Outcome Marketing — GTM Blueprint
Reading Paths
CEO / leadership: Brand Snapshot → Brand Positioning → Conversations to Own → Solution Bets overview
Content creator / copywriter: Brand Voice → Language Guardrails → Conversations to Own → Channel Modifiers → Messaging by Audience
Designer: Visual Direction → Color System → Typography → Logo Usage → Imagery
AI agent system prompt: Layers 1–3 for strategic context. Add Brand Voice + Channel Modifiers for execution. This HTML file is both human-readable and machine-parseable by design.
Brand Snapshot
What Outcome Marketing Is
Outcome Marketing is a methodology and a marketplace for B2B companies — primarily SaaS and Technology Services, $1M–$100M in revenue. The methodology — as detailed in the book Outcome Marketing — connects executive alignment, go-to-market strategy, and execution into a single measurable system. The marketplace provides curated practitioners who deliver it. AI-accelerated tools amplify quality and delivery. The methodology stays with the company, not the consultant.
Scope Boundary
Outcome Marketing is not an agency. We own the methodology, curate the practitioners, conduct peer reviews, and provide AI tools. Delivery is through the practitioner network. When we say "we" in a services context, we mean the OM ecosystem.
Services pages describe the capabilities of the network — what an OM practitioner engagement delivers — not services performed by Outcome Marketing directly.
Intellectual Hierarchy
The book (Outcome Marketing, 2024) is the methodology — the full depth of the what and why. Two paths operationalize it:
- OM LLC delivery methodology turns it into a practitioner playbook: how to run engagements, deliver the GTM Blueprint, and sustain execution.
- Saprel tools accelerate and automate delivery — the technology platform underneath.
The book feeds both. They're parallel, not sequential.
Setup → Execute → Scale:
- Setup = the GTM Blueprint (positioning, bets, messaging, visual identity — the living artifact that governs the go-to-market)
- Execute = the delivery methodology (operational cadence, practitioner-led)
- Scale = the outcome state — what happens when Setup and Execute hold and the Five Patterns stop pulling the company back into reset
Methodology endures. Outcomes compound.
Category
Fractional marketing leadership for B2B technology companies.
We compete within the established category. Our differentiation is how we deliver: methodology-backed, practitioner-curated, AI-accelerated. We don't need to create a new category — we need to be the best answer within the existing one.
ICP
Firmographics
Primary: B2B SaaS and Technology Services companies, $1M–$100M. Growth-stage companies where the CEO is still involved in marketing decisions, marketing is underperforming relative to the product, and the gap between strategy and execution is the core problem.
Secondary: B2B companies with complex sales outside SaaS/Tech Services. The methodology applies broadly but our deepest proof, language, and practitioners are concentrated in B2B SaaS and Technology Services.
Personas
They experience the five patterns. They need marketing to stop being a black box. They arrive via the book (DIY) or homepage (Done With You).
They join for community, deal flow, and AI tools. They stay because they're more productive inside the network than outside it.
Detailed personas (Who They Are in a Decision / How to Win Them) maintained in companion Persona Slides.
The Five Patterns
OM's diagnostic framework. CEOs recognize these immediately.
| 1. Unaligned Bets | Exec team can't agree on where to focus. Direction changes quarterly. No shared GTM strategy — every department is running a different playbook. |
| 2. Random Acts of Marketing | Ten campaigns running. None measured. No connection to the customer journey — no one knows what's working or where buyers actually are in their decision. |
| 3. Agency Churn & Reset | New agency, new exec, new direction — any reset sends the company back to setup and prevents it from reaching scale. The pattern isn't churn itself; it's that the company never stays in execution long enough to compound. |
| 4. Sales & Marketing Finger-Pointing | "Marketing's leads are garbage." "Sales can't close." No shared definitions, no shared targets, no shared accountability. |
| 5. Customer Neglect | All energy on acquisition. Existing customers — your easiest path to expansion revenue and your best source of advocacy — get ignored. |
The common thread: each pattern is a different way the company gets pulled back into setup and prevented from reaching scale — and all five are areas the business can control. The diagnostic maps to the book's five core capabilities: Unaligned Bets → Products & Markets, Random Acts → Customer Journey, Agency Churn & Reset → Scale, Sales & Marketing Finger-Pointing → Sales & Marketing, Customer Neglect → Customer Focus.
