Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Are You Showing Up in ChatGPT Searches?

By David Ronald  

If you’re focused on discoverability, you’ve probably invested years sharpening your SEO strategy – optimizing keywords, building backlinks, and producing content that earns you a coveted spot on Google

But now ChatGPT and other large language models have upended tradition.  

The rise of AI assistants has fundamentally changed how people find information, evaluate products, and make decisions.  

Increasingly, users are asking ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini for direct answers, instead of typing queries into a browser.  

So, in many cases, AI output is the new first impression.  

And the real question becomes: are you showing up in ChatGPT searches?  

In this blog post, I examine what you need to do to ensure the answer is an empathetic “Yes”.

Why ChatGPT Visibility Matters

AI assistants operate differently than search engines.  

They don’t simply point to links; they synthesize knowledge.  

That means if your brand is not referenced in the datasets, reviews, documentation, product comparisons, community discussions, or signals these models draw from, you’re effectively invisible in a fast-growing channel of discovery.  

This matters for three big reasons:

1. AI is becoming the first stop for research

Business buyers increasingly ask ChatGPT for vendor comparisons, market overviews, and product recommendations. If your competitors are being named and you aren’t, that’s a competitive disadvantage you may not even know about.

2. AI shapes buyer expectations

When models summarize your space, they define the narrative. If you’re missing, or inaccurately described, you lose control of your story.

3. AI visibility compounds

As more people ask AI about your category, the model’s understanding of “the top players” entrenches. Being excluded early can lock you out of future visibility.

How to Improve Your AI Visibility

Showing up in ChatGPT results is a content and reputation strategy. Here’s where to start:

1. Strengthen your public footprint

AI models pull from publicly available text across documentation, reviews, press, help articles, blogs, interviews, and reputable databases. The more clear, consistent, factual, and useful content you publish, the more likely you are to appear.

2. Clarify your category

Models respond best when companies articulate their category, target audience, and value proposition clearly. Ambiguous positioning leads to ambiguous AI output.

3. Invest in third-party validation

Analyst reports, customer reviews, independent comparisons, and reputable media coverage give AI models confident signals to learn from. These sources often matter more than what you publish yourself.

4. Answer the questions real users ask

If buyers frequently ask, “What are the best tools for X?”, you should create content that directly addresses those queries. AI learns from patterns of language and intent.

The New Frontier of Discoverability

ChatGPT search visibility has become as important as Google search visibility once was.  

And businesses that take this onboard will earn a durable advantage as AI-native discovery accelerates – while those that ignore it may find themselves missing from the conversations that matter most.  

So, ask yourself this question: when someone asks ChatGPT about your category, are you part of the answer?  

Thanks for reading.  

Are you interested in discussing how to improve your visibility with ChatGPT and other large language models? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Measuring the Impact of Product Marketing

By David Ronald

Here’s a thorny paradox.

Product marketing is one of the most influential functions in a company’s go-to-market motion, but it’s also one of the hardest to measure.

Product marketers shape the market perception, the competitive posture, the customer understanding, the go-to-market strategy, and the launch campaign. They often orchestrate how a product becomes something the market wants but, because they operate upstream, the results of their work typically show up downstream in metrics owned by other teams.

This is why many organizations fall into the trap of measuring product marketing by counting activities  such as the amount of content created, sales decks delivered, campaigns supported, and so on.

These are important operational signals, but they don’t reflect strategic contribution – they don’t show how product marketing changes customer perception, strengthens sales performance, accelerates adoption, or increases pipeline quality.

As economic conditions tighten and companies demand clearer attribution for every dollar spent, product marketing leaders must elevate how they communicate their value.  

Measuring the impact of product marketing is essential for shaping strategic decisions, securing budgets, and driving predictable revenue growth – but doing it well requires a shift in mindset.  

In this blog post I examine how product marketing can start demonstrating that it is indispensable. 

Why the Impact of Product Marketing Is Hard to Measure

Unlike sales, product marketing doesn’t close deals. Unlike demand generation, product marketing doesn’t run ads; unlike product, product marketing doesn’t ship features. And, unlike customer success, product marketing doesn’t own retention.

Instead, product marketing influences all of these things. 

That influence is where its power lies, and also where measurement becomes difficult. 

  • When product marketing strengthens competitive positioning, it improves win rates – but sales gets the “credit".
  • When product marketing improves messaging, it changes how prospects understand value – yet this shows up as higher conversion rates on the website or in sales calls.
  • And when product marketing clarifies the ideal customer profile, pipeline quality improves – but demand generation sees the lift. 

The key to measuring the impact of product marketing is to recognize that it is a causal function rather than an ownership function. 

