Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Growth Lever Most People Misunderstand

 By David Ronald

Product marketing sits at the center of everything in many B2B companies.

Yet it is recognized for almost none of it.

Instead, product marketing is routinely described as the team that “does messaging,” or “supports launches,” or “creates sales decks.”

Those descriptions aren’t wrong, but they are incomplete. They reduce a strategic growth function to a service role, and in doing so, they obscure one of the most powerful levers a company has to drive revenue, differentiation, and long-term market leadership.

The misunderstanding begins with visibility: Sales owns the number; demand generation owns pipeline; product owns the roadmap.

Each of these functions has clear, measurable outputs that executives can easily point to.

Product marketing, by contrast, operates in the connective tissue between them. It shapes how a product is understood, who it is for, why it matters, and how it is brought to market.  

In this blog post, I explore why product marketing is the most misunderstood growth lever and what companies can do to derive more value from it. 

The Product Marketing Mandate

At its core, product marketing is responsible for ensuring that a company brings the right product to market in ways that compel that audience to buy.

That mandate spans positioning, segmentation, competitive intelligence, pricing, packaging, and go-to-market strategy.

It is not a downstream function.

It's upstream, midstream, and downstream all at once.  

Which is one reason why it’s so often misunderstood. 

The Gap Between Features and Value

One of the most common failure modes in B2B companies is the gap between what a product does and why it matters.

Engineering teams build features; product teams prioritize roadmaps.

But without a clear articulation of customer value, those features exist in a vacuum.

Product marketing closes that gap by translating capabilities into outcomes.

It asks hard questions that other teams may not: Who is this really for? What problem does it solve better than any alternative? Why should a customer care now?

These questions are not academic. They directly influence whether a product gains traction or stalls.

When positioning is weak, sales cycles lengthen because buyers don’t immediately understand the value.

Conversion rates drop because messaging fails to resonate. Win rates suffer because competitors define the narrative.

None of these issues can be solved by simply increasing ad spend or hiring more sales reps.  

They require a fundamental realignment of how the product is presented to the market, which is the domain of product marketing. 

Deliverables versus Decisions

Another reason product marketing is undervalued is that its work is often mistaken for deliverables rather than decisions.

A messaging document, for example, is not the value – the value lies in the strategic choices embedded within it: the target audience, the competitive frame of reference, the differentiation that the company chooses to emphasize.

The document is simply the artifact. Focusing on the artifact rather than the decision leads organizations to underestimate the function’s importance.

Consider the difference between a company that competes on features and one that competes on positioning.

The former is locked in a perpetual race to add more capabilities, often chasing competitors and fragmenting its roadmap. The latter defines the criteria by which buyers evaluate solutions, shaping the market in its favor.

This is the essence of product marketing at its best.  

It does not just communicate value; it defines it. 

Winning in Crowded Markets

The impact of this distinction becomes even more pronounced in crowded or emerging markets, where differentiation is both more difficult and more critical.

In these environments, the winners are not always the companies with the best products in a technical sense.

They are the ones that tell the most compelling story about why their approach is fundamentally different and better suited to the customer’s needs. 

Product marketing is the function that crafts and operationalizes that story. 

The Upstream Influence

There is also a temporal dimension to product marketing that often goes unrecognized.

Many of its most important contributions happen before a product ever reaches the market.

By informing product strategy with market insights, customer research, and competitive analysis, product marketing helps ensure that the company is building something that people actually want to buy.

This upstream influence can be the difference between a successful launch and a failed one.

Yet because it happens behind the scenes, it is rarely celebrated.

When product marketing is absent from these early stages, the consequences can be severe: products are launched into markets that are not ready for them, or they target audiences that are too broad to engage effectively.

Messaging is retrofitted after the fact, resulting in generic value propositions that fail to stand out. Sales teams are left to fill in the gaps, creating their own narratives that may or may not align with the company’s strategy.  

Over time, this leads to a fragmented go-to-market motion that is difficult to scale. 

The Alignment Engine

In contrast, when product marketing is deeply embedded in the business, it acts as a unifying force. 

It aligns product, sales, and marketing around a shared understanding of the customer and the market. It ensures that everyone is speaking the same language and telling the same story.

