specific person in the decision-making role to create a
product satisfying their higher-level needs Understand priorities of each decision maker |
|
4 |
Value Proposition |
Craft the value proposition using various Differentiated Needs
Pyramids created covering the critical needs that are satisfied by the
product better than the competition Focus messaging on the most important needs |
|
5 |
Product Positioning |
Create positioning based on the Specific needs that are satisfied
by the product Highlight differentiation aligned with customer priorities |
|
6 |
Competitive Strategy |
A mapping of how the product satisfy the needs identified through
Differentiated Needs Pyramid v/s how competing products satisfy needs provides
us insight in to crafting a competitive strategy and differentiation Identify needs competitors fail to address |
|
7 |
Pricing & Packaging |
The Needs identified through Differentiated Needs Pyramid will
guide / refine Pricing and Packaging that will be acceptable to customer Align packages with perceived customer value |
|
8 |
Sales Strategy |
Needs identified will guide formulation/ refinement of Sales
Strategy Tailor engagement model to buyer needs |
|
9 |
Demand Generation Strategy |
The Pyramids created at Customer level will guide which method
will be suitable for specific set of customers – will they prefer to try out
on their own or will they prefer handholding … Choose channels aligned with buyer behavior |
|
10 |
Distribution Channels |
The needs identified will guide in refining Distribution channel
strategy Select channels preferred by target customers |
|
11 |
Customer Journey Design |
The needs of customer drives ‘how’ portion of each step in the
customer journey. It will help what actions in each stage from company will
be appreciated by customer and create a great buying experience Improve buyer experience at each stage |
|
12 |
Customer Success and Expansion |
The mapping between Customer Needs and Satisfied needs (from
product) provides guidance in terms of actions necessary for retention and expansion
Identify expansion opportunities |
|
13 |
Metrics & KPI |
Specific Metrics could be created based on needs at different
level so that company can measure customer satisfaction as well as
opportunities for improvements Track satisfaction of key needs |
|
14 |
Execution Roadmap |
Differentiated Needs Pyramid could be used to cross check the
impact of execution at every milestone and refine it if necessary. Validate progress at each stage |
|
15 |
Organization Alignment |
Here the organization should create a Differentiated Needs Pyramid
for internal Customer-Supplier pairs which will help improve the operational
flow and smoothen the product movement from raw material to finished product
in the hands of customer Align internal teams around customer needs |
Conclusion
A strong GTM strategy is
critical to startup success. However, even well-structured strategies can fail
if they are built on incorrect assumptions about customer needs.
The Differentiated Needs
Pyramid provides a systematic way to validate those assumptions, ensuring
that startups align their products, messaging, and sales strategies with what
customers truly value.
By incorporating this framework
into GTM planning, startups can significantly improve their chances of building
a repeatable, scalable, and successful revenue engine.
Detailed explanation
about Differentiated Needs Pyramid, its construction and usage are
available in my book “Customer Experience Decoded” (available on
Amazon in kindle and print format) https://www.amazon.com/dp/8195052657.
I would be happy to discuss
any specific situations and help organizations refine their GTM strategies for
greater success.