Brand Positioning
Different formats of the same truth. AI agents and copywriters pull the version that fits the context.
Positioning Statement
For B2B technology CEOs who can't connect marketing spend to revenue, Outcome Marketing is a fractional marketing practice backed by a proven system, curated practitioners, and AI-accelerated tools — unlike traditional approaches where strategy and execution are disconnected and every new hire or agency resets the strategy.
Structure: Geoffrey Moore — For [target] who [need], [brand] is a [category] that [benefit], unlike [alternative].
Vision / Mission
Values
The marketplace works for practitioners.
We measure pipeline, not status meetings.
Great practitioners make the methodology work.
Bets are hypotheses. Data tells you what's working.
Five Cards
B2B CEOs where marketing is a black box.
Proven system + curated practitioners + AI tools.
Can't draw a line from marketing spend to revenue. Every agency resets the strategy.
Trusted, experienced practitioners, a proven-in-the-field methodology, a system that stays with your company.
Marketing becomes a growth driver, not a cost center.
The differentiator is tangible: GTM Blueprint, pain map, and site config are client-owned documents any practitioner can pick up on day one.
Brand Story
B2B marketing is often a black box. Money goes in. Nobody can tell you what comes out. Outcome Marketing connects executive alignment, go-to-market strategy, and execution into a single measurable system. Curated practitioners deliver it — experienced operators who've been where you are. AI tools accelerate it. The methodology stays with the company even when the practitioner changes. The result: marketing that works like a growth driver, not a lottery ticket.
Elevator Pitch
Talk to any B2B CEO about their marketing and you'll hear the same patterns — agencies that reset, campaigns nobody measured, sales blaming marketing. There's never a system connecting strategy to execution to revenue. We built that system — and we back it with practitioners who've been in your chair.
Structure: Lead with the pain (open the story loop) → describe the solution → leave the "How" incomplete to create curiosity. Detail comes in the next five minutes of conversation.
Brand Voice
Systematic
How we sound in our industry
We speak in systems, not slogans. Specific claims backed by specific frameworks. Name the problem before presenting the solution.
Not: Academic, dry, or jargon-heavy. If a sentence needs a glossary, rewrite it.
Candid
Who we are as people
We name uncomfortable truths — "your agency reset you," "your metrics are vanity metrics." The CEO isn't stupid; they just didn't have the right framework.
Not: Sarcastic, superior, or preachy. Never condescending toward agencies, freelancers, or anyone else.
Forward-Looking
Our vision and ambition
Confident about where the market is going, honest about what's still being built. Reference AI as a capability and direction, not as hype.
Not: Buzzword-driven. We don't use "revolutionize," "game-changing," or "cutting-edge."
Style Rules
- Active voice. "The methodology connects strategy to execution" not "strategy and execution are connected by the methodology."
- Plain English. Never assume the reader has read the book.
- Lead with the pain. Open the story loop with the problem before presenting the solution.
- Specificity over superlatives. "2X average selling price in 6 months" not "dramatically improved results."
- Name the framework. Use OM terminology — bets, conversations to own, SALs not MQLs — but explain on first use.
Language Guardrails
✓ Claims We Make
- We architected the methodology — the synthesis and sequencing is our value
- The methodology stays with the company, not the consultant
- Curated practitioners with 15+ years experience
- Marketing measured on pipeline and revenue, not lead volume
- The book is the on-ramp — it creates informed buyers
- Practitioners support OM principles and bring their own judgment
✗ Claims We Do Not Make
- "We invented these frameworks" — we architected the methodology
- "Guaranteed results" — we say "predictable outcomes when PMF and exec alignment are in place"
- "This replaces your team" — we give your team a system
- "We're a marketing agency" — we're a methodology-driven marketplace
- "Proprietary AI" — our tools use LLMs; the methodology is the IP
✓ Language We Use
- "Methodology" / "Playbook" (top-of-funnel)
- "Predictable" over "guaranteed"
- "System" over "solution"
- "Curated" not "vetted" or "screened"
- "Practitioners" not "consultants" or "freelancers"
- "Black box" / "Growth driver" / "Five patterns"
✗ Language We Avoid
- "Disrupting" / "revolutionizing" / "game-changing"
- "Cutting-edge" / "best-in-class" / "world-class"
- "Guaranteed ROI" or any results guarantee
- "Full-service agency" / "Directory" / "Listing"
- Naming specific competitors — define the category, let others position relative to us
Competitor guardrail: We don't name competitors. We define categories of alternatives: "agencies," "fractional CMO networks," "directories." When asked about comparisons directly, we answer factually and let differentiators speak.
