Choose your GTM model based on three factors: Average Contract Value (ACV), product complexity, and buyer persona. Sales-led works for high-ACV ($50K+) products that require customization and for executive decision-makers. Product-led works for low-ACV (under $1K), self-service products, and technical end-users. Hybrid works for $1K-$50K in ACV and for products that serve both self-service and enterprise needs.
Each model has different unit economics, scaling profiles, and team structures. Most successful companies eventually operate all three in parallel, but starting with the right primary motion is critical to early success. Your GTM motion is how you acquire customers and convince them to buy. The model you choose at the seed stage will influence your company’s trajectory for years to come.
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Choose your GTM model based on three factors: ACV, product complexity, and buyer persona. Learn which model fits your business and how to transition between models as you scale.
Your go-to-market motion is how you acquire customers and convince them to buy. There are three primary models: Product-Led Growth (PLG), Sales-Led Growth, and Hybrid.
Each has fundamentally different mechanics, economics, and team structures. The model you choose at the seed stage will influence your company’s trajectory for years.
In PLG, the product itself is your primary sales tool. Customers discover your product, try it for free (freemium model or free trial), experience its value, and upgrade to a paid plan.
The customer journey is:
Sales and marketing accelerate this journey, but the product itself drives conversion.
Also Read: GTM Metrics That Actually Matter: A Founder’s Dashboard
1. Slack: PLG Masters
Slack grew to $100M+ ARR through PLG. Their free tier gave unlimited users (but limited message history). Teams could try Slack for free with unlimited people. They experienced the value immediately through communication.
When they hit limitations, they paid. Slack’s activation was near-instant because the value was obvious. Their expansion came through team growth (more seats) and administrative controls (paid features).
2. Figma: PLG for Complexity
Figma is a complex design tool that could have been sold more aggressively. Instead, they bet on PLG. Free users could create unlimited files but had limited real-time collaboration.
The product was so intuitive and valuable that designers wanted to use it. As teams adopted it, they hit the collaboration limit and upgraded. By letting users experience the product directly, Figma avoided sales friction and built trust.
Also Read: How to Calculate Your GTM Budget: A Data-Driven Framework
In sales-led growth, salespeople are central to customer acquisition. Leads come from marketing (ads, content, events), sales development representatives qualify them, account executives have discovery calls and demos, and close deals through negotiation.
The customer journey is:
The salesperson guides the entire journey.
Also Read: 15 GTM Strategy Mistakes That Kill Startups (And How to Avoid Them)
1. Salesforce: Enterprise Sales Master
Salesforce is the canonical sales-led company. They built a $30B+ company primarily through enterprise sales. Their sales cycles were long (6-12 months), their ACV was high ($50K-$500K+), and their customers were complex to implement.
Salesforce invested heavily in sales teams, partners, and customer success. They expanded through new products and acquisitions, selling to existing customers.
2. HubSpot: Sales-Led to Hybrid
HubSpot started with a sales-led approach: Focused on mid-market and enterprise SMB customers. As they scaled, they built a freemium tier and a content marketing engine, transitioning to a hybrid model.
Their free CRM drove trial signups, which converted at high rates when companies grew. This combination of sales (for high-ACV enterprise deals) and freemium (for SMB self-service) lets them dominate both markets.
Hybrid GTM combines product-led and sales-led in parallel. You offer a free or freemium tier that drives SMB adoption and word of mouth. Simultaneously, your sales teams are selling to mid-market and enterprise customers with higher ACVs.
This gives you high volume (from PLG) and high revenue per customer (from sales-led).
The challenge of hybrid is that it requires two different organizational structures, messaging, and product strategies.
Also Read: GTM Strategy for Series B and Beyond: From Scaling to Market Leadership
1. Intercom: From PLG to Hybrid to Sales-Led
Intercom started with a free trial (leaning PLG). As they scaled, they added a sales team to serve enterprise customers seeking on-prem deployments and custom SLAs.
Their hybrid model lets them reach both SMB (who wanted simple chat) and enterprises (who want complex automation). As they matured, they shifted more toward sales-led for their core offering while keeping freemium for exploration and expansion.
2. Zapier: PLG with Sales for Enterprise
Zapier is primarily PLG (free tier with limited automation tasks). Users connect apps and create workflows in a self-service manner.
As Zapier grew, they added a sales team to handle enterprise customers who wanted custom integrations and SLA support. Their hybrid approach lets them dominate SMB while building enterprise relationships separately.
For annual ACV under $ 1,000, PLG is almost always the right choice. At $500 ACV, paying a salesperson $100K means you need to close 200 deals annually just to cover salary. This math doesn’t work.
