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Gtm Motions

Identify the best GTM motions and tools across 7 motion types: Inbound, Outbound, Paid Digital, Community, Partners, ABM, and PLG. Use when selecting marketing channels, choosing between inbound and outbound strategy, or planning cross-channel campaigns.

ai
By phuryn
22k2.2kUpdated 1 week agoMIT

Skill Content

# GTM Motions

## Overview
Identify and evaluate the best go-to-market motions for your product. This skill analyzes seven proven GTM approaches with specific tools and tactics to help you build a balanced acquisition strategy.

## When to Use
- Selecting marketing channels for your product
- Choosing between inbound vs outbound strategy
- Building your GTM toolkit and tech stack
- Evaluating PLG vs traditional sales motion
- Planning cross-channel marketing campaigns

## The 7 GTM Motions

### 1. Inbound Marketing
Attract customers through valuable content and thought leadership.
- **Tools**: LinkedIn, SEMRush, Grammarly, HubSpot, Airtable
- **Tactics**: Blog content, webinars, whitepapers, SEO, email nurture sequences
- **Best For**: B2B SaaS, technical products, long sales cycles
- **Strength**: Builds brand authority and attracts high-intent prospects
- **Challenge**: Requires consistent content creation; slower to show results

### 2. Outbound Sales
Proactively reach target prospects through direct engagement.
- **Tools**: LinkedIn Sales Navigator, ZoomInfo, Lemlist, Apollo, Hunter
- **Tactics**: Cold email campaigns, LinkedIn outreach, phone prospecting, personalized demos
- **Best For**: Enterprise sales, high-value contracts, niche markets
- **Strength**: Predictable pipeline generation; control over target selection
- **Challenge**: Low response rates; resource-intensive; requires skilled sales team

### 3. Paid Digital Advertising
Reach target audiences through paid channels with precision targeting.
- **Tools**: Google Ads, Meta Ads, LinkedIn Ads, Newswire, Retargeting platforms
- **Tactics**: Search ads, display advertising, social ads, video advertising, retargeting
- **Best For**: Products with clear target demographics, competitive keywords
- **Strength**: Fast results; scalable; measurable ROI; precise targeting
- **Challenge**: Can be expensive; requires continuous optimization; competitive

### 4. Community Marketing
Build engaged communities where customers help each other and spread the word.
- **Tools**: Slack, Reddit, Discord, Circle, Mighty Networks, WhatsApp
- **Tactics**: Community forums, user groups, events, mentorship, ambassador programs
- **Best For**: Developer products, communities of practice, loyal user bases
- **Strength**: Builds loyalty; organic word-of-mouth; valuable feedback; low CAC
- **Challenge**: Requires active moderation; time to build critical mass

### 5. Partner Marketing
Leverage partner networks to co-market and reach new audiences.
- **Tools**: Miro, AWS Startups, Oracle Partners, Stripe, Shopify App Store
- **Tactics**: Partner integrations, co-marketing agreements, channel partnerships, resellers
- **Best For**: Complementary products, platform ecosystems, expanding market reach
- **Strength**: Access to established customer bases; shared costs; credibility
- **Challenge**: Partner alignment; revenue sharing; dependency on partners

### 6. Account-Based Marketing (ABM)
Treat high-value accounts as individual markets with personalized campaigns.
- **Tools**: Pipedrive, Hunter, Clay, 6sense, Terminus, Demandbase
- **Tactics**: Personalized messaging, account-targeted content, coordinated sales/marketing
- **Best For**: Enterprise deals, limited target accounts, high deal values
- **Strength**: Higher conversion rates; larger deal sizes; strong sales-marketing alignment
- **Challenge**: Requires detailed account research; resource intensive; not scalable to SMB

### 7. Product-Led Growth (PLG)
Drive adoption through the product experience itself with minimal sales friction.
- **Tools**: Hotjar, Amplitude, Sentry, PostHog, Intercom, Appcues
- **Tactics**: Free trials, freemium models, in-app onboarding, self-serve demos, product analytics
- **Best For**: Self-service products, SMB market, low ACV, viral potential
- **Strength**: Low CAC; aligns product and growth; strong PMF signals; scalable
- **Challenge**: Requires excellent product experience; lower price points; longer ROI

