glossary/Go-to-Market Motion
glossary term
Definition
A go-to-market motion is the primary way a company acquires customers. The four common shapes are outbound (sales reaches out), inbound (demand comes to you), product-led growth or PLG (the product sells itself through self-serve), and referral (customers and network bring you deals).
Outbound means you go find accounts and start the conversation. Inbound means content, SEO, and demand generation bring leads to you. PLG means users sign up and reach value on their own, and revenue follows usage. Referral means the network and existing customers hand you warm intros. Most companies run one dominant motion with a secondary one underneath.
The motion decides where you can leak. In outbound the usual leaks are targeting and messaging at the top, or conversion after a real fit replies. In PLG the leaks are activation, whether signups reach the aha moment, and monetization, whether activated users convert to paid. Referral scales beautifully on close rate and terribly on volume, because a personal network is not a repeatable source. Diagnosing the wrong stage for your motion wastes the whole effort.
Before you fix anything you have to know which motion you actually run, because the lever that is capping growth is different in each. The value calculator models all four so you can see where your specific motion is leaking and what fixing it is worth. A company past Process-Market Fit that is stuck on founder-led referral usually needs a repeatable outbound source added underneath it.
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The harder question
Knowing the concept is step one. Getting a working system shipped into your live stack, in weeks, is the job. That is what a fractional GTM engineer does: find the one lever, build the first working fix, hand you a system a hire can run.