Article
Top 5 Go-to-Market Blindspots for North American Scale-Ups

In North America, it can be common for growth-stage companies to bump into unforeseen hurdles as they chart their course to success. These challenges tend to stem from blindspots in their go-to-market (GTM) strategies, hindering their scalability, customer acquisition, and market penetration. 

And of course, we want you to be prepared for them, so here are five of the most common pitfalls and how to address them.

1. Assuming product-market fit is “solved”  

Don’t mistake early traction for permanent product-market fit, it will only lead to plateaued growth. For example, a cybersecurity SaaS company might initially gain momentum with mid-market clients but struggle to penetrate enterprise accounts because its compliance features don’t meet Fortune 500 standards. This disconnect arises when teams focus on scaling operations rather than continuously validating evolving customer needs.  

How to fix it: 

Implement regular “fit audits” where cross-functional teams analyze churn reasons, feature adoption rates, and unmet needs in high-value segments. Use win/loss interviews to pressure-test assumptions, and allocate around 20% of R&D resources to iterating based on frontline feedback.  

2. Underestimating the complexity of market education  

Deep-tech firms often fall into the trap of believing their innovation’s technical superiority guarantees adoption. Example: A quantum computing start-up might struggle to convert enterprise buyers because IT leaders lack context to evaluate its ROI against traditional cloud solutions. Without bridging this knowledge gap, even transformative solutions stall in elongated sales cycles.  

How to fix it: 

Build an education-driven GTM motion. Develop interactive tools like ROI calculators tailored to CFOs, host micro-certifications for technical buyers, and publish benchmark reports comparing legacy vs. new approaches. Ensure marketing budgets focus on  educational content, not just promotional messaging.  

3. Treating North America as a monolithic market  

Expanding U.S. or Canadian operations without regional customization is a costly error. An example of this: A European fintech scale-up might use the same messaging in Silicon Valley and Texas, unaware that Bay Area tech teams prioritize API flexibility while Texan energy firms value compliance with local data residency laws.  

How to fix it: 

  • Map regional sub-segments using localized criteria:  
    • Regulatory requirements (e.g., CCPA vs. PIPEDA)  
    • Industry maturity (tech-first vs. traditional sectors)  
    • Economic drivers (venture-funded startups vs. bootstrapped SMBs)  
  • Develop customized playbook for each sub-segment  

4. Overlooking the hidden costs of founder-led sales  

Many scale-ups delay building a repeatable sales machine, relying too long on founder charisma. While this works early on, it creates bottlenecks during growth spurts. One AI logistics company lost 40% of its pipeline for six months after the CEO (the primary seller) shifted focus to fundraising.  

How to fix it: 

  • Before hitting $5M ARR, codify the sales process into a playbook documenting:  
    • Ideal customer profiles (beyond firmographics)  
    • Objection-handling frameworks for common technical/legal pushback  
    • Internal handoff protocols (between sales, legal, and customer success)
  • Ensure first-line managers coach reps, reducing dependency on founders.  

5. Confusing activity with strategic alignment  

Leadership teams often pride themselves on having “aligned” GTM strategies, only to discover later that sales prioritizes short-term upsells while product focuses on long-term platform vision. A healthtech scale-up learned this the hard way when sales reps pushed standalone modules to hit quotas, undermining the company’s integrated ecosystem positioning.  

How to fix it: 

  • Conduct a quarterly “GTM alignment sprint”:  
    • Scorecard departments on shared KPIs (e.g. Net revenue retention)  
    • Run war-gaming workshops where teams resolve conflicting priorities  
    • Tie a percentage of leadership bonuses to cross-functional metrics like solution adoption rates.

Turning blindspots into breakthroughs  

North America’s competitive landscape leaves little room for unaddressed GTM gaps. The most successful scale-ups institutionalize continuous learning – recognizing their GTM strategy as a living thing, not a one-time plan. 

By embracing localized segmentation, founder-to-process transitions, and alignment habits, companies can convert these common blindspots into catalysts for efficient, sustainable growth.

Think you’re ready to expand? Take our Expansion Readiness Assessment.

Article
Stuart Kelly
MD, North America

GTM Strategy | Scaling | Partnerships | Growth