This alignment is not just a matter of internal efficiency; it directly impacts the customer experience.  

Buyers encounter a consistent narrative at every touchpoint, which builds trust and accelerates decision-making. 

Enabling Sales and Demand Generation

The relationship between product marketing and sales is particularly important in this regard.

Sales teams are on the front lines of customer interaction, and their effectiveness depends heavily on the clarity and relevance of the messaging they are given.

When product marketing provides a strong foundation that includes clear positioning, well-defined personas, and compelling value propositions, sales can focus on execution rather than improvisation.

When that foundation is weak, sales is forced to compensate, often with inconsistent results.

Similarly, product marketing plays a critical role in enabling demand generation. Campaigns are only as effective as the messages they convey.

Without a sharp understanding of the audience and the value proposition, even the most sophisticated marketing tactics will underperform. 

Product marketing ensures that demand generation efforts are grounded in insights rather than assumptions, increasing their likelihood of success. 

The Measurement Challenge

Despite all of this, many organizations continue to treat product marketing as a secondary function.

This is often a reflection of how success is measured.

Because product marketing’s impact is distributed across multiple metrics such as pipeline, win rates, deal velocity, and product adoption, it can be difficult to attribute outcomes directly to the function. 

This creates a bias toward more easily measurable activities, even if they are less strategically important. 

Elevating Product Marketing to a Strategic Function

To fully leverage product marketing as a growth driver, companies need to rethink how they define and evaluate its role.

This starts with recognizing that product marketing is not just about communication; it is about strategy. It involves making choices about where to compete, how to win, and what trade-offs to accept.

These are decisions that shape the trajectory of the business, not just its marketing output.

It also requires elevating product marketing’s position within the organization.

When the function reports too far down the hierarchy or is excluded from key strategic discussions, its ability to influence outcomes is limited. 

Giving product marketing a seat at the table ensures that market and customer perspectives are integrated into decision-making from the outset. 

Clarity as a Competitive Advantage

Equally important is fostering a culture that values clarity over complexity. 

In many companies, there is a tendency to equate sophistication with detail, resulting in messaging that is dense and difficult to understand. 

Product marketing’s role is to distill complexity into simplicity without losing substance. 

This is not a trivial task – it requires a deep understanding of both the product and the customer. 

But, when done well, it creates a powerful competitive advantage. 

Conclusion

Ultimately, the reason product marketing is the most misunderstood growth lever in B2B is that its work is both pervasive and subtle.

It does not always produce visible outputs that can be easily quantified, but it fundamentally shapes how a company competes and grows. 

It is the difference between a product that exists and a product that sells, between a company that participates in a market and one that defines it. 

For leaders looking to unlock the next stage of growth, the implication is clear. 

Stop thinking of product marketing as a support function and start treating it as a strategic one. Invest in it accordingly, integrate it deeply into your organization, and hold it accountable for outcomes that matter. 

When you do, you will find that many of the challenges you once attributed to other areas including pipeline gaps, low win rates, and unclear differentiation, begin to resolve themselves. 

Product marketing may not always be the most visible function in a B2B company, but it is often the most consequential. 

Understanding that is the first step toward turning it into a true engine of growth.

Thanks for reading this lengthy post - it’s the longest one I’ve written in a while.

Are you interested in maximizing the role of product marketing as a growth lever in your business? My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you. 

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

What is the 1% Rule in Marketing?

By Sharon Lee  

In marketing, there’s a persistent temptation to chase the big moment the viral campaign, the major rebrand, the breakthrough idea that changes everything overnight.  

While those moments can be impactful, they’re rare and often unpredictable. 

The more reliable path to sustained growth lies in something far less glamorous: incremental improvement. 

This is where the 1% Rule comes in.

The Origin of the 1% Rule

So, just what is the 1% Rule?  

Popularized by James Clear in his 2018 book Atomic Habits, the concept is straightforward: if you get just 1% better each day, those small gains compound into significant progress over time.  

While Clear framed this idea in the context of personal habits, its application to marketing is both natural and powerful.

