B2B Go-to-Market
Strategy
Most B2B launches generate internal momentum and miss the market. Zen Media builds go-to-market strategies that coordinate positioning, pricing, sales readiness, and marketing execution before the first external conversation happens.

Where Plans Break Down
The decisions that determine launch success are made months before go-live.
A B2B product launch involves five distinct workstreams: market research, positioning, pricing, sales enablement, and marketing execution. When built in silos and assembled at the end, the gaps between them become the failure points. The structural problem is coordination: the workstreams were never designed to connect with each other.
Positioning built by the builders
When positioning starts from capability rather than the buyer's mental model, the messaging lands in a register buyers do not recognize as their own.
Sales readiness as a launch output
When sales receives materials at launch without being part of the research that produced them, the connection between discovery and field readiness never gets made.
Channels selected before buyer research
Without research into how buyers find and shortlist vendors, channel decisions are educated guesses dressed up as strategy.
The Engagement Process
Seven steps from discovery to launch readiness.
Each step feeds the next. The engagement continues through launch and includes a formal post-launch review once market signals are in.
Market Discovery
Stakeholder interviews, primary research, product-market fit mapping, buyer language.
Positioning and Messaging
Architecture from buyer research, tailored to each audience segment and buying committee role.
Pricing and Packaging
Calibrated to competitive benchmarks and how buyers prefer to buy, reducing evaluation friction.
Sales and Channel Strategy
Channel decisions grounded in buyer behavior, with a sales playbook ready before go-live.
Integrated Marketing Plan
Cross-channel launch plan assembled after positioning and channel decisions are locked.
KPI Framework
Success metrics defined before launch so marketing, sales, and leadership share one scorecard.
Launch and Post-Launch Review
Hands-on support through go-live, followed by a formal review once early market signals are in.

What You Receive
Nine deliverables. A complete launch architecture.
Every output is built for use: by marketing in campaign planning, by sales in field conversations, and by leadership in go/no-go decisions.
Market and competitive research report
Enables every downstream strategic decision
Primary and secondary research findings on product-market fit, buyer language, and the competitive landscape your launch will enter.
Buyer persona profiles and journey maps
Enables audience targeting and message sequencing
Research-backed profiles for each buyer type in the committee, with journey maps showing how they evaluate and decide at each stage.
Positioning and messaging framework
Enables content, PR, sales, and paid programs
Core positioning with message hierarchies for each audience segment and buying stage, grounded in buyer language rather than product features.
Pricing recommendations
Enables revenue forecasting and deal structuring
Pricing and packaging options benchmarked against competitive alternatives and calibrated to buyer willingness to pay.
Sales and channel strategy playbook
Enables field team readiness from day one
Channel rationale with a sales playbook covering buyer context, competitive framing, and objection handling built from the discovery phase and ready before go-live.
Integrated marketing plan
Enables coordinated launch execution across all channels
Cross-channel launch plan with sequencing, content requirements, and PR integrated across all relevant channels, built after channel and audience decisions are set.
KPI framework and dashboards
Enables shared performance language across sales and marketing
Success metrics defined before launch, with reporting dashboards built around the signals your strategy was designed to move.
Launch readiness checklist
Enables a confident go/no-go decision before external activity begins
A structured pre-launch checklist confirming readiness across every workstream before public-facing activity begins.
Post-launch performance review
Enables informed adjustment before momentum is lost
A formal review of launch performance against the KPI framework, with documented adjustments for the next phase of market development.
Why Zen Media
GTM strategy that connects to every downstream channel from day one.
Most GTM strategy engagements produce a strategy document that sits in a shared drive while the teams it was written for continue doing what they were doing. Zen Media's work feeds directly into the GTM Influence Model: the research and positioning decisions drive which media to pursue, what content to build, how paid programs are targeted, and what sales teams say when a competitor comes up in a deal.
Zen Media has operated exclusively in B2B since 2009. The firm has been recognized by the White House and United Nations as one of the top 100 companies in North America and holds DBE, MBE, and SBE certifications. Every engagement is B2B-only and scoped: no generalist retainers, no blended accounts.
The strategy activates into execution
The output connects directly to your PR, content, paid media, and sales programs through the GTM Influence Model. The week the engagement closes, your team has a clear picture of where to be visible, what to say, and how to respond when a competitor comes up in a deal.
Grounded in primary buyer research
Most GTM plans are built from internal assumptions about what buyers want. Zen Media's process includes primary research with buyers in your target market, so the positioning, pricing, and channel strategy reflects how they evaluate options in practice.
B2B-only. No hybrid accounts.
Zen Media has worked exclusively with B2B companies since 2009. B2B GTM dynamics (long sales cycles, buying committees, account-based motions) require different methodology than consumer marketing. This firm does not do both.
Results
Strategy built into market traction.
What happens when positioning, sales enablement, and marketing are built as a connected system before the first external conversation.
insytz
Forbes and Inc coverage secured following GTM strategy implementation
Zen Media built and executed the go-to-market strategy for insytz. The plan included positioning, messaging framework, and an integrated marketing program with earned media at its center.
Birthright Israel
GTM architecture built for the BEYOND sub-brand launch
Zen Media developed the full go-to-market strategy for Birthright Israel BEYOND, positioning the sub-brand as a distinct offering and building the launch framework required to take it to market independently.
Outcome Framing
What the first 90 days looks like after the engagement.
