You’ve done everything right.
You invested in a best-in-class Account-Based Marketing (ABM) platform. Your marketing team is identifying in-market accounts, uncovering intent signals, and running highly targeted campaigns. Dashboards look strong. Marketing-sourced pipeline is up.
Yet something still feels… disconnected.
Sales complains about noisy alerts with little context. The handoff from marketing to sales feels more like a baton toss over a brick wall than a seamless relay. Customer Success is unaware of churn risks or expansion signals that marketing data could have surfaced weeks earlier.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
The problem isn’t your ABM platform—it’s powerful.
The problem is that you’ve built a world-class engine without the chassis, transmission, or steering wheel.
What’s missing is the Go-to-Market (GTM) Orchestration Layer—the connective tissue that turns isolated GTM actions into a coordinated revenue motion.
Modern ABM platforms excel at three things:
These capabilities are essential—but they are fundamentally marketing-centric.
Where most ABM platforms fall short is in translating insight into cross-functional action. The result is predictable friction across the revenue lifecycle:
ABM tells you who and what.
GTM orchestration defines how, when, and by whom—across the entire lifecycle.
Think of your GTM organization like an orchestra.
Marketing is the strings. Sales is the brass. Customer Success is the woodwinds. Each team is talented in isolation. Your ABM platform gives one section better instruments.
But without a conductor—and a shared score—you don’t get a symphony. You get noise.
The GTM Orchestration Layer is both the conductor and the score.
It continuously listens to signals across the business, interprets them in real time, and triggers coordinated plays for the right teams at the right moment.
True orchestration starts with signal fusion—not just intent.
A mature orchestration layer combines:
The outcome is a single, shared view of account health and readiness—not fragmented dashboards by department.
This is where RevOps defines the rules of engagement.
Instead of isolated nurtures, orchestration relies on if-then logic that spans teams:
Plays are proactive, coordinated, and contextual—not reactive or siloed.
Insights don’t drive revenue if they live in dashboards.
The orchestration layer must push actions directly into the systems teams already use:
Execution happens where work already lives.
Instead of siloed KPIs, orchestration shifts measurement to motion-level outcomes:
RevOps stops measuring activity—and starts measuring coordination effectiveness.
Building GTM orchestration doesn’t require ripping out your tech stack. It’s an iterative process grounded in alignment, not tooling.
Bring GTM leaders together and map the customer journey end-to-end.
Identify where context is lost, handoffs break down, or actions are inconsistent. Choose one or two high-impact scenarios to pilot, such as:
RevOps needs a central access point for GTM data.
This might be a CDP, a warehouse with Reverse ETL, or tighter native integrations across CRM, ABM, and product analytics. The goal is simple: ensure play logic has all the inputs it needs.
Be explicit. Document triggers, actions, owners, and outcomes.
Example: Opportunity Acceleration Play
Orchestration rarely lives in a single tool. Common approaches include:
Technology enables orchestration—but process defines it.
Your ABM platform is indispensable—but it was never designed to run your entire revenue engine.
True GTM performance doesn’t come from isolated excellence. It comes from coordinated execution.
A GTM orchestration layer transforms linear handoffs into a responsive, intelligent system that moves as one team—from first signal to renewal and expansion.
Stop building bigger silos.
Start building the connective tissue.
That’s how RevOps turns activity into momentum—and momentum into durable growth.