go to market strategy for b2b saas product launch

The GTM Playbook I’d Use to Launch a SaaS Tool Like Taskly

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When launching a new SaaS product, most teams obsess over features and forget the real challenge: getting people to care. That’s what a solid go-to-market (GTM) strategy solves.

This blog post walks through a full GTM strategy I’d use for launching a fictional SaaS tool called Taskly – a team productivity and task automation app. I created this project as part of my freelance portfolio to show how I think about launching, positioning, and growing a B2B SaaS product from scratch.

Whether you’re a product marketer, SaaS founder, or growth consultant, this breakdown gives you a practical blueprint you can copy, adapt, and run with.

I used emojis and AI help to structure the article. You will also find PDF templates, ready to adjust. Enjoy!

Table of contents

  1. 1. Research First – Know the Market Before You Build
  2. 2. Positioning That Hits – Build Your Messaging Framework
  3. 3. SEO for Long -Term Growth
  4. 4. Paid Campaigns That Don’t Waste Budget
  5. 5. Product-Led Growth to Drive Activation
  6. 6. Lead Nurturing That Converts
  7. 🧩 Wrapping It Up

After you build your GTM strategy, don’t forget to apply these 3 ways to strengthen your product launch strategy.

1. Research First – Know the Market Before You Build

Before writing copy or running ads, you need to understand:

  • Who your audience is (ICP)
  • What they’re trying to achieve (JTBD)
  • What options they already have (competitor research)
  • Where the gaps are (market insight)

For Taskly, I built user personas based on team leads in fast-paced tech companies, analyzed gaps in competitors like Asana or Trello, and identified a segment craving automation without complexity.

📎 [Download the GTM Research Template]

👉 Deep-dive post

2. Positioning That Hits – Build Your Messaging Framework

Great messaging is the difference between “meh” and “take my money.”

Here’s how I crafted Taskly’s value proposition:

  • Core benefit: saves time by automating repetitive workflows
  • Messaging hierarchy: pain > solution > proof > CTA
  • Differentiator: unlike other tools, Taskly requires zero setup time

📎 Download the SaaS Messaging Builder

👉 Deep-dive post

3. SEO for Long -Term Growth

I designed an SEO strategy with three pillars:

  • TOFU: productivity tips, async work, remote collaboration
  • MOFU: task management tool comparisons, ROI of automation
  • BOFU: “Taskly vs Trello,” use-case landing pages

All mapped to keyword clusters + internal links.

📎 Download SEO Content Calendar Template

👉 Deep-dive post

4. Paid Campaigns That Don’t Waste Budget

SEO takes time. So I planned PPC campaigns on Google and LinkedIn to:

  • Drive early qualified traffic
  • Retarget visitors who didn’t convert
  • A/B test value propositions

The secret? Structure your ad sets by intent, not just demographics.

📎 Download the PPC Launch Checklist

👉 Deep-dive post

5. Product-Led Growth to Drive Activation

PLG isn’t just a buzzword. It’s how you:

  • Turn free trial users into power users
  • Trigger the “aha” moment fast
  • Use in-app guides and nudges to drive action

For Taskly, that meant auto-suggesting workflows based on user behavior.

📎 Download the PLG Tactics Sheet

👉 Deep-dive post

6. Lead Nurturing That Converts

Not everyone signs up right away. That’s why I built:

  • Segmented email nurture flows
  • Targeted webinar invites
  • Case studies based on industry or role

And of course, a lead scoring system to prioritize sales outreach.

📎 [SOON- Download the Lead Nurturing Template]

👉 [Deep-dive post coming soon]

🧩 Wrapping It Up

This GTM strategy for Taskly is more than a thought experiment – it’s a portfolio piece I use to demonstrate how I think, plan, and execute in B2B SaaS marketing.

As I publish the detailed posts for each section, I’ll link them here. In the meantime, you can grab all the templates to build your own strategy.

✨ Want updates? Follow Peak Demand on LinkedIn.