Martina Lauchengco - Loved

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Most tech companies get marketing wrong because they don't know how to do product marketing right. The next in the bestselling SVPG series, LOVED shows what leaders like Apple, Netflix, Microsoft, and Salesforce do well and how to apply it to transform product marketing at your company. The best products can still lose in the marketplace. Why? They are beaten by products with stronger product marketing. Good product marketing is the difference between “also-ran” products versus products that lead. And yet, product marketing is widely misunderstood. Although it includes segmenting customers, positioning your product, creating product collateral, and supporting sales teams, great product marketing achieves much more. It directs the best way to bring your product to market. It shapes what the world thinks about your product and category. It inspires others to tell your product’s story.
Part of the bestselling series including INSPIRED and EMPOWERED, LOVED explains the fundamentals of best-in-class product marketing for product teams, marketers, founders and any leader with a product and a vision.
Sharing her personal stories as a former product and marketing leader at Microsoft and Netscape, and as an advisor to Silicon Valley startups, venture capitalist, and UC Berkeley engineering graduate school lecturer, Martina Lauchengco distills decades of lessons gleaned from working with hundreds of companies to make LOVED the definitive guide to modern product marketing.
With dozens of stories from the trenches of market leaders as well as newer startups with products just beginning their journey, the book shows you:
the centrality of product marketing to any product’s success the key skills and actions required to do it well the four fundamentals of product marketing and how to apply them how to hire, lead, and organize product marketing how product marketers optimize crucial collaboration with other functions one-sheet frameworks, tools and agile marketing practices that help simplify and elevate product marketing LOVED is an invitation to rethink tired notions of product marketing and practice a more dynamic, customer and market-centric version that creates raving fans and helps products achieve their full market potential.

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Distribution Strategy, aka GTM Strategy, GTM Model, Business Model, Adoption Model. This is the most confused term. It's the chosen go-to-market model used to get products into the hands of customers. A product's go-to-market can include one or multiple go-to-market models. A company often uses multiple go-to-market models as they mature. They include:Direct sales: a sales force is the primary source of distribution. Used most often by B2B companies with complex products and a high price.Inside sales: the customer self-serves into a sales funnel and a phone or online-based rep closes the deal. More typical for companies where customers can self-serve, have lower price points or have higher volumes of new customers.Channel partners: Leveraging independent software vendors (ISVs), value-added resellers (VARs), systems integrators (SIs), consulting firms, major regional distributors, carriers, or other technology companies for distribution. More common with highly complex products or when hardware is a part of the mix.Direct to professional/customer: customers buy products themselves, sometimes through some form of distribution (app store, physical store), and often directly online.Trial or freemium: awareness and customers come through free product usage. Customers pay for premium features if they want to access specific features or after a trial is over. In some of these models you may never be asked to pay to use the product. Happy “free” users are seen as evangelists for future paying ones.Product-led growth: customers are acquired or converted by the product itself. Often used in combination with other GTM models.I will refer to these as GTM models. When a product marketer creates a plan to bring a product to market, it leverages the go-to-market models at use in a company to distribute or encourage adoption of a product.

Channel Strategy, aka Partner Strategy, Marketing Mix. See above for its use as a form of distribution. In marketing, channel strategy refers to the marketing mix across different marketing channels, such as PR, events, social, digital paid, or content. For the purpose of this book, I will specify either channel partners or marketing channel mix.

Product Strategy. Connects business objectives and product vision to the work done by individual product teams. In product marketing, key elements of product strategy drive a product go-to-market plan, especially timing of tactics.

Business Goals or Objectives. These are the specific, measurable desired achievements for a company over a set period of time. In product marketing, marketing strategies in product go-to-market align tightly with these goals.

Hopefully, this makes the relationships to concepts and language I'm using clear.

The Role of Marketing Strategies in Product Go-to-Market

Much as product marketers can't do their job without customer and market insights, no marketing activities should happen before putting in place the why . This is done in a product go-to-market plan, in which marketing strategies tell us the why behind all market-facing activities.

Declaring strategies creates guardrails that prevent activities from going off strategy. It keeps activities strongly aligned with business goals. They help teams answer which ideas are on strategy or not, reducing marketing activities that don't move the business forward.

If strategies answer the why , the when is the next most important factor. This is because whether or not an activity or tactic is relevant depends on product milestones, customer's realities, and existing market dynamics—all of which have an element of time associated with them. For example, if your target market is students, major product launch activities would be timed around Back-to-School.

The why and when in a product's go-to-market are what make the what and how worth doing. I see many companies begin their product go-to-market journey thinking of it as a list of to-dos, then asking how they should do them. Take the time to put the strategic why in place first.

Marketing activities also need to be grounded in the realities of a company's resources and stage. In the Pocket example, they right-sized their event to their stage—inviting just 10 customers and partners with whom integrations were deep. This exposed press to Pocket's ecosystem without taking on more than their small team could do well.

Here are some starter questions to help think through your marketing strategies. Remember, their purpose is to guide all other marketing activities. Which tactics are most appropriate depends on your answers:

Is third-party validation important for credibility?

What kind of customers are you trying to acquire and how fast?

Where do those customers spend time in their professional or personal lives?

Are you trying to educate the space?

What are the product's strengths?

Are there particular trends that present opportunities in your category?

Does someone else already have established relationships with the customers you're trying to reach?

What is the preferred way to adopt new products or technology for your customers?

A product marketer's job is to then articulate strategies specific to their product's situation and go-to-market. For example, grow healthcare vertical adoption or define product suite for DevOps category . The strategies or tactics that make it into a plan can include a wide range of marketing levers—partnerships, channels, branding, pricing, or communities—but what they're in service of is clear.

Remarkably, the strategy building blocks for a product's go-to-market inevitably fall into some variation of these themes:

Enable growth to hit a revenue or business goal

Improve conversion of specific customers

Generate awareness, improve discovery, or build a brand

Define, reshape, or lead a category, ecosystem, or platform

Engender customer validation, loyalty, or evangelism

Find and develop new customer segments, partners, and programs

Some worry taking the time to be strategic in a product's go-to-market slows things down or makes marketing less dynamic. Done well, it's an accelerant.

In part 3, I use a few examples to show how a strategy for one company can be a tactic for another. It all depends on stage and goals. I also introduce a lightweight product go-to-market canvas that combines all important market elements in an easy framework that makes planning across product and go-to-market teams easier.

How Company Maturity Evolves Product Go-to-Market

For a startup with one product, everything you do in market is part of a go-to-market puzzle. You're experimenting rapidly, learning about market dynamics, which customers are good ones, what product to build, and the best ways to bring it to market—all at the same time.

It's why the product go-to-market is your go-to-market strategyat the earliest stages of a company. It's also why product marketing plays such an important role at startups and why I advocate making a product marketer your first marketing hire.

At more mature companies, the go-to-market machinery is much more established and complex. The work is as much about internal coordination as it is about accelerating product adoption in the outside world. A product's go-to-market strategies might look similar to earlier stage companies but the work is done by the GTM engine of marketing and sales. Each has their own strategies and agendas, which can at times be challenging for product marketing to align. Parts 2and 5of the book explore much of this organizational challenge.

Regardless of where your company falls on the maturity spectrum, a product marketer is responsible for crafting the marketing strategies that shape a product go-to-market plan to keep activities aligned with what the business needs.

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