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B2B glossaryPipelineGTM motion

GTM motion

GTM motion

GTM motion

Pipeline

The specific method or channel a company uses to bring its product to market — outbound, inbound, product-led, or a combination.

The specific method or channel a company uses to bring its product to market — outbound, inbound, product-led, or a combination.

What is GTM motion?

What is GTM motion?

What is GTM motion?

A GTM motion is the primary operational mechanism through which a company generates and converts demand. It defines the relationship between how buyers discover, evaluate, and purchase, and how the company organises its sales and marketing resources to facilitate that process. The three primary GTM motions are sales-led, product-led, and community-led, though most companies blend elements.

In a sales-led motion, demand is generated through outbound or marketing, and conversion happens through human sales interactions. Reps drive discovery, qualification, and closing. This motion is well-suited for complex products with long evaluation cycles and high ACV where a buyer needs guidance to understand value and navigate internal procurement.

In a product-led motion, the product itself generates demand by allowing users to experience value before committing. Conversion happens through trial expansion, usage triggers, and self-serve purchase. This motion is suited for products where value is quickly demonstrable, where the user and buyer are the same person, and where distribution through usage creates natural network effects.

Community-led GTM generates demand through networks, communities, and peer influence. Buyers find the product through trusted recommendations within professional communities rather than direct marketing or sales contact. This motion is harder to operationalise deliberately but produces some of the highest quality, fastest-closing pipeline when it emerges naturally from genuine community value.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Outbound, Demand generation, and PQL.

A GTM motion is the primary operational mechanism through which a company generates and converts demand. It defines the relationship between how buyers discover, evaluate, and purchase, and how the company organises its sales and marketing resources to facilitate that process. The three primary GTM motions are sales-led, product-led, and community-led, though most companies blend elements.

In a sales-led motion, demand is generated through outbound or marketing, and conversion happens through human sales interactions. Reps drive discovery, qualification, and closing. This motion is well-suited for complex products with long evaluation cycles and high ACV where a buyer needs guidance to understand value and navigate internal procurement.

In a product-led motion, the product itself generates demand by allowing users to experience value before committing. Conversion happens through trial expansion, usage triggers, and self-serve purchase. This motion is suited for products where value is quickly demonstrable, where the user and buyer are the same person, and where distribution through usage creates natural network effects.

Community-led GTM generates demand through networks, communities, and peer influence. Buyers find the product through trusted recommendations within professional communities rather than direct marketing or sales contact. This motion is harder to operationalise deliberately but produces some of the highest quality, fastest-closing pipeline when it emerges naturally from genuine community value.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Outbound, Demand generation, and PQL.

A GTM motion is the primary operational mechanism through which a company generates and converts demand. It defines the relationship between how buyers discover, evaluate, and purchase, and how the company organises its sales and marketing resources to facilitate that process. The three primary GTM motions are sales-led, product-led, and community-led, though most companies blend elements.

In a sales-led motion, demand is generated through outbound or marketing, and conversion happens through human sales interactions. Reps drive discovery, qualification, and closing. This motion is well-suited for complex products with long evaluation cycles and high ACV where a buyer needs guidance to understand value and navigate internal procurement.

In a product-led motion, the product itself generates demand by allowing users to experience value before committing. Conversion happens through trial expansion, usage triggers, and self-serve purchase. This motion is suited for products where value is quickly demonstrable, where the user and buyer are the same person, and where distribution through usage creates natural network effects.

Community-led GTM generates demand through networks, communities, and peer influence. Buyers find the product through trusted recommendations within professional communities rather than direct marketing or sales contact. This motion is harder to operationalise deliberately but produces some of the highest quality, fastest-closing pipeline when it emerges naturally from genuine community value.

In a B2B pipeline model, this is only useful if it changes resourcing or prioritization. A clean definition helps the team decide where to push harder, where to cut waste, and which funnel step deserves attention next. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Outbound, Demand generation, and PQL.

GTM motion — example

GTM motion — example

A B2B SaaS tool launches with a sales-led motion: outbound sequences, AE-led demos, and 30-day paid trials that require a sales conversation to initiate. After 12 months, they add a product-led layer: a self-serve freemium tier that lets teams sign up without sales contact. Within six months, 35% of new ARR comes from accounts that started on the free tier and expanded without ever talking to sales. The two motions serve different segments: enterprise via sales-led, mid-market via product-led.

A B2B company cleans up how it uses GTM motion after noticing that leadership likes the headline number but cannot explain what operationally caused it to move. They rebuild the logic so the term maps back to specific pipeline actions and owners. They also make sure it connects cleanly to Outbound and Demand generation so the definition is not trapped inside one team.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

How do I choose the right GTM motion for my product?
The primary decision factor is ACV. Below £5K ACV, the economics of a sales-led motion usually do not work because the cost of a sales conversation exceeds the return. Above £50K ACV, self-serve typically fails because the evaluation complexity requires human guidance. Between £5K and £50K, a hybrid motion often works best.
Can a company run multiple GTM motions simultaneously?
Yes, and the most successful growth-stage companies typically do. However, running multiple motions well requires organisational clarity about which team owns which motion and how leads are handed between them. Most companies start with one motion, prove it out, and add a second motion once the first is reliable.
What is the most common GTM motion mistake for B2B startups?
Trying to run a sales-led motion on a low-ACV product where unit economics do not support it, or trying to make a complex, high-ACV product self-serve when buyers need guidance to see value. Matching motion to ACV and product complexity is the foundational GTM decision.
How does the GTM motion affect team structure?
Sales-led motion requires AEs, SDRs, and supporting marketing. Product-led motion requires growth engineers, product marketers, and customer success focused on expansion. Community-led motion requires community management, developer relations, or content expertise. The motion determines the skills and roles you need to hire.
When should I shift from one GTM motion to another?
When evidence from pipeline data and customer interviews consistently shows that buyers want to evaluate differently from how you are currently selling. The signal to shift is commercial: if adoption, conversion, or retention rates are significantly better in one motion than another at meaningful scale, that is evidence to shift resources toward the winning motion.

Related terms

Related terms

Related terms

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