Which means that you are not trying to prove that product marketing owns a metric; you are demonstrating how product marketing contributed to its improvement.  

It’s this mindset shift that unlocks a world of meaningful measurement. 

Five Areas Where Product Marketing Creates Impact

Although product marketing’s responsibilities vary by company, its influence tends to fall into five interconnected areas: 

  1. Customer and market insights.
  2. Positioning and messaging.
  3. Cross-functional alignment.
  4. Sales enablement. 
  5. Product launches and go-to-market execution.

1. Customer and Market Insights

Product marketing sits at the intersection of market intelligence and product decisions.

Customer insights from interviews, alpha programs, advisory boards, and win/loss analysis shape the roadmap just as much as they shape go-to-market messaging. Competitive insights influence positioning just as strongly as they influence sales tactics.

Measuring this impact means tracking the decisions that flowed from product marketing insights. 

  • How many roadmap priorities were informed by user research?
  • Which product changes came from product marketing-identified friction points
  • How did pricing evolve based on segmentation work? And what improvements followed?

Although these are sometimes qualitative, organizations that build a culture of documentation often find that product marketing plays an outsized role in the decisions that matter most.

2. Positioning and Messaging

Positioning is one of the most powerful levers in go-to-market performance, because it shapes every downstream motion. 

When product marketing improves, it affects website engagement, sales conversations, product adoption, analyst perception, and even investor narratives.

The impact becomes visible through the clarity customers express during calls, how well prospects articulate the product’s value back to you, or the degree to which sales teams naturally adopt the new narrative.

More formal signals, such as improvements in win/loss themes or increased engagement on core pages, provide quantitative support.

Not just that, the most effective product marketing teams track the before-and-after moments: what did customers believe, understand, or misunderstand before the messaging changed, and what shifted after? 

The narrative itself becomes a measurable asset. 

3. Cross-Functional Alignment

Product marketing is the glue. 

It is the connective tissue that ensures product, sales, and marketing share the same story, target the same segments, and prioritize the same opportunities.

When this alignment improves, everything else improves – campaigns perform better, sales cycles shorten, launch quality increases, and internal friction decreases. 

When alignment appears, product marketing is almost always the reason.

Measuring alignment can be as simple as tracking cross-functional readiness or conducting periodic internal surveys to capture clarity, confidence, and alignment across teams.  

4. Sales Enablement

Sales enablement is one of the most underrated sources of measurable product marketing value. 

When product marketing equips sales teams with a compelling narrative, strong tools, and great training, revenue performance shifts quickly and tangibly.

The strongest indicators of enablement impact appear in win rates.

Plus, improvements in time-to-first-deal for new reps also reveal whether product marketing has improved sales readiness.

Sales leaders often express the impact qualitatively first, such as “the team finally understands how to sell this”, but the quantitative metrics eventually reflect the shift. 

What distinguishes high-performing product marketing teams is that they measure enablement by how results improve, and not by how many assets they create. 

5. Product Launches

Launches are one of the most concrete places where product marketing influence is both broad and deep.

Product marketing sets the launch strategy, narrative, target audience, enablement plan, and success criteria. A well-run launch accelerates adoption, drives pipeline, and shapes market perception – while a poorly run launch can bury even the strongest product.  

To measure launch impact, product marketing teams focus on the outcomes that tie directly to launch intent. 

  • If the goal is adoption, look at 30/60/90-day usage trends.
  • If the goal is revenue, examine pipeline influenced or opportunities created in the launch window.
  • If the goal is awareness, track media coverage, analyst response, and engagement.

Launch impact is clearest when product marketing establishes a baseline from previous launches and shows how the new playbook lifted results. 

Over time, this becomes a compelling proof-point that product marketing is a multiplier on product investment.   

Shifting the Measurement Conversation

The most successful product marketing organizations use a simple mental model to anchor measurement: inputs, outputs, and outcomes. 

  1. Inputs are the strategic foundations product marketing provides – research, segmentation, competitive insights, and messaging.
  2. Outputs are the assets, programs, and launches that translate those insights into motion.
  3. Outcomes are the business results that reflect product marketing’s influence – better win rates, stronger pipeline quality, higher adoption, and clearer market differentiation.

Product marketing teams should track all three, but communicate primarily about outcomes, and the causal story that links them back to product marketing’s work. 

Executives don’t want to know how many assets product marketing created – they want to know how product marketing helped the company win more deals, launch better products, and improve customer understanding. 

Conclusion

High-impact product marketing teams embrace a simple principle: measurement must be designed into the work, not bolted on afterward.