Why Incremental Gains Matter in Marketing

At its core, marketing is a system of interconnected levers conversion rates, engagement metrics, retention, acquisition efficiency, and more.  

Each lever can be optimized:

  • A slightly stronger subject line might lift email open rates.
  • A clearer call-to-action can improve click-through rates.
  • A refined onboarding experience may increase activation.  

Individually, these improvements seem marginal but, together, they can dramatically reshape performance. 

The math is compelling because improving by 1% doesn’t just add up, but compounds. 

And, over time, these small gains multiply, creating a widening gap between teams that embrace continuous optimization and those that rely solely on sporadic big bets.

The Organizational Challenge

Many organizations struggle to adopt this mindset because the 1% Rule runs counter to how marketing teams are typically structured and rewarded. 

Big campaigns are visible. They earn recognition, budget, and executive attention. Incremental improvements, on the other hand, often happen quietly, across dashboards, experiments, and iterative tweaks.

They may lack the drama of a product launch or rebrand, but invisibility doesn’t diminish impact.

In fact, the most effective marketing organizations build their success on a foundation of continuous, iterative improvement.

They don’t wait for quarterly planning cycles to make changes but are constantly testing, learning, and refining. 

Cultural Advantage of Continuous Improvement

Adopting the 1% Rule doesn’t just improve metrics—it transforms team culture.

When the goal is to improve by one percent, the barrier to action becomes much lower. Teams are more willing to experiment because the perceived risk is minimal. Failure becomes a source of insight rather than a setback.

This creates momentum one of the most underrated forces in marketing. 

When teams see consistent, incremental gains, it reinforces confidence in the process. Progress becomes visible, repeatable, and motivating.  

Over time, this mindset compounds just like the metrics themselves. 

Balancing Big Bets with Small Wins

Embracing the 1% Rule doesn’t mean abandoning bold thinking.

Breakthrough campaigns and strategic pivots still play an important role. They should, however, be complemented, not replaced, by a disciplined focus on daily optimization.  

The most successful marketing teams strike this balance they think big when it comes to vision and strategy, but they execute through small, continuous improvements. 

Putting the 1% Rule into Practice

In practical terms, applying the 1% Rule in marketing can take many forms: 

  • Systematically A/B testing landing pages.
  • Refining audience segmentation and targeting.
  • Optimizing ad spend allocation.
  • Improving content relevance based on performance data.
  • Iterating on messaging and positioning.

None of these actions are revolutionary on their own. But over time, they compound into a meaningful competitive advantage. 

Final Thoughts

In a field as dynamic and data-driven as marketing, the edge rarely comes from a single moment of brilliance.

More often, it comes from the quiet, consistent pursuit of getting better…

Just 1% at a time. 

Thanks for reading my blog post.

How are you applying the 1% rule in your marketing? Feel free to get in touch with me at shamikodesign@gmail.com if this is a topic you’d like to explore further.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A Brief Guide to Sales Enablement

By David Ronald

Sales enablement is a crucial function.

It's not a nice-to-have, but a must-have.

A company that I worked for not so long ago had never invested any resources in enabling its sales team, and it showed. Listening to the company’s SDR pitching to prospects was uncomfortable for everyone involved, because they lacked fluency in what to say.

Moreover, as buyer journeys grow more complex, product portfolios expand, and competition intensifies, sales teams need more than enthusiasm and persistence to succeed. They need the right knowledge, tools, messaging, and guidance to engage buyers effectively.

At its core, sales enablement ensures that sellers have everything they need to win deals consistently. It connects marketing, product, and sales around a shared mission – helping buyers make informed decisions. 

Effective sales enablement, however, isn’t simply about creating sales decks or organizing training sessions. The most successful organizations approach enablement as a strategic discipline that continuously improves seller performance and customer engagement. 

In this blog post I explore best practices that can help organizations build a sales enablement function that drives measurable revenue impact. 

Align Sales Enablement with Business Strategy

Too often, enablement teams focus on producing materials or running training programs without connecting those efforts to strategic priorities such as entering new markets, launching new products, or increasing win rates in competitive deals.

Effective enablement leaders ask fundamental questions such as: 

  • What revenue goals must the company achieve?
  • Which segments or industries represent the highest growth opportunity?
  • Where in the sales process are deals most often lost?