Proof standard: Anonymized result with specific metric, identified company stage, clear before/after framing. Practitioners reference results from prior engagements using anonymized company descriptions — never naming the specific companies.
Conversations to Own
Three CEO-facing conversations plus one practitioner-facing conversation. The book is the content engine that feeds all three CEO-facing CtOs.
CEO-Facing
1. Outcome Marketing — Predictable Pipeline Through a Proven System
Who it's for: CEOs experiencing the five patterns
Core tension: CEOs invest in marketing but can't connect spend to revenue. Every new agency or hire resets the strategy.
Our POV: The gap between strategy and execution is the root problem. The Bets-to-Story system forces CEO decisions before money gets spent — then connects bets to conversations, positioning, execution, and measurement in a single chain.
Not competing on: Tactical execution tips or channel-specific playbooks in isolation.
Content themes: Five patterns, Bets-to-Story, why agencies reset you, setup → execute → scale, SALs not MQLs, LTV:CAC, customer advocacy
CEO-Facing
2. Fractional CMO — Unactivated Marketing
Who it's for: CEOs with no marketing function, immature marketing, or marketing running without a system
Core tension: The company may have product-market fit, but the go-to-market bets aren't focused or persistent enough to let marketing compound. Every quarter feels like a reset. They've tried an agency or a junior hire — got activity without results. Trust eroded.
Our POV: Your marketing isn't broken — it was never activated. You need a system and someone who's done it at your stage. A fractional CMO backed by methodology and AI tools doesn't just advise — they build the infrastructure, connect strategy to execution, and measure on revenue.
Not competing in: Fractional CMO staffing or recruiting platforms.
Content themes: Unactivated marketing, fractional CMO vs. full-time, fractional CMO + AI, engagement phases, practitioner productivity
CEO-Facing
3. AI Marketing Agents — Autonomous AI, Grounded in Methodology
Who it's for: CEOs investing in AI but seeing no measurable marketing impact, and CEOs whose websites and brand presence aren't structured for how AI-era buyers find information
Core tension: Companies are buying AI tools but nothing changes. The tools have no strategy to execute against — no positioning, no bets, no brand voice, no measurement framework. AI without methodology is just faster noise. Meanwhile, AI is forming buyer opinions before anyone visits your site.
Our POV: AI agents are only as good as the methodology they execute. Ours are grounded in the GTM Blueprint — they read strategy documents to apply brand voice, generate content, build pages, and analyze markets. Strategy that builds itself isn't a metaphor: the GTM Blueprint is the build spec, the website gets built in weeks, and strategy and execution can't drift apart because they're the same artifact.
Not competing on: Brand identity design (logo, visual identity creation). We operationalize existing brand assets. Not selling point solutions or generic AI toolkits.
Content themes: AI without methodology fails, autonomous agents grounded in strategy, machine-readable style guides, the end of CMS, AEO and zero-click, strategy documents as build specs, why brand guides fail
Practitioner-Facing
4. The Practitioner Network — You Don't Have to Work Alone
Who it's for: Experienced fractional CMOs, CXOs, agency principals, and freelancers who want consistent deal flow without giving up independence
Core tension: Fractional work is rewarding but isolating. No sounding board when you're stuck on a client problem. No peers to bring into an engagement when the scope exceeds your expertise. Deal flow is feast or famine. And every firm that offers structure wants to own your client relationships.
Our POV: A network of experienced operators who show up for each other — sharing deal flow, conducting peer reviews, and building something none of them could build alone. Practitioner-first economics: you capture the value you create. The methodology is portable infrastructure, not a franchise — any practitioner can pick up where the last one left off, and the system stays with the company. The more you contribute, the more the network works for you.
Not competing on: Staffing or recruiting.