Before launching new messaging, they benchmark current performance. Before launching a product, they define what success looks like. Before rolling out new competitive content, they capture current win rates.

This allows them to tell a clean, credible narrative: 

  • Here’s where we were.
  • Here’s what we changed.
  • Here’s what improved.

Although product marketing may once have been an “invisible function”, it is quickly becoming one of the clearest drivers of differentiation and growth.

And the organizations that measure product marketing well are the ones that unlock its full potential.

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in discussing how to measure the impact of your product marketing? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

15 Powerful Tools to Unlock Buyer Intent Data and Drive Growth

By David Ronald  

Understanding buyer intent has become one of the most powerful levers for accelerating growth.  

By uncovering who is in-market, what they’re researching, and when they’re ready to buy, marketers can focus their efforts where it matters most.  

Buyer intent data helps align marketing and sales teams, shorten sales cycles, and personalize outreach at scale.  

In this blog post I take a look at a variety of tools can help you capture and act on these insights. 

(Just a heads-up: this reads a bit like a laundry list – my apologies for that – some people express themselves through poetry but I, apparently, prefer bullets.) 

1. Third-Party Intent Data Platforms

Third-party intent tools collect and analyze behavioral signals from across the web, such as content consumption, searches, and engagement, to identify companies showing buying interest.

  • Bombora – one of the best-known providers, aggregating intent signals across a massive B2B data co-op.
  • ZoomInfo Intent – combines intent topics with firmographic and contact data, giving sales teams a clear picture of who to target.
  • 6sense – uses AI to predict buying stages and prioritize accounts for outreach.
  • Demandbase – integrates intent insights with account-based advertising and personalization campaigns.
  • Dealfront (formerly Leadfeeder) – identifies the companies visiting your website, even when visitors don’t fill out a form.

When used together, these intent sources give marketing and sales teams a multidimensional view of in-market buyers, allowing for more precise targeting and higher-converting outreach.

2. First-Party Intent Tools

Your own data can be just as powerful.  

First-party intent tools leverage website activity, email engagement, and content downloads to uncover high-potential leads.

  • HubSpot – provides lead scoring and behavioral tracking across all your owned channels.
  • Marketo (acquired by Adobe) – uses predictive scoring to identify accounts most likely to convert.
  • Drift (now part of Salesloft) and Qualified – surface real-time engagement signals from live chat and conversation flows.
  • Clearbit Reveal (acquired by HubSpot) – identifies anonymous website visitors and enriches them with firmographic data.
  • Mutiny – personalizes website experiences for high-intent visitors to increase conversions.

When combined, these first-party insights give you a clear, real-time picture of which accounts are leaning in, so you can engage them proactively and accelerate pipeline.

3. Review and Content Engagement Platforms

When buyers are comparing vendors, their research activity becomes a goldmine of intent data.

These signals give you near-real-time visibility into active evaluation cycles, helping you prioritize accounts that are closest to making a purchase decision.

4. Data Enrichment and Signal Integration Tools

Intent data becomes most powerful when connected across systems.

  • Apollo – merges verified contact data with intent signals for targeted outreach.
  • RollWorks – integrates intent into your account-based marketing campaigns.
  • Slintel (now part of 6sense) – combines technographic and intent data for precise segmentation.
  • Triblio – automates follow-up by syncing multi-source intent scores with your CRM.

By unifying these sources, you create a single, actionable view of account readiness – enabling smarter orchestration, tighter alignment, and more effective engagement across the entire GTM motion.

5. Social and Search Intent Tools

Social and search activity reveal valuable signals about buyer interests.

  • LinkedIn Sales Navigator – surfaces engagement data within your target accounts.
  • SparkToro – identifies where your audience spends time and which topics influence them.
  • Google Ads and Search Console – provide keyword-level insights into what prospects are actively searching for.

These signals help you understand what topics are resonating in the moment, allowing you to tailor content and outreach to match active buyer interests.

Conclusion

Buyer intent data doesn’t just help you see who’s interested, it also helps you act faster and smarter.  

The strongest buyer intent strategies combine third-party, first-party, and contextual data sources. By leveraging this combination you will observe better alignment, higher conversion rates...

And a marketing engine that’s driven by insight.  

Thanks for reading – I hope you found this blog post useful.  

Are you interested in discussing the tools that you can leverage to uncover buyer intent? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

A Brief Guide to Content Marketing

By David Ronald

People crave meaning

And this is the simple truth that great content marketing thrives on.

In a world where attention is scarce and algorithms change overnight, brands win when they create content that feels purposeful, trustworthy, and unmistakably human.