By aligning enablement programs with these priorities, organizations ensure that their efforts address the most important challenges facing the sales team.

When enablement is tied directly to business outcomes, it becomes a strategic driver of growth rather than a support function. 

Build Deep Collaboration Between Sales, Marketing, and Product

Sales enablement sits at the intersection of multiple teams. Its success depends on strong collaboration between sales, marketing, product management, and customer success.

Marketing produces messaging, content, and campaigns that shape how buyers perceive the company. Product teams understand the technology and roadmap that differentiate the offering. Sales teams interact with customers daily and understand real-world objections and competitive dynamics. 

Sales enablement functions as the connective tissue among these groups. Enablement teams should create structured feedback loops that allow insights from sales conversations to inform marketing content and product messaging. 

Likewise, product updates and marketing campaigns should be translated into practical guidance that sellers can immediately apply in customer interactions. 

When these teams operate in alignment, messaging becomes more consistent, sales conversations become more effective, and customers receive a clearer understanding of the company's value. 

Develop Clear, Customer-Centric Messaging

One of the most important responsibilities of sales enablement is ensuring that sellers communicate value clearly and consistently.

Many organizations struggle with messaging that focuses too heavily on product features rather than the outcomes customers care about. Buyers rarely make decisions based solely on technical specifications. Instead, they want to understand how a solution will solve their problems, reduce risk, or improve performance. 

 

Sales enablement teams should help sellers frame conversations around customer challenges and business outcomes.

 Effective messaging typically includes a clear articulation of the customer's problem, a compelling explanation of how the company's solution addresses that problem, evidence such as customer stories, case studies, or data points, and differentiation that explains why the offering is superior to alternatives.  

When sales teams have access to concise, customer-focused messaging, they can engage buyers more confidently and guide conversations toward meaningful outcomes. 

Create a Structured Onboarding Program

Sales onboarding is one of areas of sales enablement with the highest importance and greatest impact. 

New hires often face a steep learning curve as they absorb product information, understand target markets, learn sales processes, and build confidence in customer conversations. Without a structured onboarding program, ramp times can stretch unnecessarily long. 

Effective onboarding programs need, therefore, to combine several elements: 

  • Product and industry education.
  • Messaging and positioning training.
  • Competitive intelligence.
  • Sales methodology instruction.
  • Practice sessions such as role-playing or mock sales calls.

The goal is not simply to deliver information but to help new sellers apply that knowledge in real-world situations.

Many organizations also pair new hires with experienced mentors or sales leaders who can provide guidance during the early months. This accelerates learning and helps new team members build confidence more quickly. 

A strong onboarding program shortens ramp time, improves early performance, and increases the likelihood that new hires will succeed. 

Provide Continuous Training and Coaching

The best organizations treat enablement as an ongoing process that continuously develops the skills of the sales team. Markets evolve, products change, and buyer expectations shift, and sellers must adapt accordingly.

Continuous training can include updates on new product features, competitive strategy sessions, industry trend briefings, advanced sales techniques, and customer success stories and lessons learned.

While enablement teams provide the structure and resources, managers play a crucial role in reinforcing skills during real sales interactions. Effective managers review calls, provide feedback, and help sellers refine their approach. 

Organizations that combine structured training with consistent coaching see significantly stronger performance improvements than those that rely on training alone. 

Deliver the Right Content at the Right Time

Sales teams rely on a wide range of materials to support customer conversations, including presentations, product documentation, case studies, and competitive battle cards.  

Many organizations, however, struggle with content overload. Sellers often face large repositories of materials with little guidance on which assets are most useful in specific situations.

Sales enablement should focus on organizing content so that sellers can quickly find the right resource for each stage of the sales process. And, in my experience, best practices include: 

  • Mapping content to specific stages of the buyer journey.
  • Highlighting the most effective assets.
  • Retiring outdated materials.
  • Ensuring messaging remains consistent across all content.

Technology platforms designed for sales enablement can help manage and distribute content efficiently. But tools alone are not enough. The real value lies in curating content so that sellers can use it effectively.