## How It Works

### Step 1: Understand Your Product
Define product characteristics:
- Price point and ACV (contract value)
- Sales cycle length
- Buyer type and decision-making process
- Product complexity and learning curve
- Target market size and concentration

### Step 2: Evaluate Market Conditions
Assess your market dynamics:
- Competitive intensity of your keywords/channels
- Target audience location and accessibility
- Budget availability for paid channels
- Your team size and capabilities
- Timeline to revenue generation

### Step 3: Score Each Motion
Rate fit for your product (1-10 scale):
- Inbound: Content creation capability, brand building timeline
- Outbound: Prospect list availability, sales team capacity
- Paid: Budget flexibility, target audience clarity, conversion potential
- Community: Existing communities, product network effects
- Partners: Complementary products, channel availability
- ABM: Deal size and account concentration
- PLG: Product trial-ability, pricing flexibility

### Step 4: Design Motion Stack
Select and prioritize 2-4 motions to execute:
- Primary motion (highest potential for your business)
- Secondary motions (complementary acquisition channels)
- Motion sequencing (which to start first)
- Resource allocation across channels

### Step 5: Build Execution Plan
Create 90-day implementation roadmap:
- Quick wins and early validation
- Team and tool requirements
- Success metrics for each motion
- Optimization and scaling strategy
- Budget and resource allocation

## Input Format
Use $ARGUMENTS to pass:
- Product description and positioning
- Target customer profile and market
- Price point and sales cycle
- Team size and capabilities
- Budget and timeline constraints
- Existing channels or data

## Output
A comprehensive GTM motions analysis including:
- Scoring of all 7 motions for your product
- Recommended motion stack (primary and secondary)
- Tool recommendations for each motion
- 90-day execution plan with milestones
- Resource and budget requirements
- Success metrics and measurement framework
- Competitive differentiation through motion choice

## Framework
Based on Product Compass GTM motion analysis. Provides a systematic approach to balancing customer acquisition across multiple channels.

## Tips
- Most successful products use 2-4 complementary motions
- Start with your strongest motion; add complexity gradually
- Paid channels fund growth while organic channels build long-term value
- Revisit motion mix quarterly as company scales
- Combine inbound (brand) with outbound (sales) for B2B strength
- Use PLG to reduce CAC; use paid to accelerate proven channels

---

### Further Reading

- [5 GTM Principles You Should Know as a PM](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/5-gtm-principles-with-frameworks-templates)
- [OpenAI’s Product Leader Shares 3-Layer Distribution Framework To Win Mind & Market Share in the AI World](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/distribution-framework-ai-products)
- [Product Management vs. Product Marketing vs. Product Growth 101](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-management-vs-product-marketing)
- [How to Design a Value Proposition Customers Can't Resist?](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/how-to-design-value-proposition-template)

How to use

  1. Copy the skill content above
  2. Create a .claude/skills directory in your project
  3. Save as .claude/skills/pm-skills-gtm-motions.md
  4. Use /pm-skills-gtm-motions in Claude Code to invoke this skill

GitHub stars License: MIT PRs Welcome Companion: pm-skills Companion: burnstop Companion: claude-usage

PM Skills Marketplace: The AI Operating System for Better Product Decisions

68 PM skills and 42 chained workflows across 9 plugins. Claude Code, Cowork, and more. From discovery to strategy, execution, launch, growth, and shipping AI-built code.

PM Skills marketplace: skills, commands, and all 9 plugins at a glance

Designed for Claude Code and Cowork. Skills compatible with other AI assistants.

Start Here

New idea? → /discover
Need strategic clarity? → /strategy
Writing a PRD? → /write-prd
Planning a launch? → /plan-launch
Defining metrics? → /north-star

If this project helps you, ⭐ the repo.

Why PM Skills Marketplace?

Generic AI gives you text. PM Skills Marketplace gives you structure.

Each skill encodes a proven PM framework — discovery, assumption mapping, prioritization, strategy — and walks you through it step by step. You get the rigor of Teresa Torres, Marty Cagan, and Alberto Savoia built into your daily workflow, not sitting on a bookshelf.

The result: better product decisions, not just faster documents.

How It Works (Skills, Commands, Plugins)

Example prompts: a skill and two commands (/write-prd, /ship-check) in action

Skills are the building blocks of the marketplace. Each skill gives Claude domain knowledge, analytical frameworks, or a guided workflow for a specific PM task. Some skills also work as reusable foundations that multiple commands share.