Yet, truly effective content is the outcome of a thoughtful, ongoing relationship between a brand and its audience.

Over the years, I’ve watched teams transform their marketing simply by slowing down, stepping back, and ask, “Why are we creating this?” 

Everything else flows from that clarity. 

In this blog post I examine the best practices that separate truly resonant content from digital noise.

(You may also be interested in reading this post Mapping Content to Your Buyer’s Journey.)

Start With Strategy, Not Output

Too many marketing teams jump straight into production without understanding how any of it connects into business goals.

But the most successful marketers begin somewhere more foundational: strategy.

Before a word is written, you should know which business objective the content supports: 

  • Is it meant to generate leads?
  • Establish authority?
  • Nurture customer loyalty?

And who exactly are you trying to reach at that moment in their journey?

Once these anchors are clear, choosing formats becomes intuitive – early-stage buyers might need educational explainers, while those closer to purchase benefit from case studies, webinars, or ROI tools.

When strategy drives creation, content stops being clutter and starts becoming a force multiplier. 

Let Your Brand Voice Do the Heavy Lifting

The brands that leave an impression don’t just tell stories but tell them in a voice that nobody else could fake.

A distinctive tone builds familiarity, and over time, trust – the key is consistency, whether your brand sounds authoritative, warm, witty, or visionary.

For example, a cybersecurity startup may use calm, data-driven language signals credibility while a wellness brand adopting a softer, more empathetic tone conveys approachability. 


What matters is that every piece of content, feels like it comes from the same personality – documenting your voice ensures that anyone who creates content reinforces the same identity. 

Create for Humans First, Algorithms Second

Search still matters, but modern algorithms reward what humans reward: clarity, relevance, and value. The days of stuffing pages with keywords are long gone.

A user-first mindset changes how you write.

You focus on topics instead of keywords, structure articles for readability, and incorporate visuals or data to elevate the experience.

Ironically, the more human your content feels, the better it performs in search. 

Lead With Storytelling, Grounded in Substance

We are wired for stories.

But storytelling isn’t about being dramatic – it’s about making meaning tangible.

The most resonant content casts the customer as the hero and the brand as the guide – it highlights tension (ie, what challenge the customer faces) and resolution (ie, how insight, not hype, helps them overcome it).

The story may bring people in, but it’s the substance that keeps them there.

Pairing narrative with expertise is the combination that turns readers into believers. 

Reach Audiences Where They Already Are

Because people consume information differently, format diversity matters.

Some audiences gravitate toward long-form articles; others prefer short videos, podcasts, or interactive tools.

Effective marketers don’t try to be everywhere. Instead, they selectively show up where their audience already spends time.

A deep-dive blog can be converted into a video summary. 


A customer interview can become a podcast; a webinar can produce social clips and infographics.

So, distribution becomes a strategic act, not an afterthought. 

Let Data Be Your Compass

Content is creative, but it’s also analytical.

Every interaction leaves a trail of insights – what people click, how long they stay, what they share, where they drop off.

These patterns tell you what resonates and what falls flat.

High-performing content should be repurposed and expanded – and underperformers should be refreshed or retired.

When teams treat analytics as feedback rather than judgment, they evolve faster and produce content that feels increasingly indispensable. 

Quality Over Quantity, Always

The digital world is overflowing with content.

What’s scarce is clarity, originality, and meaningful insight – producing more doesn’t increase impact; publishing better does.

High-quality content reflects real research, thoughtful structure, and a point of view – it adds something new, an opinion, a framework, a dataset, that audiences can’t find in ten other tabs.

In the end, a handful of exceptional pieces will always outperform a flood of forgettable ones. 

Build a Culture of Collaboration

Great content is rarely created in isolation.

It comes from cross-functional collaboration: product teams who understand features and roadmaps, sales teams who hear objections firsthand, customer success managers who know what frustrates and delights users.

When these voices inform the editorial process, content becomes more relevant, accurate, and aligned with go-to-market priorities.

Monthly content councils, shared dashboards, and regular feedback loops turn content into a company-wide asset, not a marketing department project. 

Repurpose and Refresh to Maximize Impact

You don’t need to reinvent the wheel every time you launch a new campaign.

Often the most powerful content already exists, it just needs to be reshaped or modernized.

A popular article can become a LinkedIn carousel; a podcast interview can become a case study; a series of related blogs can evolve into an eBook or a nurture sequence.

This approach not only saves time but reinforces your brand’s key messages across channels and formats. 

Earn Trust Through Transparency

In an era where AI-generated content floods every feed, trust is the most valuable currency.

Audiences can sense the difference between content created to manipulate and content created to help.

