GTM, or go to market, is having a moment. From SaaS companies to startups trying to scale at the speed of light, hiring managers are realizing they don't just need a go-to-market strategy. They need someone who can actually run it.
If a go-to-market strategy is a comprehensive plan for launching a new product or service, then a GTM hire is someone who can operationalize revenue-generating efforts across the organization, turning that plan into pipeline.
"Whether that is in engineering, marketing, or direct sales, this hire ties their efforts directly to generating revenue rather than spending money to elevate teams and products, though that step is vital beforehand," explained Heather Petropoulos, Creative Engineering Recruiter with Artisan Talent.
But hiring managers, beware: While GTM roles are among the most critical for scaling companies, they are also the most misunderstood. Because the title means something different at every organization, the best candidates don't follow a predictable path, and hiring managers keep making the same mistakes.
Hiring a GTM specialist without understanding the function you need is like hiring a doctor without specifying whether you need a surgeon or a therapist. So before you dive into a new job description, let's take a step back and talk about what GTM actually means.
The go-to-market role is not branding. It's not content marketing. It's not PR. Those functions are valuable, but they sit upstream of what a true GTM hire owns.
GTM leaders don't just build roadmaps; they cultivate a shared set of beliefs that anchor every decision, campaign, and customer interaction. Strategies and playbooks are everywhere, but what's rare is the internal alignment and conviction to actually execute one.
That's the through line across every GTM role, regardless of title, in that this hire sees the existing situation and generates revenue through their efforts.
So what’s the starting point on the map once you understand the GTM mindset? We suggest getting familiar with the scope of some burgeoning GTM roles and where they live within an organization.
There is no single, all-encompassing GTM hire. Rather, there is a set of roles that together make up a GTM org, and each one owns a distinct piece of the revenue engine. The mistake most hiring managers make is conflating them, or trying to find one person who can do all of it. We know that never ends well.
Here are the key roles, what they own, and the order in which a sustainable GTM org is actually built.
This is your foundation hire. Nothing else works without it. A Marketing Operations Lead owns the tech stack, the data infrastructure, and the lead flow, which means they own your ability to evaluate everything else you're doing. Without clean MarOps, you can't track what's working, you can't trust your pipeline numbers, and you can't scale anything.
A strong MarOps Lead can make a mediocre agency productive. Without one, even a great agency underperforms. This is not a flashy hire, but it is the hire that every other tier depends on.
This person owns the pipeline number, full stop. They run the programs, allocate the budget across channels, and wake up every morning thinking about the sourced pipeline.
This is not a content role or a brand role. The Demand Gen Lead is an operator who has the authority and the accountability to hit a number.
Someone has to decide who you're selling to and why — and then make sure demand gen, content, and sales enablement are all aligned on that answer. That's the GTM Lead or VP of Marketing. They own positioning, segmentation, and orchestration across the revenue org. This is the hire that gives your strategy coherence.
Until you're past $50M ARR, you probably need one, not both. This person owns paid media, conversion rate optimization experiments, and partners with demand gen on campaign execution.
At scale, the function splits, but before that, it doesn't need to.
If outbound matters to your business (and in B2B SaaS, it almost always does), a GTM Engineer replaces your Sales Development team's manual prospecting with an automated, AI-enriched pipeline. This is the role most likely to make your agency's outbound and ABM work redundant. More on this one later thought.
What doesn't belong on this list? A generalist growth agency retainer. If you have your foundation and core roles staffed, an agency's role shrinks to narrow specialist work. If you don't have them, the agency was never going to perform. You were asking them to be your entire marketing department without providing the infrastructure, stack access, or buyer context to do so.
Even when hiring managers know what role they need, they often struggle to evaluate the candidates in front of them. The challenge is twofold.
First, results on a resume don't automatically indicate revenue-generating acumen. As Petropoulos explained:
"Many marketers and engineers achieve results from spending more money on technology and personnel, whereas a GTM hire sees the existing situation and generates revenue through their efforts. For example, engineers who understand enterprise scaling through tightening QA processes rather than adding components."
The flip side is also true. If a candidate's revenue instinct is too strong, their operational rigor often suffers. "If their revenue-generating/sales acumen is too high, they might be less operationally sound," she adds. "It is a balance."
Second, there is no standard GTM career path. These hires don't come pre-packaged with a recognizable credential or a linear resume. Petropoulos notes that some of the strongest GTM Engineers she has placed came up through traditional computer science degrees and classic engineering paths — but had an early-stage startup somewhere in their history that forced them to learn how revenue actually gets made.
"The necessary background often comes from the right team, company, or mentor rather than a defined path of education or professional experience," she said.
That shapes what you should be looking for in the interview room.
The biggest red flag? A candidate who is more focused on what support and processes are already in place than on demonstrating comfort navigating ambiguity. GTM hires build new pathways. They don't need a map, and if they're asking for one, that tells you something important.
The right hire isn't just about the resume; it's about how they think. These questions are designed to surface the operational instincts, revenue orientation, and comfort with ambiguity that separate strong GTM candidates from the ones who look good on paper.
Of all the GTM roles in play right now, the GTM Engineer is the one gaining the most ground while also generating the most confusion.
A GTM Engineer builds and maintains the automated systems that power outbound at scale: data enrichment pipelines, lead scoring models, CRM integrations, and AI-powered outbound sequences.
Their toolkit includes platforms like Clay, Apollo, Instantly, Zapier, Pipedream, SQL, and various APIs. They are, in short, the person who makes your outbound motion actually work without a team of SDRs doing it manually.
The numbers reflect the shift. GTM Engineering job postings grew 205% from 2024 to 2025, and LinkedIn listings more than doubled from roughly 1,400 in mid-2025 to over 3,000 by January 2026, according to ZoomInfo data. Salaries range from low to high six figures, depending on scope and seniority.
Haris Silic, VP at Artisan Talent, lends some insight into the reason for the explosion:
“One GTM engineer building the right systems can produce the pipeline output of three to five SDRs at a fraction of the cost. That's not an agency deliverable. That's an embedded operator who knows your stack, your data, and your buyer."
That last line is worth sitting with. What makes this role different from an agency arrangement isn't just cost — it's context. A GTM Engineer embedded in your org builds on institutional knowledge that a third party can never fully replicate. For companies at the right stage, it's not a question of whether to hire one. It's a question of how fast.
The bottom line: The team you're building isn't complicated: a MarOps foundation, a Demand Gen Lead, a GTM Lead, a GTM Engineer, and a vertical specialist on contract if the work calls for it. Everything else is optional until you have those in place. Scope each role correctly, hire for the mindset over the resume, and remember that the best GTM candidates have never needed a map, as they have the necessary skills to build one.
As companies continue to rethink their go-to-market strategies, having the right people in the right roles has never been more important. Haris Silic, Heather Petropoulos, and the broader team at Artisan Talent have spent years helping organizations navigate growth, build high-performing teams, and identify the talent needed to execute evolving GTM initiatives.
Whether you're refining your strategy, expanding into new markets, or determining which roles will have the greatest impact, Artisan Talent's experts are ready to help you find the people who don't just follow a map — they're equipped to draw one. The kind of talent that can navigate ambiguity, create new opportunities, and turn go-to-market strategies into measurable growth.