Discovery model: This is a reputation and referral CtO, not a search-driven one. Keyword volume for "fractional CMO network" and related terms is 0–10/mo. Site pages serving this CtO need to be credible on landing, not discoverable via search. Practitioner recruitment conversations lead with economics and deal flow — that's what gets the meeting. Site pages and LinkedIn content lead with belonging and peer community. Both are true; the audience enters from different doors.
Content themes: Belonging and peer community, meritocratic deal flow, independence preserved, peer reviews, methodology as shared language, AI practitioner productivity
Competitive Landscape
Internal reference only — competitor names are never used in external-facing content. We define categories of alternatives; we don't name competitors.
Blue Ocean Canvas
| Capability | Chief Outsiders | CMOx | Chameleon | Kalungi | OM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methodology | Growth Gears book. Insight → Strategy → Execution. Assumes exec alignment. Industry-agnostic. | Practitioner training book. Not client-facing. | None. People-driven, embed-and-transform. | T2D3 book + masterclass + certification. SaaS-specific. | Book + complete GTM system. Starts with exec alignment (Bets + Story) before marketing begins. |
| AI tools | GrowthGears® OS. Client-facing. AI trained on 5,000+ engagements. | None | Collective OS — agency-to-agency partnership matching. Not client delivery. | None | Client-facing. System lives in client's documents. |
| Practitioner economics | W-2. Company captures value. | Training fees to CMOx. | Hybrid. 140 FTE + 150 contractors. | Agency model. Kalungi bills, pays CMOs. | Practitioners capture value. 10% reinvested. Structural moat. |
| Peer community | Strong. 120+ CMOs/CSOs. Peer reviews. Team Outsiders execution layer. | Accelerator community | Collective OS network (1,000 agencies). Cross-firm partnerships. | Internal team | Smaller, curated. Peer reviews. |
White Space
The white space is the combination: practitioner-first economics, a methodology that starts with executive alignment before marketing begins, AI that amplifies productivity and the caliber of marketing clients receive, and a system where any practitioner can pick up where the last one left off. Competitors may match one element. Nobody combines all four.
Solution Bets
| Bet | Product | Market | CtO | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Strategy-to-Website | AI-accelerated GTM Blueprint → website build → ongoing management | B2B companies, $2M–$50M | CtO 3 | Primary — near-term revenue |
| 2. Fractional Marketing | Fractional CMO / advisory / specialist — methodology-led | B2B SaaS/Tech, $1M–$100M | CtO 2 | Primary — core business |
The book is the conceptual foundation and content engine — it feeds both bets but isn't a bet itself.
Bet 1: Strategy-to-Website
Current State
Why Buy: Website doesn't tell the story. Brand guides are PDFs filed away. Strategy and execution drift apart immediately. Every update requires a dev ticket. A full rebuild takes 6–12 weeks and costs $30–80K.
Why Now: AI is forming buyer opinions before anyone visits your site. If your website isn't structured for AI consumption, you're invisible to the next generation of buyers.
Future State
Why Us: Strategy documents ARE build specs. AI reads them to generate pages with correct voice, CTAs, keywords, and schema. AEO-ready by design. Complete website in 3–4 weeks at $10–15K.
Outcomes: Strategy and execution can never drift apart. Ongoing management ($1,500/mo) includes SEO, AEO, content, and PPC — sticky because it's GTM judgment, not just tasks.
Bet 2: Fractional Marketing
Current State
Why Buy: Marketing is a black box — unactivated or immature. Can't draw a line from spend to revenue. Agencies reset every 12 months. Sales and marketing point fingers.
Why Now: Growth stalls. Revenue stays lumpy. A marketing leader gets fired every 18 months. The CEO is refereeing fights instead of running the business.
Future State
Why Us: A proven system delivered by curated practitioners with 15+ years experience. AI tools make practitioners 3–5x more productive. Peer reviews from the network. The methodology stays with the company.
Outcomes: Predictable pipeline generation. Marketing measured on revenue contribution. Sales and marketing aligned. A system that compounds instead of resetting.
Capabilities include Fractional PMM, Customer Journey, RevOps, SaaS Pricing, and Sales Playbook — these are engagement variants within Bet 2, not separate products.
Messaging by Audience
For CEOs — B2B SaaS
One-liner
A proven methodology, curated practitioners, and AI-accelerated tools that turn marketing from a black box into a predictable growth engine.