When sales teams have easy access to relevant, high-quality materials, customer conversations become more productive and persuasive. 

Leverage Data and Analytics

Sales enablement should be guided by data rather than intuition. Organizations can analyze a wide range of metrics to evaluate enablement effectiveness and identify areas for improvement. 

These metrics can include sales ramp time, win rates, deal size, sales cycle length, content usage, and training participation and performance. For example, if win rates decline in competitive deals, enablement teams might strengthen competitive battle cards or introduce specialized training.

If new hires take too long to reach quota, onboarding programs may need adjustment. Data allows enablement teams to focus their efforts where they will have the greatest impact.  

Over time, this analytical approach transforms sales enablement from a reactive support function into a performance optimization engine.

Integrate Sales Enablement Into the Sales Process

Sales enablement works best when it is embedded directly into the sales workflow rather than operating as a separate activity.

Training, content, and guidance should be available exactly when sellers need them, whether that's during deal preparation, prospect research, or customer meetings.  

For example: 

  • Competitive intelligence should be easily accessible before discovery calls.
  • Case studies should be available when presenting solutions.
  • Pricing guidance should support negotiation conversations.

Modern sales tools can integrate enablement resources directly into customer relationship management systems, ensuring that sellers receive relevant support at each stage of the sales process. 

This integration reduces friction and makes enablement more practical and impactful. 

Measure Impact and Continuously Improve

Successful sales enablement programs measure their impact and evolve continuously.

Enablement leaders should regularly evaluate whether their initiatives are improving seller performance and driving revenue growth. This requires close collaboration with sales leadership to identify key performance indicators and track progress.

Equally important is gathering feedback from the sales team. Sellers can provide valuable insights into which materials are most helpful, which training programs resonate, and where gaps remain. By combining performance data with qualitative feedback, enablement teams can refine their approach and ensure that their efforts remain relevant.  

Sales enablement is not a static function - it must evolve alongside the business, adapting to new markets, technologies, and customer expectations. 

Conclusion

Sales enablement has emerged as a strategic capability that can dramatically improve sales effectiveness and revenue performance.

By aligning enablement with business strategy, fostering collaboration across teams, developing customer-centric messaging, and investing in continuous training, organizations can equip their sales teams to engage buyers more effectively. 

The most successful companies treat sales enablement as an ongoing discipline grounded in data, collaboration, and continuous improvement. When executed well, sales enablement does more than support the sales team. It transforms how organizations connect with customers, communicate value, and ultimately win in competitive markets.

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

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

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

How to Decide if Social Media will Work for Your Business

By David Ronald

Social media is often presented as a universal marketing solution.

If you read enough about marketing, it can feel as though every business must have a strong presence on every platform.

But the reality is more nuanced.

For some companies, social media is a powerful growth engine.

For others, it delivers little measurable value despite significant investment of time and resources.

The real issue isn’t social media’s popularity, but if it matches how your customers discover and buy products. 

 

So, before investing heavily in social media, it’s worth asking a few strategic questions. 

(You may also be interested in reading this blog post Rethinking Social Media - From Noise to Meaningful Engagement.)  

1. Where Do Your Customers Look for Information?

The first question is simple: do your customers actually use social media to research solutions like yours?

In many consumer markets, the answer is yes.

People regularly discover restaurants, travel destinations, fashion brands, and home décor through social platforms.

In many B2B industries, however, the discovery process is very different.

Buyers often rely on search engines, professional networks, industry events, or peer recommendations.  

If your customers primarily discover vendors through search or referrals, social media may play a supporting role rather than being a primary demand-generation channel. 

2. Is Your Product Visually or Emotionally Engaging?

Some products naturally lend themselves to social media.

Fashion, food, fitness, travel, and design-oriented businesses benefit from visual storytelling.

Platforms built around images and short-form video make it easy to capture attention and generate engagement.

Other products are more complex or technical. In these cases, the buying decision typically requires deeper research, detailed explanations, and longer consideration cycles.  

Social media can still contribute awareness, but it may not be the most effective place to educate buyers. 

3. How Long Is Your Sales Cycle?

Social media tends to work best for businesses with shorter purchase cycles. 

