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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this session from Drive 2025, Sangram Vajre, Co-founder and CEO of GTM Partners, presents research-backed insights on building a repeatable go-to-market operating system for sustainable growth. (04:08) Drawing from analysis of 100+ companies, Vajre challenges traditional marketing approaches and emphasizes the critical importance of Net Revenue Retention (NRR) as the key metric for business survival. (11:28)
Co-founder and CEO of GTM Partners, a research and advisory firm focused on go-to-market strategy since 2021. Vajre has served as CMO at two companies that reached over $100 million in revenue, including Terminus and Pardot, giving him extensive experience scaling B2B marketing operations and go-to-market systems across different market conditions.
Companies with NRR over 120% can double their revenue in 3.8 years without adding a single new customer, while those below 75% NRR are literally dying. (14:14) Vajre shares a powerful example of a CMO who generated $50 million in pipeline but was let go because it was for the wrong ICP that wouldn't retain or expand. This metric should be the plumb line for every marketing decision, connecting all activities back to sustainable business growth rather than vanity metrics.
The most successful companies stick with proven strategies rather than constantly chasing new campaigns or tactics. (20:08) Using Chick-fil-A as an example, Vajre explains how they spent millions researching when to change their cow campaign, but research consistently showed the market preferred the existing approach. B2B marketers should focus on the "business of marketing" - driving actual growth - rather than "marketing the business" with flashy campaigns that don't move the needle.
In 1948, McDonald's cut their menu from everything including barbecue and orange juice to just three items: hamburgers, fries, and soda. (24:00) This focus led to explosive growth. Similarly, 60-70% of marketing activities could be eliminated without anyone noticing. The key is identifying what truly resonates with customers and being "boring" at executing those core elements consistently rather than spreading efforts across multiple initiatives.
Traditional sales and marketing alignment meetings are fundamentally flawed because they create defensive positioning from both sides. (28:43) Instead, frame discussions around go-to-market business problems. When you call it a "go-to-market meeting" focused on business outcomes, teams collaborate on solutions rather than defending their departments. This shift in language and focus drives actual alignment around revenue growth.
Successful companies achieve clarity on eight critical questions that create alignment, clarity, and trust across teams. (32:38) These questions focus on where you can grow the most (not just where you can grow), how to expand with customers, and what your differentiated point of view is. The system works because it forces parameter-driven decision making rather than open-ended speculation, leading to better business decisions and sustainable growth.