The GTM Execution Gap
Why most B2B tech growth stalls - even with good strategy
Most founders and revenue leaders already know what should happen. What’s missing isn’t ambition, intent, or intelligence.
It’s the ability to execute go-to-market with ownership, coordination, and discipline end-to-end. Advice is everywhere. Execution capacity is not.
This is the GTM Execution Gap.
When go-to-market breaks down, the same failures show up almost every time.
This is the counter-model to The Effective GTM Function.
Failure #1
Ownership
No single owner of the full GTM system
There is no clear, accountable owner responsible for the entire go-to-market function, from first signal through revenue, expansion, and retention.
Responsibility diffuses across roles:
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Marketing owns “leads”
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Sales owns “deals”
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Product owns “features”
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Customer success owns “accounts”
But no one owns the system.
What happens:
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Decisions stall
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Trade-offs are avoided
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Follow-through weakens
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GTM becomes everyone’s job, which means no one is truly accountable
Failure #2
Focus
Too many initiatives - no enforced priority
Priorities compete. Messaging fractures.
Teams chase momentum instead of building it.
Founders and leaders jump to:
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the next market
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the next positioning
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the next AI tool
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the next campaign
…hoping it will solve problems that only discipline, repetition, and learning cycles can fix.
Not enough cycles are run in a chosen:
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market
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ICP
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motion
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message
to learn what actually works before focus shifts again.
Result: motion without traction.
Failure #3
Alignment
Disconnected teams operating as functional silos
Even when ownership exists, there is no clear GTM leader actively integrating across:
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founders
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revenue leadership
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marketing
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sales
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product
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engineering
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customer success
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external partners and agencies
Everyone is doing their job, but no one is ensuring it all works together.
What breaks:
- Decisions don’t connect
- Signals don’t travel
- Feedback loops don’t close
- GTM becomes fragmented execution, not a system
Failure #4
Capability
Execution capacity doesn't match ambition
Teams expect:
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one hire
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one leader
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or one tool
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to cover the entire go-to-market motion
Tools multiply. Enablement lags. Execution stretches thin.
Founders become the single point of:
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decision-making
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escalation
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context
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success or failure
The system cannot scale past the founder.
The Impact
When these failures persist, go-to-market stops being a growth engine.
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Pipeline becomes unpredictable
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Revenue stalls or leaks
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Expansion slows
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Confidence erodes internally and externally
Over time, the company spends more energy trying to grow than actually delivering on its mission.
This is the cost of the GTM Execution Gap.