Before PMF, your GTM strategy should focus on learning—not scaling

If you’re still searching for product-market fit (PMF), the goal isn’t to “scale” — it’s to discover. A smart go-to-market (GTM) strategy at this stage isn’t about hiring a big sales team or pouring money into ads. It’s about talking to customers, uncovering painful problems, and testing your messaging and solution quickly.

Here’s what that looks like:

  • Founders sell first: You need firsthand exposure to objections, feedback, and patterns.
  • Start with a sharp ICP: Focus on a narrow, high-pain niche. Broad = blurry.
  • Use outbound for signal: Cold emails and direct conversations validate messaging fast.
  • Track learning, not just leads: Measure conversations, objections, and repeatable signals.
  • Resist the urge to automate: Early GTM should be manual so you can hear every reaction.

“Premature scaling is the #1 startup killer.”
Startup Genome Report

The right GTM before PMF is a feedback engine—designed to clarify who you help, what problem you solve, and why you’re worth paying for. Once you consistently convert a narrow segment, then it’s time to scale.


Not sure what to test first?
Start by asking: “What pain is so sharp my buyer would pay to make it go away now?” That’s your GTM starting line.


One response to “What’s the right go-to-market strategy for a B2B SaaS startup before product-market fit?”

  1. […] Random acts of marketing don’t cut it. If you’re still searching for the right structure before product-market fit, see What’s the Right Go-to-Market Strategy for a B2B SaaS Startup Before Product-Market Fit?. […]

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