Pain language they use
- "We were doing a lot of things and not sure what was working"
- "I can't draw a line from marketing spend to revenue"
- "Every agency promises the world and delivers a PDF"
- "I need to scale past founder-led sales"
- "We had great differentiators but couldn't tell our story"
Key Objection Responses
| Objection | Response |
|---|---|
| "We've tried agencies and it never sticks" | That's the agency churn cycle — one of the five patterns. The issue isn't the agency, it's that there's no system connecting strategy to execution. OM gives you a methodology that stays. |
| "I don't have budget for a fractional CMO" | Compare it to what you're spending: agency ($120K/year) + 12-month reset cycles. A fractional CMO at $15K/month with AI tools delivers better outcomes at lower total cost — and the knowledge stays. |
| "I already have a marketing person/team" | Great — they need a system. The fractional CMO builds the infrastructure — positioning, metrics, playbooks — then your team runs it. We elevate what you have, we don't replace it. |
| "How do I know this will work?" | Predictable outcomes depend on two prerequisites: product-market fit and executive alignment. If those are in place, the methodology is proven. If they aren't, Phase 1 establishes them. |
For CEOs — Technology Services
One-liner
Stop depending on your personal network for pipeline. A system that turns marketing into a predictable, measurable growth channel.
For Practitioners
One-liner
A professional home for experienced marketing operators — proven methodology, AI tools, peer community, and deal flow where you capture the value you create.
Key Objection Responses
| Objection | Response |
|---|---|
| "I have my own methodology" | Good — you should. Practitioners support the principles and bring their own judgment. Foundation, not a replacement for your expertise. |
| "What's in it for me financially?" | Practitioner-first economics. You capture the value you create. 10% commission reinvests into lead generation. Founders pay the same rate. |
| "Why wouldn't I just stay independent?" | You can. Inside the network: community, peer reviews, AI tools (3–5x productivity), deal flow, and a brand that compounds credibility for everyone. |
Proof Inventory
Proof organized by bet.
Bet 1 — Strategy-to-Website
GTM build from zero: Guided startup from zero to exceeding $1M in revenue using Outcome Marketing framework
Category leadership: +200% revenue growth years in a row in new market category for account-based selling
Bet 2 — Fractional Marketing
Marketing activation: Unified voice, ABM from $0 to $4.6M pipeline, webinar registrations +379%, organic +23%
Advisory / sherpa model: 2X revenue, 10X company value, 10X SEO in 12 months. CEO: "It felt like a yearlong marketing masterclass."
Brand-to-pipeline: #1 ecosystem partner. 40% YoY growth for 4 consecutive years.
Repositioning: 2X average selling price in 6 months
Pipeline transformation: 4X pipeline growth, 80% outbound → 60% digital
SDR optimization: 95% productivity increase across three software companies
Proof Gaps
- 3–5 case studies (priority: first OM marketplace case study, DodiHome)
- 5–10 Google Reviews (OM-attributed engagements)
- 2–3 practitioner testimonials ("why I joined OM")
Visual Direction
Visual personality: Modern, confident, systematic, premium. The brand looks like a methodology company with depth — not a tech startup, not a consulting firm.
Emotional tone: Calm authority. Deep indigo with clean typography says "we know what we're doing." Periwinkle accents and generous whitespace say "this is approachable."
✓ Visual Do's
- Lead with deep indigo backgrounds
- Periwinkle as primary action color
- Wave/geometric textures for depth and motion
- Clean, structured layouts mirroring methodology
- Professional photography — real people, business contexts
- Book imagery as a visual anchor
✗ Visual Don'ts
- Generic stock "business people"
- Bright white as primary background (use off-white/frost)
- Cluttered layouts or competing elements
- Overly playful illustration
- Dark/moody tech aesthetic — approachable, not brooding
- Anything that looks like a traditional agency or consulting firm
Color System
Primary
Secondary
Neutrals
Usage Guidance
Deep Indigo dominates (60–70%) — hero sections, nav, footers, dark cards. Periwinkle Blue — CTAs, highlights, active states. Frost Blue — content area backgrounds. Lavender sparingly — secondary accents. Royal Blue — gradient endpoints, links.