Skills are loaded automatically when relevant to the conversation — no explicit invocation needed. If needed (e.g., prioritizing skills over general knowledge), you can force loading skills with /plugin-name:skill-name or /skill-name (Claude will add the prefix).

Commands are user-triggered workflows invoked with /command-name. They chain one or more skills into an end-to-end process. For example, /discover chains four skills together: brainstorm-ideas → identify-assumptions → prioritize-assumptions → brainstorm-experiments.

Plugins group related skills and commands into installable packages. Each plugin covers a PM domain — discovery, strategy, execution, and so on. Installing the marketplace gives you all 9 plugins at once.

Commands use skills. Some skills serve multiple commands. Some skills (like prioritization-frameworks or opportunity-solution-tree) are standalone references that Claude draws on whenever relevant — no command needed.

Commands are designed to flow into each other, matching the PM workflow. After any command completes, it suggests relevant next commands — just follow the prompts.

Installation

Claude Cowork (recommended for non-developers)

  1. Open Customize (bottom-left)
  2. Go to Browse pluginsPersonal+
  3. Select Add marketplace from GitHub
  4. Enter: phuryn/pm-skills

All 9 plugins install automatically. You get both commands (/discover, /strategy, etc.) and skills.

Installing PM Skills in Claude Cowork

Claude Code (CLI)

# Step 1: Add the marketplace
claude plugin marketplace add phuryn/pm-skills

# Step 2: Install individual plugins
claude plugin install pm-toolkit@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-product-strategy@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-product-discovery@pm-skills 
claude plugin install pm-market-research@pm-skills 
claude plugin install pm-data-analytics@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-marketing-growth@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-go-to-market@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-execution@pm-skills
claude plugin install pm-ai-shipping@pm-skills

Codex CLI (OpenAI)

Codex reads the same plugin marketplace file as Claude Code, so you can install PM Skills natively — no conversion or file-copying needed:

# Step 1: Add the marketplace
codex plugin marketplace add phuryn/pm-skills

# Step 2: Install the plugins you want
codex plugin add pm-toolkit@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-product-strategy@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-product-discovery@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-market-research@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-data-analytics@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-marketing-growth@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-go-to-market@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-execution@pm-skills
codex plugin add pm-ai-shipping@pm-skills

What you get: every skill (the PM frameworks), available to Codex and invocable by name. Install whole plugins rather than cherry-picking individual skills — a workflow usually relies on several skills that ship together.

What's different from Claude Code: the /slash commands (/discover, /write-prd, …) install but don't run as Codex slash commands — Codex plugins don't expose commands. To run a workflow, just describe the steps in plain language, for example:

Run product discovery on [your idea]: brainstorm options, map assumptions, prioritize the risky ones, then design experiments — pause between each step.

Optional — let Codex turn the workflows into skills. Because the command files ship inside each installed plugin, you can ask Codex to convert the ones you use most:

Read the command files in the pm-execution plugin and create equivalent Codex skills for the workflows I use most often.

This is a best-effort, model-driven conversion (some Claude-specific command syntax won't translate), but it's a quick way to get the guided workflows on Codex without leaving the CLI.

Other AI assistants (skills only)

The skills/*/SKILL.md files follow the universal skill format and work with any tool that reads it. Commands (/slash-commands) are Claude-specific.

ToolHow to useWhat works
Gemini CLICopy skill folders to .gemini/skills/Skills only
OpenCodeCopy skill folders to .opencode/skills/Skills only
CursorCopy skill folders to .cursor/skills/Skills only
KiroCopy skill folders to .kiro/skills/Skills only
# Example: copy all skills for OpenCode (project-level)
for plugin in pm-*/; do
  mkdir -p .opencode/skills/
  cp -r "$plugin/skills/"* .opencode/skills/ 2>/dev/null
done

# Example: copy all skills for Gemini CLI (global)
for plugin in pm-*/; do
  cp -r "$plugin/skills/"* ~/.gemini/skills/ 2>/dev/null
done

Available Plugins

<details> <summary><strong>1. pm-product-discovery</strong> — Ideation, experiments, assumption testing, OSTs, interviews (13 skills, 5 commands)</summary>

Skills (13):