A GTM strategy is only as useful as what it enables. Here is how the deliverables translate into market activity across the first three months post-launch.
Days 1 to 30
Sales team is equipped. Channels are live.
The sales playbook is in use. Reps have positioning language, competitive framing, and objection responses from the discovery phase. Marketing campaigns have launched against the integrated plan. PR outreach has begun based on the messaging framework.
Days 30 to 60
Early pipeline signals. Message resonance tested.
The KPI framework is producing data. Pipeline quality indicators are visible. Marketing and sales are reviewing the same dashboard rather than competing metrics.
Days 60 to 90
Post-launch review. Adjustments documented.
The formal post-launch review compares actual performance against the KPI framework. The review produces a concrete adjustment plan with documented priorities for the next phase of market development.
Read more in our case studies and client love letters.
Is This the Right Engagement?
Where go-to-market strategy creates the most value.
B2B companies with a confirmed launch window
You have a product or service with a launch window in the next 6 to 12 months and need a coordinated strategy across positioning, pricing, sales, and marketing before external activity begins.
Companies entering a new segment or geography
Your existing GTM motion works in one market. You are entering a new one where buyers, channels, and competitive dynamics are different enough that the existing approach does not transfer.
Teams with a product but no launch architecture
The product is built. Positioning, pricing, sales strategy, and marketing have not been structured into a connected launch plan, or have been built independently with visible gaps between them.
Growth-stage B2B companies scaling past founder-led sales
The early motion was built on the founding team's network. You are now building a repeatable GTM motion that can work for people who were not in the room when the company started.
Consumer brands and B2C products
Zen Media works exclusively with B2B companies. Consumer go-to-market requires a different methodology and a different firm.
Teams needing execution capacity only
If the strategy is built and you need a vendor to run specific marketing channels, this is a different engagement. Zen Media builds the architecture; execution lives in your team or specialist partners.
Pre-product companies still in development
GTM strategy requires a defined product, a real ICP, and a launch horizon. Companies still defining what they are building need product strategy before go-to-market strategy.
Broad-scope or generalist engagements
Zen Media does not take on accounts where the brief is to handle all marketing. Every engagement is scoped around a specific strategic outcome.
The GTM Influence Model
Go-to-market strategy is the operating system. The GTM Influence Model is how it connects to every channel.
Every engagement at Zen Media is grounded in the GTM Influence Model: a framework for how B2B buyers form perceptions, build short lists, and make decisions before sales ever enters the picture. Go-to-market strategy that ignores the pre-sales journey is an incomplete plan. The GTM strategy engagement translates that architecture into a specific, executable plan for your organization.
See the GTM Influence Model →Research and Positioning
Buyer language, competitive context, ICP
GTM Strategy
The operational bridge to market
Execution
Channels, content, sales enablement
Thought Partnership
Related services in this pillar
Go-to-market strategy draws on the full Thought Partnership service set. The research that informs the GTM plan connects directly to the positioning, persona, and competitive work in this pillar; each service can be engaged as a standalone or as part of a full GTM build.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a go-to-market strategy engagement take?
Most GTM strategy engagements run eight to twelve weeks from kickoff to delivery of the final launch architecture. The timeline depends on the number of target segments, the complexity of the buying committee, and whether primary research requires outreach to external buyers. Post-launch support continues beyond delivery.
We've done GTM strategy internally before. What does Zen Media add?
Internal GTM work is built from inside the organization: the product team's understanding of what they built, the sales team's read on current deals, the marketing team's preference for familiar channels. The structural gap is external buyer perspective: how buyers in the target segment evaluate options before sales enters the picture. Zen Media's process centers primary research with buyers, which internal teams are structurally unable to do objectively for themselves.
What is the difference between a go-to-market strategy and an integrated marketing plan?
An integrated marketing plan is one workstream inside a GTM strategy, covering channel selection, content, and campaign sequencing. A complete GTM strategy also addresses market and competitive research, positioning, pricing strategy, and sales enablement. Building the marketing plan before those upstream decisions are made produces a plan optimized for the wrong audience or the wrong message.
The strategy sounds rigorous. How does it translate to actual execution?
Every deliverable is built for immediate use by the team that will execute it. Sales reps receive a playbook with buyer context, objection responses, and competitive framing built from the discovery phase. Your campaign team gets an integrated marketing brief with channel sequencing already in it. Leadership gets dashboards aligned to the KPIs defined during the engagement. Positioning feeds every PR pitch, content brief, and paid program. Each output maps to a specific team and a specific function, so the strategy moves into execution without a translation step.
What do we need to prepare before the engagement starts?
Access to your product team, marketing leadership, and at least one senior sales leader for the discovery phase. Any existing market research, competitive analysis, or customer data should be shared at kickoff. We build from what exists, so nothing needs to be finalized before starting.
Can you work alongside our existing agency or sales team?
Yes. The GTM strategy is designed for handoff to whoever executes it. If you have an existing media agency, demand generation team, or sales organization, the output includes briefing documents and frameworks designed to be directly actionable by those teams. Coordination with external agencies and internal sales leadership is a standard part of how these engagements run.
Let's Talk
Your launch window has a close date. Let's build the strategy that fills it.
Start with a conversation about where your GTM plan is today and what it needs before go-live.
Or call 1-866-858-0660
No pitch. A real conversation about your gaps.
Response within one business day.
B2B brands only. No generalist engagements.