In this post, Ian suggests six steps to move from hacks and hustle to a go-to-market strategy.
Across early-stage startups and established B2B tech SMEs, we repeatedly see teams working hard, shipping content, running campaigns, and filling calendars, yet revenue growth remains stubbornly slow. Confidence dips. Investors get twitchy. And the instinctive response is to add more activity.
For early-stage founders, this often shows up when founder-led selling reaches its natural limits, and the pool of early adopters starts to dry up. For more established SMEs, growth tends to plateau as markets shift, competition increases, or execution loses its sharpness.
In our experience, these moments happen when focus drifts from the fundamentals.
Broadly speaking, there are three reasons for momentum to stall:
None of this happens because of a lack of effort; in our experience, it’s usually a loss of focus on the fundamentals.
To address these challenges, it’s tempting to look for the easy button.
Scroll through LinkedIn, and you’ll find no shortage of growth hacks, shortcuts, and channel-specific advice. Often, the call comes from within the house, as well-meaning colleagues suggest the latest tactic to try.
However, while these ideas may deliver a tempting quick sugar rush of noise and activity they can distract the revenue team, waste time or annoy your skeptical potential buyer and erode trust.
For any tactic to move the needle, new or old, trendy or traditional, it has to be a coherent part of a go-to-market plan or strategy.
We need to cut out distractions, noise, and activity that just spin the wheels, refocus on the category and buyer, and reset around some key fundamentals to understand where things are drifting.
To address the reasons we see B2B tech companies stall, we’ve identified six areas to focus on to understand the market, sharpen execution, and measure what truly matters.
Each of these requires a workstream, guided by a set of objectives and key results.
To help founders and SME leaders sense-check these six areas, we pulled together a practical guide based on what we see working and not working across B2B tech businesses.
It’s not a collection of hacks or tactics. It’s a structured reset, designed to help you work out where things are drifting and where to focus first.
It’s written for B2B tech founders, SME leaders, and commercial teams who know there are no shortcuts and want clarity, momentum, and more predictable growth.
It’s not designed to be exhaustive. It’s intended to be useful for teams that want to regain focus; it’s a spark to get you started.