  • brainstorm-ideas-existing — Multi-perspective ideation for existing products (PM, Designer, Engineer)
  • brainstorm-ideas-new — Ideation for new products in initial discovery
  • brainstorm-experiments-existing — Design experiments to test assumptions for existing products
  • brainstorm-experiments-new — Design lean startup pretotypes for new products (Alberto Savoia)
  • identify-assumptions-existing — Identify risky assumptions across Value, Usability, Viability, and Feasibility
  • identify-assumptions-new — Identify risky assumptions across 8 risk categories including Go-to-Market, Strategy, and Team
  • prioritize-assumptions — Prioritize assumptions using an Impact × Risk matrix with experiment suggestions
  • prioritize-features — Prioritize a feature backlog based on impact, effort, risk, and strategic alignment
  • analyze-feature-requests — Analyze and categorize customer feature requests by theme and strategic fit
  • opportunity-solution-tree — Build an Opportunity Solution Tree (Teresa Torres) — outcome → opportunities → solutions → experiments
  • interview-script — Create a structured customer interview script with JTBD probing questions
  • summarize-interview — Summarize an interview transcript into JTBD, satisfaction signals, and action items
  • metrics-dashboard — Design a product metrics dashboard with North Star, input metrics, and alert thresholds

Commands (5):

  • /discover — Full discovery cycle: ideation → assumption mapping → prioritization → experiment design
  • /brainstorm — Multi-perspective ideation (ideas|experiments × existing|new)
  • /triage-requests — Analyze and prioritize a batch of feature requests
  • /interview — Prepare an interview script or summarize a transcript (prep|summarize)
  • /setup-metrics — Design a product metrics dashboard

Examples:

Skills:

  • What are the riskiest assumptions for our AI writing assistant idea?
  • Help me build an Opportunity Solution Tree for improving user activation
  • Prioritize these 12 feature requests from our enterprise customers [attach CSV]

Commands:

  • /discover AI-powered meeting summarizer for remote teams
  • /brainstorm experiments existing — We need to reduce churn in our onboarding flow
  • /interview prep — We're interviewing enterprise buyers about their procurement workflow
</details> <details> <summary><strong>2. pm-product-strategy</strong> — Vision, business models, pricing, competitive landscape (12 skills, 5 commands)</summary>

Product strategy, vision, business models, pricing, and macro environment analysis. Covers the full strategic toolkit from vision crafting through competitive landscape scanning.

Skills (12):

  • product-strategy — Comprehensive 9-section Product Strategy Canvas (vision → defensibility)
  • startup-canvas — Startup Canvas combining Product Strategy (9 sections) + Business Model — an alternative to BMC and Lean Canvas for new products
  • product-vision — Craft an inspiring, achievable, and emotional product vision
  • value-proposition — 6-part JTBD value proposition (Who, Why, What before, How, What after, Alternatives)
  • lean-canvas — Lean Canvas business model for startups and new products
  • business-model — Business Model Canvas with all 9 building blocks
  • monetization-strategy — Brainstorm 3–5 monetization strategies with validation experiments
  • pricing-strategy — Pricing models, competitive analysis, willingness-to-pay, and price elasticity
  • swot-analysis — SWOT analysis with actionable recommendations
  • pestle-analysis — Macro environment: Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal, Environmental
  • porters-five-forces — Competitive forces analysis (rivalry, suppliers, buyers, substitutes, new entrants)
  • ansoff-matrix — Growth strategy mapping across markets and products

Commands (5):

  • /strategy — Create a complete 9-section Product Strategy Canvas
  • /business-model — Explore business models (lean|full|startup|value-prop|all)
  • /value-proposition — Design a value proposition using the 6-part JTBD template
  • /market-scan — Macro environment analysis combining SWOT + PESTLE + Porter's + Ansoff
  • /pricing — Design a pricing strategy with competitive analysis and experiments

Examples:

Skills:

  • Compare Lean Canvas vs Business Model Canvas vs Startup Canvas for my marketplace startup
  • Design a value proposition for our AI writing assistant targeting non-native English speakers
  • Run a Porter's Five Forces analysis for the project management SaaS market

Commands:

  • /strategy B2B project management tool for agencies
  • /business-model startup — AI writing tool for non-native English speakers
  • `/value-proposition SaaS onboarding tool for en

View source on GitHub