$1,000-$10,000 ACV: Hybrid often works. You can support a small inside sales team that focuses on expansion and high-touch SMB deals, while freemium drives volume.
$10,000-$50,000 ACV: A hybrid typically makes sense. You have enough revenue per customer to support sales teams, but not so much that PLG is wasteful.
$50,000+ ACV: Sales-led is usually required. Enterprise customers expect personal attention, customization, and implementation support. PLG won’t work at this price point.
Simple, Self-Service: Slack, Figma, Stripe, Notion. If your product is intuitive and users can experience value in 15 minutes, PLG works well.
Moderately Complex: Hybrid often works. Free tier for SMB to self-discover, sales team for enterprise customers who need guidance.
Complex, Requires Customization: Salesforce, SAP, Oracle. If implementation takes months and your product requires customization for each customer, a sales-led approach is necessary.
End-Users (Technical): Developers, designers, operators who use the product directly. These people prefer product-led because they want to try before buying.
Decision-Makers (Non-Technical): CTOs, CFOs, VPs who decide on purchases but don’t use the product daily. These people prefer sales-led because they want education and assurance.
Mixed: Both technical and non-technical buyers. Hybrid often works: technical users discover through product, executives buy through sales.
Also Read: GTM Strategy for Series A Startups: Scaling What Works
Choose PLG if: ACV under $10K, simple product, end-users are technical decision-makers, you can achieve high activation and conversion rates, and your brand can sustain word-of-mouth.
Choose Sales-Led if: ACV above $50K, complex product, executive decision-makers, long implementation cycles, and need customization.
Choose Hybrid if: ACV between $5K-$50K, product works for both SMB and enterprise, mixed buyer personas, and you have resources for two teams.
Your initial choice doesn’t have to be permanent. Many successful companies transition between models as they grow.
You start with PLG (low CAC, high volume). As your product becomes critical to customer workflows, you realize that some customers would be willing to pay significantly more for support and customization. You add a sales team targeting these power users.
The risk: your new sales team might cannibalize freemium users who would have upgraded anyway.
The fix: clear segmentation. Sales team targets a specific segment (by company size, industry, use case) where they can deliver unique value beyond what freemium offers.
You start with sales-led (high ACV, complex product). As you scale and want to reduce CAC, you add a freemium tier to drive volume and reduce reliance on sales.
The risk: your sales team views freemium as competition rather than top-of-funnel.
The fix: clear incentive alignment. Freemium converts some users to paid at higher ACVs than you’d acquire through sales alone, so blended CAC decreases.
Starting hybrid is harder than starting with a single motion because you need to build and scale two GTM engines simultaneously.
Most companies should pick one and scale it to dominance before adding the second. The exception is if you have capital and experienced leadership for both.
Your GTM model choice is one of the most important decisions you’ll make as a founder. It determines your team structure, unit economics, sales cycle, CAC, and growth trajectory.
Choose based on your ACV, product complexity, and buyer persona. If your ACV is low and your product is simple, go PLG. If your ACV is high and your product is complex, go sales-led. If you’re in the middle, a hybrid can work, but it is harder to execute.
upGrowth helps B2B SaaS companies choose, build, and scale the right GTM model for their product and market. Our go-to-market strategy services specialize in helping companies transition between models or execute a hybrid GTM successfully.
1. Can I start hybrid and specialize later?
Yes, but it’s harder. Starting a hybrid means building two GTM engines simultaneously, which requires capital, talent, and focus. Most successful companies start with one and add the other when they’re dominant.
2. What’s the free-to-paid conversion rate I should target for PLG?
Industry average is 2-5%. The top quartile is 8-12%. Above 12% is exceptional. If your conversion is below 2%, your onboarding or value proposition needs work.
3. How much should I charge for a freemium tier?
The free tier should provide enough value that users can see your value proposition. But it should hit limitations quickly (after 1-3 weeks of regular use), so power users need to upgrade.
4. What’s a realistic sales cycle for sales-led companies?
SMB (under $50K ACV): 6-12 weeks. Mid-market ($50K-$250K ACV): 2-4 months. Enterprise ($250K+ ACV): 4-12 months.
5. Can a PLG company ever build an enterprise motion?
Yes. Once you have significant SMB adoption and a strong product, you can add a sales team targeting enterprise customers. They’ll sell on the strength of your existing brand and customer base.
6. How do I measure unit economics for hybrid companies?
Calculate separately for each motion. PLG CAC (marketing spend divided by free signups who convert to paid). Sales-led CAC (fully loaded salary and marketing spend divided by customers closed). Compare CAC payback, LTV, and efficiency ratio for each.
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