Go To Market Planner

Build a go-to-market plan for any product launch, feature release, or new market entry. Use when planning a product launch, writing a GTM strategy, defining launch tiers, or coordinating cross-functional launch activities. Produces a tiered GTM plan with messaging, cross-functional activity tracker, success metrics, and launch day checklist.

Published by @Mohit Aggarwal·0 agent reads / 30d·0 saves·

Go-to-Market Planner Skill

Produce a complete, cross-functional GTM plan that aligns product, marketing, sales, and support around a single launch — with clear owners, timelines, and success metrics.

Launch Tier Framework

Before planning, classify the launch:

TierScopeTypical EffortExamples
Tier 1 — Major LaunchNew product / significant platform change8–12 weeksNew pricing model, platform rebrand, new product line
Tier 2 — Feature LaunchSignificant new capability4–6 weeksMajor feature, API release, new integration
Tier 3 — Incremental ReleaseImprovement, bug fix, minor feature1–2 weeksUI tweak, performance improvement, small enhancement

Always confirm tier with the user before proceeding.


GTM Plan Output Format

GTM Plan — [Product/Feature Name] — [Launch Date]

Launch Tier: [1 / 2 / 3] Launch Owner (PM): [Name] Target Launch Date: [Date] Soft Launch Date (Beta/Limited): [Date, if applicable]


1. What We're Launching

One-line description: [What it is, for whom, and why now] Key customer problem solved: [Specific pain point] Key differentiator: [Why ours, why now]


2. Target Audience

Primary segment: [Who benefits most — be specific] Secondary segment: [Who else benefits] Not for: [Who this is NOT for — helps sales and support]


3. Messaging

Headline: [Customer-facing headline — lead with outcome, not feature] Sub-headline: [Supporting context — how it works or why it matters] 3 key messages:

  1. [Problem solved]
  2. [How it works / what's new]
  3. [Proof / social proof / data]

Elevator pitch (30 seconds):

[For [target user] who [has this problem], [product/feature] is a [category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [alternative], we [differentiator].]


4. Launch Activities by Function

FunctionActivityOwnerDue DateStatus
ProductFeature flagging / rollout planPM[date]
MarketingBlog post / landing pageMarketing[date]
MarketingEmail campaign to existing usersMarketing[date]
MarketingSocial media contentMarketing[date]
SalesSales enablement deckPM + Sales[date]
SalesFAQ for sales teamPM[date]
SupportHelp centre articlesSupport[date]
SupportSupport team trainingSupport[date]
EngineeringMonitoring/alerting in placeEng[date]

5. Success Metrics

MetricBaselineTargetMeasurement Window
[Adoption metric][X][Y]30 days post-launch
[Engagement metric][X][Y]60 days post-launch
[Business metric][X][Y]90 days post-launch

6. Risks & Contingencies

RiskLikelihoodImpactMitigation
[Risk]H/M/LH/M/L[Action if it happens]

7. Launch Day Checklist

  • Feature live for [X%] of users
  • Monitoring dashboard active
  • Support team briefed
  • Blog post published
  • Email sent / scheduled
  • Sales team notified
  • Executive announcement sent (if Tier 1)
  • Rollback procedure confirmed

Required Inputs

Ask the user for these if not provided:

  • Product or feature name
  • Target launch date
  • Launch tier (Tier 1 / 2 / 3 — or describe scope and the skill will classify)
  • Target audience (who benefits and who it's NOT for)
  • Key message (what's the headline outcome for the customer)
  • PM and launch owner

Guidelines

  • Never plan a Tier 1 launch without at least 8 weeks of lead time
  • Always include a "Not for" section — it prevents misdirected sales and support tickets
  • Recommend a soft launch to 5–10% of users before full rollout for any Tier 1 or 2 launch
  • Post-launch retrospective should be scheduled at launch planning time — don't leave it to chance

Quality Checks

  • Launch tier is confirmed and appropriate for scope
  • "Not for" section is included to prevent misdirected sales and support
  • Every function has at least one activity with a named owner and due date
  • Success metrics include a measurement window (30/60/90 days)
  • Rollback procedure is confirmed for Tier 1 and 2 launches
  • Post-launch retrospective is scheduled

Anti-Patterns

  • Do not build a Tier 1 GTM plan for an incremental feature update — tier the launch appropriately before planning
  • Do not create activity lists without named owners and due dates — unowned tasks do not get done
  • Do not skip the rollback procedure for Tier 1 and 2 launches — every significant launch must have an abort plan
  • Do not treat marketing and engineering as separate tracks — cross-functional coordination is the whole point of a GTM plan
  • Do not set success metrics without a defined measurement window — "increase signups" is not a measurable target

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