Attribution to real authors, transparent sourcing, honest reflections, and open engagement are powerful trust-builders.

When a brand demonstrates humility, expertise, and empathy, people do more than simply consume the content – they rely on it. 

Use AI Thoughtfully, Without Losing the Human Spark

AI has become a powerful creative partner.

It can cluster keywords, draft outlines, analyze user behavior, and automate repetitive tasks.

But it cannot replace human insight, intuition, or imagination.

The best content teams use AI to accelerate workflows, not dictate them. AI handles the grunt work; humans shape the story.

That partnership (I think of it as “speed with soul”) is what sets modern content marketing apart. 

Measure the Metrics That Matter

Executives want results, and the strongest content teams speak the language of impact.

Instead of celebrating vanity metrics like impressions, they connect content to outcomes: pipeline creation, lead quality, customer expansion, share of voice, loyalty.

Clear dashboards, regular reporting, and narrative insight about why content worked help stakeholders see the strategic value. 


Once they do, support, and investment, increase.

Commit to Continuous Learning

Content marketing is a moving target.

New channels appear, old ones fade, and audience expectations shift constantly.

The teams that thrive are the ones that stay curious – reading industry reports, watching emerging formats, experimenting with new ideas, and analyzing their wins and failures.

Curiosity is a competitive advantage.

Each iteration makes your content sharper, more relevant, and more aligned with what audiences truly need. 

Conclusion

The best content has the potential to transform minds.

It turns passive readers into active advocates and fleeting attention into lasting loyalty.

When strategy meets storytelling, when clarity pairs with creativity, content becomes more than a tactic. It becomes the heartbeat of a brand.

When you commit to creating content that is strategic, human, and consistently excellent, you’re building trust at scale.

Thanks for reading – I hope you found this blog post useful.

Are you interested in discussing how to improve your content marketing? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Marketing Report That I Trust Above All Others

By David Ronald

Every marketer has a report that they rely on.

A report that cuts through bias, noise, and opinion to reveal the truth of what’s really happening.

For me, it’s the weekly pipeline influence report.

It’s the one snapshot that keeps our feet planted firmly on solid ground – especially when everything else in the business feels full of shifting narratives and competing priorities. 

In this blog post I explain why this report matters to me so much. 

What is a Pipeline Influence Report?

A weekly pipeline influence report is a recurring analysis that shows how marketing activities are contributing to the creation and progression of the revenue pipeline. 

At its core, it highlights what pipeline was created or progressed, which touchpoints shaped that movement, and where early opportunities or bottlenecks are emerging. 

It brings together data from a variety of sources including our CRM platform, marketing automation platforms, and website analytics to reveal which campaigns are influencing opportunities at each stage of the buyer’s journey. 

And, because it’s built on consistent definitions and clean data sources, it provides a stable, trusted view of how marketing affects real revenue outcomes, and not just vanity metrics.

What The Report Shows

The pipeline influence report tells the story of real customer movement, not surface-level performance data, and it does so without clutter.  

At its core, the report answers three things: 

  1. What pipeline was created or progressed this week? This surfaces new opportunities, deals that moved forward, and any shifts in deal velocity or value.
  2. Which marketing touchpoints influenced that movement? It connects engagements such as content downloads, events, ads, emails, or website activity to opportunities, showing where marketing is helping spark or accelerate buyer interest.
  3. Where are the emerging opportunities or bottlenecks? By normalizing data week over week, it highlights patterns, friction points, or early signals that might impact future revenue.

Because it’s built on consistent definitions (eg, what counts as an “influence,” “qualified engagement,” or “pipeline”), it provides a stable and trusted view of how marketing affects revenue outcomes.  

When done well, it connects the dots across channels, campaigns, and sales activities without exaggerating marketing’s role or underplaying the contributions of the broader go-to-market engine. 

Building Your Own Pipeline Influence Report

Although there isn’t a “one-size-fits-all” example of a “weekly pipeline influence report,” especially since much of the information on would be proprietary, there are some excellent templates available: 

1. Pedowitz Group

The Pedowitz Group provides a practical breakdown of how to define, track, and report influenced pipeline. Their guide outlines the core elements: defining qualifying touchpoints, mapping contacts to opportunities, choosing an attribution model, and building dashboards that show pipeline / revenue by channel and program. 

2. Salesforce

If you use Salesforce, there’s a built-in Campaign Influence feature, and you can run reports like “Campaigns with Influenced Opportunities (Customizable Campaign Influence)”. 