If a customer can see a product, become interested, and buy within minutes or hours, social platforms can directly drive revenue. 

This is common in retail and direct-to-consumer brands. 

In contrast, businesses with long sales cycles such as enterprise software, consulting services, or industrial equipment, usually depend on multi-stage evaluation processes. 

Social media may help build credibility or brand awareness, but it rarely drives immediate conversions. 

4. Do You Have the Resources to Be Consistent?

Social media success rarely comes from occasional posting. 

Building an engaged audience requires consistent content creation, interaction with followers, and ongoing experimentation. 

This requires time, creativity, and often dedicated staff. 

If your organization cannot sustain that effort, the results may not justify the investment. 

Final Thoughts

A helpful way to evaluate social media is to think about it as a channel within a broader marketing system, not as a standalone strategy.  

Ask yourself three questions: 

  • Are our customers active on these platforms?
  • Does our product lend itself to social storytelling?
  • Do we have the resources to do it well?

If the answer to most of these questions is yes, social media can become a valuable part of your marketing mix.

If not, your efforts may be better spent on channels that more directly influence how customers discover and evaluate your business.

The goal of marketing is not to be everywhere, but to be where your customers are looking.

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

Are you interested in discussing how your social media can be more effective? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you. 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Marketing to Developers is Different

By David Ronald  

Marketing to developers is different.  

It’s not traditional B2B marketing with some technical gloss.  

It is a different discipline entirely – one that rewards clarity over cleverness, proof over promise, and usefulness over persuasion.  

Too many companies approach developers the way they approach executive buyers. They wrap technical capabilities in abstract positioning, lead with vision statements, and rely on gated assets and sales follow-ups to move prospects forward.  

That playbook rarely works here, because developers are not waiting to be sold to – they are trying to build something.  

If your marketing interrupts that goal rather than accelerates it, you lose credibility immediately.  

To market effectively to developers, you have to start with respect – for their time, their intelligence, and the way they evaluate tools.

In this blog post I provide guidance on the best ways to market to developers.  

(You may also be interested in reading this blog post A Brief Guide to marketing to Developers.)

Developers Don’t Buy Hype

Developers are pragmatic evaluators.  

When they encounter a new tool, they aren’t asking whether it’s “market-leading” – they’re asking whether it solves their problem cleanly, whether it fits into their stack, and whether it will break at scale.  

They want to know how it works, what the tradeoffs are, and what happens under edge conditions. 

This is why substance always beats spin.  

Companies like Stripe and Twilio earned developer loyalty not through grand brand narratives, but through product experiences that delivered immediate value. Their APIs were intuitive. Their documentation was crisp. Developers could get to a working implementation quickly.  

The marketing wasn’t layered on top of the product but embedded in it.  

In developer ecosystems, the product experience is the primary persuasion mechanism.

Documentation Is Strategy

For most companies, documentation is treated as a downstream artifact but, for developer-focused companies, it’s the front door.  

When a developer lands on your site, they are often heading straight to the docs – they want to see examples, understand the architecture, and gauge the depth of your thinking.  

Clear setup instructions and working code samples do more to convert a developer than any landing page headline ever will.  

Friction in documentation is silent churn – so you won’t get a complaint but you will get abandonment.  

The companies that win treat documentation as a product. They invest in clarity, structure, and completeness. They anticipate mistakes. They explain not just how to implement something, but why design decisions were made.  

This level of transparency builds trust, and trust is the currency of developer adoption. 

Community Creates Credibility

Developers trust other developers more than they trust brands.  

Which is why community matters so much in developer marketing.  

When a developer sees active GitHub discussions, thoughtful issue responses, or engaged Slack and Discord communities, they gain confidence that the tool is alive and supported.  

Conversations among practitioners carry more weight than polished campaigns ever will.  

Organizations like MongoDB and HashiCorp understood this early – they invested in ecosystems, user groups, and open conversations long before enterprise sales motions scaled.  

Their communities served as feedback loops that shaped the product itself.

The Funnel Is the Product

Traditional B2B funnels rely on controlled progression: advertisement to landing page, to demo request, to sales conversation.  

