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Show HN: I aggregated over 200 Go-To-Market strategies (fellowry.com)
82 points by baetylus 2 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 25 comments
Hey HN,

I aggregated a bunch of GTM advice, including their rankings.

Thought it could be useful for some founders here.

Let me know if you have any feedback. Thanks!






This is very interesting, thank you for sharing it

What are your opinions on lists like this?

https://github.com/mmccaff/PlacesToPostYourStartup


On the home page, rather than having the horizontal scroll you can just have multiple rows for each category, that's fine - but the horizontal scroll is bad for several reasons.

The font size is a bit small for people older than mid-40s.

Forget the max-width on the main container, there's a lot of text on the page, so you should use all available screen width.

I signed up for the beta, can give more feedback on that if you wish.


I am interested in this, and it was interesting to see the different viewpoints. I noted that you have competing ideas about cold calling. One GTM strategy says "cold calling is dead since COVID." Another says, "I get 90% of my meetings via cold calling." I am sure context matters, so that does not bother me. These feel more like anecdotes than strategies; storytelling is powerful and necessary so that also did not bother me. It would be interesting to see if others wanted to add their own thoughts and stories. But, why would they?

Fun site.


This is a really great anthology of perspectives. Thanks for doing this, I think you're going to help a lot of people.

So happy to read this comment. I really wanted that to come through!

Could be cool to get GTM from companies pitch deck - and show their success rate per market.

Cold Emails Are Worth It

This surprises me. I get a bunch per day following the same script as the post.

* 1 email every week for 2 weeks.

* 1 email every other week for 4 weeks.

* 1 follow-up email every month for 3 months.

They never sound personal, even if they use some "Hey [name], hope [company] is doing well" script or AI to write them. It's worse when they beg "I know you're probably sick of hearing from me, but I'll give it one last try" until they follow up again (1 every other week for 4 weeks).

I'm not sure what strategy would work for me, I'm generally of the idea that if I want something I'll go look for it, and if someone pushes something to me I don't trust it.

It'd certainly be interesting to know how many people out there do reply to cold emails.


They need to work less than 1% of the time to be effective.

I used to be in the spam game and then moved to "email marketing". It's really just a numbers game and timing. If you spam out 50k bullshit cold emails, you will always get a few bites regardless of how shitty your messaging is.

Add in the drip email technique you mention above and you will attract way more bites.

They may ignore 99% of your emails but all it takes is that one time when your dripped email is right at the top of their inbox when they wake up in the morning and are checking emails or stuck in traffic and looking at their emails on their phone and etc.

tl;dr = its a numbers game. spew shit out, get a few hits.


I have the opposite view. The numbers game might have worked 10-15 years ago but it is a horrible strategy that will send your email deliverability rate to near zero.

Rather than spray and pray, I prefer to only contact companies that have shown they have the problem my product is trying to solve at the time they have that problem (or actively looking for solutions). I send a handful of cold DMs/emails a day and aim for at least a 20% response rate.


totally agree. This was around 2010 when I stopped doing anything like this as I was just smtp spamming off botnets. I didnt care about about inboxing 100% or deliverbability rates much. You could still make money hitting straight spam folders back then.

everyone moved to contact mailing and then SMS spam and then I lost track of the game after that.


That's exactly why those go immediately in spam. You don't waste my attention with automation there is enough of that already.

This! I am not going to buy the next AI magic tool because of a cold mail. I don't even know I need it and I won't read a cold mail end to end if it starts like that. If I need something I go looking and if I don't even know I need it, cold mail wouldn't help

But now you have seen the tool name and you might say you are not going to buy from them because they were annoying - you know the name and there is some chance when you will be looking for a tool like that you will at least check them out. Instead of not even having them on radar.

This makes me want to hook up my email to AI to reply to all spammers and waste their time in super long email chains. If enough AI fakes were replying to these spams, it would be almost impossible for spam to work, right?

Nice startup idea here. Lenny 2.0 to string alone salespeople who cold call/email for as long as possible. Doesn’t work for B2C spam emails unfortunately.

A bit risky if their AI makes your AI promise legally binding purchases in your human name.

A long tume ago when the Amazon affiliate program was less stringent, I would always email recruiter spam back with a link to my “resume” which was just an amazon affiliate link. Made a bit of $$$ from people who clicked on it and made an amazon purchase incidentally later on

> Don't waste your time if someone tells you to send them an email

Surely this is personality dependent, right? I detest, loathe, despise phone calls or -- the bane of my existence -- a 10 minute Zoom. I have spent my entire career becoming an expert at digesting text into something actionable, so an email (or blog post) is the perfect way to inject your value prop into my head

The actual post <https://fellowry.com/post/cm5al4dds00vzps2yuzahk8g8/don-t-wa...> also seems to imply that it's a good GTM tactic to lie about sending the email in order to gauge whether they really care about your content. This strikes me as a horrible way to start a relationship: if I ask for an email and you don't send it, expecting that you'll fish my interest out later, you have established that you don't do what you said you would and I have no reason to think your product claims are accurate, either


Wait, you mean you can’t just count on making a popular top ten “show HN” post?

How many of the GTM strategies are list building tactics like paywalling content behind email address signups?

could someone explain like i’m 5 what gtm means?


GTM is just sales + marketing

It’s recent corporate-speak jargon for “marketing,” because that word is apparently too simple and straightforward.

I think its original meaning was specifically around developing a marketing plan for a brand new product, but that meaning has been lost and I’ve now worked for several companies whose entire marketing teams are now called the “GTM team.”




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