3. Qualified

Qualified offers a Weekly Pipeline Council framework that’s designed for cross-functional team alignment. While not exactly a “pipeline influence report” in the pure marketing attribution sense, this kind of structured weekly council model ensures the data (influenced pipeline, velocity, risk) is being consumed by stakeholders and acted upon. 

4. Microsoft

Microsoft’s Dynamics 365 Marketing (Customer Insights / Journeys) has a built-in Marketing Program Effectiveness report. It includes a “Lead Pipeline” report and an ROI / attribution section. You can export or snapshot this weekly to serve as your influence report if you define “programs” or “journeys” as your influencing touch points. 

5. ClickUp

ClickUp provides a weekly sales report template that tracks key pipeline metrics: velocity, number of new opportunities, deal values, conversion rates, and so on. While it’s more of a sales pipeline report than a “marketing influence” report, you could combine this with a custom influenced-pipeline dashboard to approximate your weekly pipeline influence report. 

Conclusion

When a report consistently helps you make better decisions, you start to rely on it – not out of habit, but out of earned confidence.

And over time, it becomes more than a dashboard. It becomes the compass you trust in both calm and chaotic seasons, the one source that points you back to what buyers are actually doing, not what anyone wishes they were doing.

Thanks for reading – I hope you found this blog post useful.

Are you interested in discussing how to improve your ability to track marketing’s influence on pipeline? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

How to Make Your Product Launch a Success

By David Ronald  

Nearly 95% of new products fail to create profitable impact, according to research from Harvard Business School. 

Not surprisingly, the cumulative cost in wasted development budgets, marketing spend, opportunity cost, and brand damage of these failures is enormous.  

What’s more, many of these failures don’t stem from bad ideas or technology, but from overlooking the go‑to‑market and launch disciplines that separate a promising concept from a commercially successful offering.  

In this blog post I provide guidance on how to embed launch rigor, align cross‑functional stakeholders, and transform your next product release into a growth engine instead of a write‑off.  

(You may also be interested in reading this blog post Too Many Product Launches Are Unsuccessful.)

1. Launch Discipline

One of the major reasons why products flop is due to companies becoming “too engrossed in product development” and neglecting market readiness.  

But building a product doesn’t guarantee market traction – what matters is how you bring it into the world, how you communicate value, how you reach the right buyers, and how you support them once they adopt. 

In many ways launching a product is like sending a rocket into space  – building the rocket is essential, but if you don’t coordinate launch timing, trajectory, mission control, communications, and landing procedures, you might build a beautiful spacecraft that never reaches orbit.  

And the very high failure rate of new product launches shows that many organizations miss one or more of those mission‑critical pieces.  

By building discipline into a launch you make visible the hand‑offs, dependencies, timelines and metrics across product, marketing, and sales.

2. Performance Metrics

Tracking a launch shouldn’t be about checking boxes. It needs to be about measuring signals that the product is resonating and scaling. And, in this regard, there are five metric categories that we need to consider: 

2.1 Awareness

How many target prospects know about the offering and have seen targeted messaging?

  • Measure – website traffic to launch pages, downloads of pre‑launch assets, invitations accepted, ad click‑throughs, earned media mentions.  

A key question at this stage is this – are we getting sufficient exposure among the right segment of buyers, not just broad traffic?

Ultimately, this stage is about ensuring awareness translates into meaningful engagement with the audiences that matter most.

2.2 Engagement

Are prospects actively interacting with the product narrative and experiencing value?

  • Measure – free trial or demo sign‑ups, webinar attendance, product preview invitations, event participation.

The key question to address now is this – is the engagement meaningful (ie, deep enough) to suggest interest, not just curiosity?

The goal here is to confirm that prospects are moving beyond initial interest and beginning to connect with the product’s real value.

2.3 Acquisition

Are we converting engaged prospects into paying customers at an acceptable rate and cost?

  • Measure – conversion rate from demo to customer, customer acquisition cost, time‑to‑close. 

The all important question here is this – is our cost to acquire acceptable relative to the expected lifetime value of the customer?

This phase is about validating that our acquisition efforts are both efficient and sustainable in driving profitable growth.

2.4 Retention

Are customers staying, using, deriving value and avoiding churn?

  • Measure – monthly/weekly active users, churn rate, usage metrics, customer health scores.

A key question to answer at this stage is this – does the product deliver value such that customers want to stay and expand?

This stage focuses on ensuring customers realize lasting value that deepens their loyalty and drives long-term retention.

2.5 Referrals

Are customers so delighted that they refer others, amplifying growth?

  • Measure – net promoter score, referral count, viral coefficient, word‑of‑mouth indicators.

The most valuable question to answer now is this – do customers act as advocates (not just users)?