Developer adoption rarely follows that linear path.  

Instead, the journey often begins with a search query and moves directly into documentation, sandbox environments, or an API key.  

Developers like to experiment – If the tool proves useful, they integrate it into a side project or internal workflow. Only later does procurement get involved.  

Companies such as Atlassian and Datadog scaled by reducing friction in that early experimentation phase – they allowed developers to try the product without negotiation, without forms, and without sales pressure.  

When you market to developers, your job is to remove barriers between curiosity and implementation.  

The faster someone can move from reading about your product to building with it, the stronger your growth engine becomes.

Precision Is Persuasive

Developers value specificity.  

Abstract claims about “digital transformation” or “next-generation AI” feel hollow because they can’t be tested.  

Clear statements about performance, compatibility, or architectural choices, on the other hand, invite scrutiny, and scrutiny is welcome when your product is strong.  

Saying that your platform processes a million events per second at low latency is meaningful, while saying that it “revolutionizes data workflows” is not.  

Effective messaging in this space requires technical fluency. 

Marketers must understand the product well enough to articulate why certain design decisions matter. They need to know how the system fits into existing stacks, what problems it replaces, and what tradeoffs it introduces.  

Without that depth, positioning becomes superficial, and developers notice.

Content That Demonstrates, Not Declares

The most effective developer content does not read like marketing at all.  

It reads like “engineering thinking” made public.  

Deep technical blog posts that explore architecture decisions or share performance benchmarks resonate because they signal competence.  

Transparent discussions of lessons learned, including failures, signal maturity. Code samples and SDKs invite experimentation. Open-source components demonstrate confidence.  

For example, when Elastic released its core technology as open source, it was a trust strategy, not just a distribution one. Developers could inspect the code. They could contribute. They could verify claims independently.  

Speaking at practitioner-focused events such as KubeCon or AWS re:Invent reinforces that credibility. Developers want to see the builders behind the product, not just the brand.

The Role of Product Marketing in DevTools

Developer marketing is often conflated with developer relations, but they are not the same.  

DevRel fosters relationships and advocacy. Product marketing provides clarity and direction.  

In developer-centric companies, product marketing must define the ideal customer profile, articulate primary workloads, and position the product against alternatives, including open-source or in-house solutions.  

That positioning cannot rely on abstraction – it must explain architectural advantages, operational efficiencies, and cost implications in concrete terms.  

The best product marketers in this space are bilingual – they can engage engineers in detailed conversations about implementation while also translating those technical advantages into strategic value for business stakeholders.  

This dual fluency is critical because developers may initiate adoption, but enterprises ultimately scale it.

Enterprise Constraints Don’t Change Developer Psychology

Even in large organizations, developers retain their core motivations.  

They care about code quality, portability, transparency, and avoiding unnecessary lock-in.  

What changes in enterprise contexts are the constraints – security reviews, compliance checks, and procurement processes.  

Effective developer marketing acknowledges both realities – it demonstrates technical excellence while signaling operational readiness. It shows that the product can withstand scrutiny, not just from engineers, but from security and finance teams as well.  

When companies like OpenAI or Snowflake expand into enterprises, developer experimentation often acts as the wedge.  

Initial use cases grow into broader adoption because the technical foundation earns trust first.

What Actually Drives Growth

If you measure success purely through traditional marketing metrics, such as click-through rates or raw lead volume, you may misinterpret what’s happening in a developer motion.  

The signals that matter tend to live inside the product: activation rates, time to first meaningful action, API calls, and expansion usage.  

If developers are building with your tool, growth becomes durable – if they are not, no amount of promotional activity will compensate.  

Developer ecosystems compound because trust compounds.  

When developers find a tool that respects their workflow and delivers on its promises, they advocate for it internally and externally. They incorporate it into new projects. They recommend it to peers.  

That kind of momentum cannot be manufactured through campaigns alone.

Conclusion

At its core, marketing to developers is simple, even if it is not easy.  

It requires clarity, technical depth, and a willingness to let the product speak for itself. It demands transparency about limitations and confidence in your engineering.  

Most of all, it requires humility – developers are practitioners to be supported, not targets to be captured. 

