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.
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