Additionally, collect qualitative feedback from customers, prospects, sales, marketing, and product teams to surface issues, insights and opportunities for improvement.

3. Cross‑Functional Alignment

One of the major launch risks is functional silos. 

Product builds something, marketing tries to push it, sales tries to sell it, but alignment is weak. It's crucial to build a coordinated launch plan with owners, deadlines, KPIs and an end date.  

But how do you make this work?

  • Define a launch command center – designate a launch lead (often from product marketing) who owns end‑to‑end readiness. Bring together stakeholders from product, engineering, marketing, sales, enablement, support, operations, finance, and channel/partners.
  • Build your launch plan as a living document – include launch goals, target segments, positioning, key message pillars, pricing/packaging decisions, distribution strategy, marketing campaign timeline, sales enablement materials, support readiness checklist, risk mitigation items, and metrics.
  • Set an end date – launch may schedule a date, but the real work lies in the “post‑launch review” phase (such as measuring outcomes, comparing to KPIs, capturing learnings, deciding next steps). Without an end date, the launch drifts into “we shipped, now we move on” mode and you lose evaluation, feedback and refinement.
  • Communicate continually – keep internal teams and external stakeholders updated via weekly or bi‑weekly status reviews, dashboards, risk logs, and decision points. Transparency reduces surprises and aligns everyone to the same objectives.

By establishing clear ownership, living plans, defined timelines, and ongoing communication, you turn a potential siloed effort into a coordinated launch that delivers measurable impact. 

4. Pre‑Launch Demand Building

If you think launch day is the moment when demand begins, you’re probably already be behind.  

Effective launches often start weeks or months in advance with demand‑building activities that include thought‑leadership, awareness campaigns, community engagement, pre‑registrations, beta access, influencer outreach, and partner outreach.  

By building a pre‑launch funnel you do three things:

  • You warm up the audience so that launch day already has traction.
  • You validate messaging and offer (by tracking sign‑ups, engagement, conversion intent) and iterate early.
  • You build operational muscle (marketing campaign flow, sales outreach, onboarding processes) before full scale.

This aligns with the concept of a customer journey that begins well before the product is sold.  

As the original article iterates, the buyer journey moves from “Unknown” to “Known” to “Engaged” and, finally, to “Converted”.

Extend that idea to the product launch journey: build awareness and engagement ahead of time, convert early adopters, iterate, then scale.

5. Scaling After Launch

Many product marketing teams celebrate on launch day and assume the job is done.  

But the reality is, the hardest work often begins after launch.  

 So, you should:

  • Plan for scale – if the product starts gaining traction, do you have the processes to expand marketing spend effectively, onboard new customers efficiently, support them professionally, and capture referrals? If not, you risk peak and decline.
  • Monitor metrics continuously – use the five metric categories (awareness through referrals) to track early indicators of trouble: stagnating conversion, accelerating churn, weak engagement, siloed acquisition. Use dashboards, regular reviews, and trigger thresholds (eg, conversion falls below X% for two weeks → initiate corrective action).
  • Iterate and optimize – no product launch is perfect. Use early feedback to refine messaging, pricing, packaging, onboarding flows, and even product features. Treat the launch as a 90‑day sprint, not a one‑and‑done event.
  • Leverage success for momentum – when you hit milestones (eg, first 100 customers, first customer success story, first referral loop), use them as marketing assets. Social proof and case studies accelerate adoption and credibility.

Growth is never automatic. Conversion curves, customer onboarding, usage adoption, churn, upsell, channel activation all need nurturing.

6. Leadership Imperatives

Beyond process and metrics, the kind of culture you bring to product launches makes a big difference. Some leadership and cultural behaviors that correlate with successful launches include:

  • Customer obsession – building a product you think customers want is not enough — focus on what customers demonstrate they want, will pay for, and will use.
  • Cross‑functional collaboration – product development, marketing, sales, support, operations all need to work in tight feedback loops rather than hand‑offs.
  • Launch mindset not just “shipping” mindset – many organizations celebrate the development milestone (“It’s out!”) but fail to celebrate the business milestone (“It’s used, valued, scaling!”).
  • Fail fast, learn faster – instead of burying failures, investigate them quickly, share learnings, adjust next launches.
  • Accountability for outcomes – everyone involved in the launch should own the metrics and be involved in post‑launch reviews.

Cultivating these behaviors creates an environment where launches are not just completed, but truly drive impact, growth, and lasting customer value.