If you help them build faster, more reliably, and more elegantly, they will choose you –
and they will bring others with them.  

That is earned growth, not hype-driven growth.  

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

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

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

5 Qualities to Look for When Hiring PMMs

By David Ronald

Hiring a great product marketing manager can dramatically accelerate your growth.

Hiring the wrong one can stall launches, muddle positioning, frustrate sales, and create disconnects between product and market.

In today’s environment, where markets move quickly, buyers are more informed, and competition is relentless, product marketing managers (PMMs) must operate at the intersection of strategy, storytelling, and execution.

PMMs are translators, orchestrators, and operators all at once. 

In this blog post I examine five high-impact qualities to prioritize when hiring a modern, growth-oriented PMM. 

1. Customer & Market Empathy

The foundation of great product marketing is empathy.

A strong PMM goes beyond surface-level personas. They understand customer pain points, buying triggers, internal politics, budget constraints, and the emotional drivers behind decisions. They know not only what customers say, but why they say it.

This depth of understanding allows them to craft positioning that resonates. It enables sharper messaging, stronger differentiation, and more effective sales conversations.

When interviewing PMMs, look for evidence that they have spent meaningful time with customers – conducting interviews, analyzing win/loss data, shadowing sales calls, or synthesizing research into actionable insights.  

Empathy should show up in how they speak about users and buyers, not just in slide decks. 

2. Strategic Storytelling

Great PMMs are strategic storytellers.

They take complex products, technical features, and evolving roadmaps and transform them into clear, compelling narratives.  

The best PMMs are able to articulate the following: 

  • The problem.
  • The stakes.
  • The differentiated solution.
  • The “why now”.

And they can do it for multiple audiences – buyers, users, executives, sales teams, partners, and analysts.

Strong storytelling is about clarity. It’s about making the value obvious and the decision easier.

When evaluating candidates for your PMM roles, ask them to walk through a launch they led.

Pay attention to how they frame the story. Is it feature-centric, or outcome-driven? Is the differentiation sharp? Do they understand competitive dynamics?

The best PMMs can shape perception, not just explain products. 

3. Data-Informed Judgment

Modern PMMs operate in a world of dashboards, attribution models, and constant experimentation.

But the goal is to use data wisely and not drown in it.

Effective PMMs balance qualitative insight with quantitative rigor. They validate assumptions with research. They track launch performance. They analyze pipeline impact. They test messaging and iterate based on results.

Importantly, they don’t hide behind data - they use it to inform judgment, not replace it.

Look for candidates who can discuss metrics comfortably: win rates, conversion rates, adoption curves, pipeline influence. Ask how they measure launch success and how they’ve adjusted strategy based on performance data.

The strongest PMMs are both analytical and decisive. 

4. Cross-Functional Influence

PMMs rarely have direct authority over the teams they rely on.

They must influence product managers, sales leaders, demand gen teams, and executives.

The best PMMs build alignment through credibility, clarity, and collaboration. They can facilitate tough conversations about priorities, positioning, and trade-offs. They align stakeholders around a shared go-to-market plan and keep everyone moving in the same direction.

In interviews, you should consider probing for examples of navigating conflict or aligning divergent teams.  

Strong PMMs aren’t simply participate in cross-functional work, but driving alignment in it. 

5. Execution Excellence

Strategy without execution is noise. 

Strong PMMs don’t just define positioning frameworks; they ship. They run launches. They deliver enablement. They produce assets. They maintain timelines. They ensure sales is ready. They close the loop post-launch. 

Execution excellence requires organization, discipline, and momentum. It also requires a bias toward action. 

When hiring, look for evidence of ownership. Did they simply contribute to launches, or did they lead them? Did they deliver measurable outcomes? Can they manage complexity without sacrificing quality?

The most impactful PMMs operate at both altitude and ground level - shaping strategy while driving execution. 

Final Thoughts

Hiring a high-caliber PMM means investing in someone who can connect product innovation to market demand. 

When you prioritize empathy, storytelling, data-informed judgment, influence, and execution, you dramatically increase your odds of hiring someone who will accelerate growth. 

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

Are you interested in discussing how to hire the very best PMMs? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.