7. Launch Checklist

Here’s a practical checklist you can consider using when planning your next product launch:

  • Define the business goals such as target revenue, market share, margin, time‑to‑break‑even.
  • Map buyer segments and buyer journey for this product specifically.
  • Conduct pre‑launch validation using messaging tests, pre‑registrations, pilot customers, willingness to pay.
  • Build a launch plan with owners, milestones, KPIs, risk mitigation, end date and post‑launch review.
  • Ensure pricing and packaging are aligned with value and segment.
  • Create demand‑gen pipeline ahead of launch (awareness, engagement).
  • Coordinate with sales/enablement regarding things such as training, collateral, pricing tools, objection handling.
  • Ensure operational readiness across customer success staffing, support workflows, supply/distribution, onboarding flows.
  • Establish launch metrics dashboard across awareness, engagement, acquisition, retention, referrals.
  • After your launch, review performance, capture learnings, and iterate as needed.

Following this checklist helps ensure your product launch is strategic, coordinated, and positioned for measurable success from day one and beyond. 

Conclusion

It’s simply not enough to build an innovative product.

You must also launch smart.  

A robust launch process, disciplined cross‑functional alignment, validated market readiness, tracked metrics and a culture tuned to outcome, not just output, aren’t optional . They’re the difference between writing off your investment and unlocking growth, momentum and distinction.  

If you commit to linking product launch activities with business outcomes, treat launch as a strategic discipline and embed a learning‑and‑iteration mindset, your next product release is far more likely to be one of the 5 % that succeeds.  

And, what happens when it does?  

The rewards for growth, brand credibility, customer loyalty, and economic return are well worth the investment. 

Thanks for reading – I hope you found this blog post useful.  

Are you interested in discussing how to improve your next product launch? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

The Product Marketer’s Guide to Market Research

By David Ronald

Market research isn’t a “one and done” project.  

Market research is a continuous feedback loop that keeps product marketers aligned with their customers, competitors, and the market’s direction of travel.  

Yet, in practice, many teams treat it as a box to check before a launch.  

This is a mistake that will create problems downstream.  

Truly effective product marketing teams know that smarter market research is what fuels everything: messaging that resonates, positioning that differentiates, and strategies that drive growth.  

In this blog post I explore some of the best practices that product marketers can apply in their market research.

1. Start with a Clear Objective

Before collecting any data, define why you’re doing the research.  

Are you trying to size a market opportunity? Validate messaging? Understand buyer pain points? Or something else.  

Clarity here prevents wasted effort and ensures every question and interview serves a specific purpose.  

Write down the decision you need to make and frame your research around that. 

For example: “We need to know whether our target audience values speed or reliability more – so we can adjust our product messaging accordingly.” 

2. Blend Quantitative and Qualitative Insights

Smarter market research doesn’t rely on one type of data.

  • Quantitative methods, such as surveys, usage analytics, or secondary market data, show you what’s happening.
  • Qualitative methods, including interviews, focus groups, social listening, explain why it’s happening.

The best product marketers triangulate both to get a full picture.  

For instance, survey data might reveal that 60% of buyers switch vendors within a year, but one-on-one interviews uncover the real reason: frustration with onboarding complexity.

3. Don’t Skip Competitive Intelligence

Competitive research is more than just tracking product features or pricing.  

It’s about understanding positioning. How are your competitors framing their value? Which segments are they targeting? What emotional levers are they pulling?  

Set up a simple framework to track competitor messaging, campaigns, and reviews monthly.  

This living document can be a goldmine for refining your own differentiation story.

4. Bring Sales and Customer Success Into the Process

Frontline teams often hear customer pain points long before they show up in survey data.  

Regularly interview sales and customer success reps to capture those insights early.  

Ask them questions such as, “What objections come up most often?” or “Which customer stories make deals close faster?” 

Integrating this voice-of-customer intelligence into your research makes your findings more grounded – and your go-to-market strategy more effective.

5. Turn Findings Into Action

Even the smartest research is useless if it stays trapped in a slide deck.  

Summarize insights in a concise, narrative format – highlight what’s new, what it means, and what action it requires. 

Create simple one-page briefs for stakeholders or use internal workshops to turn insights into positioning updates, campaign ideas, or roadmap inputs.

6. Make It Continuous

Markets move fast, and insights age quickly.  

Build lightweight, ongoing mechanisms to keep a pulse on change – automated sentiment tracking, regular win-loss interviews, or quarterly buyer persona refreshes. 

When research becomes a habit, not a project, product marketers stay closer to their customers than the competition ever will.  

Smarter market research is about better questions and faster learning.

When done right, it becomes your most powerful strategic asset – not just informing your marketing, but shaping the very direction of your business.  

Thanks for reading – I hope you found this blog post useful.  

Are you interested in discussing how to improve your market research? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.