Accessibility: White on Deep Indigo passes WCAG AAA. Periwinkle on Deep Indigo passes AA for large text. Never use Lavender for body text.
Color in Context
Typography
Headlines — Mont
This is a Main Headline
Weights: Bold, Regular, ExtraLight. Mont is licensed — Poppins is the web fallback.
Body — Poppins
Poppins Light for body text. Clean, geometric, readable at all sizes.
Weights: 200–700. Google Fonts.
Type Hierarchy — Rendered
Every SMB Deserves Good Marketing
A Proven System for Predictable Growth
The Methodology Stays With Your Company
Talk to any B2B CEO about their marketing and you'll hear the same five patterns — agencies that reset every 12 months, campaigns nobody measured, sales blaming marketing. The problem isn't the people. It's that there's no system connecting strategy to execution.
Methodology Endures. Outcomes Compound.
Logo Usage
Primary mark: "OM" icon — stylized, dimensional letterform in signature gradient (indigo → periwinkle → lavender). Used alongside "Outcome Marketing" wordmark.
Clear space: Minimum 1x on all sides, where x = the height of the OM icon mark. Scale proportionally when resizing. No text, images, patterns, or page edges may enter the exclusion zone.
Don’ts: Don’t rotate, recolor, distort, place on busy backgrounds, or separate icon from wordmark in formal contexts.
Logo Lockups
Default. Use for most applications — website, documents, presentations, partner materials.
Hero sections, dark cards, Deep Indigo backgrounds, social banners.
Social avatars, favicons, square placements where the wordmark won’t fit.
Print, single-color contexts, co-branding where the gradient can’t reproduce.
Imagery & Brand Elements
Photography: Professional, editorial quality. Real people in business contexts. The book as a visual anchor. AI-generated professional photography acceptable when on-brand.
Brand elements: Wave/curve patterns (momentum), grid patterns (methodology), diamond/lattice patterns (precision), gradient orbs (indigo → periwinkle → lavender). Subtle — adds depth without competing with content.
Channel Modifiers
Every channel follows the same arc: surface the pain, make inaction unacceptable, show how the situation improves, prove it. This maps to the positioning framework — Challenges → Consequences → Capabilities → Outcomes. Channels differ by where you enter the journey: outbound initiates at the top, inbound meets prospects who've already identified a need.
Website
Audience: CEOs (primary). CtOs: All — homepage routes to bets.
Posture: Homepage and about pages are assertive — state what OM is and why it exists. Services pages serve a dual function: assertive positioning for visitors AND inbound SEO capture for category keywords. Blog/resource pages are inbound. CTAs route toward conversion.
Tone: Core voice — no adjustment. Services pages describe network capabilities, not OM direct delivery.
CTAs: Primary: "Talk to an Advisor" (DWY — qualified conversation). Secondary: "Browse the Marketplace" or "Find a Practitioner" (explore before committing). Tertiary: "Get the Book" (DIY path). Consider: "Book a Strategy Workshop" for prospects ready for Phase 1.
✓ Strong Website Copy
"Talk to any B2B CEO about their marketing and you'll hear the same five patterns — agencies that reset every 12 months, campaigns nobody measured, sales blaming marketing, exec teams pulling in different directions, and customers getting ignored after the deal closes. The problem isn't the people. It's that there's no system connecting strategy to execution to revenue. Outcome Marketing is a fractional marketing practice that connects all three — proven methodology, curated practitioners, AI-accelerated tools. The methodology stays with your company, not the consultant."
✗ Weak Website Copy
"Outcome Marketing is a revolutionary methodology-driven marketplace that leverages cutting-edge AI and best-in-class fractional CMOs to deliver world-class marketing solutions for forward-thinking B2B companies looking to disrupt their markets."
Audience: Both CEOs and practitioners. CtO: All four.
Goal: Brand authority, thought leadership, community. Primary social channel.
Tone: More personal, candid turned up. First-person from Angus, Neil, or practitioners. Stories over abstractions.
Content types: Best practices and methodology insights (five patterns, bets-to-story). AI innovation in marketing. Case studies and engagement stories. LinkedIn Lives with practitioners (repurposed to YouTube, blog, social clips).
YouTube
Audience: CEOs and practitioners. CtO: 1, 2, 4.
Goal: Methodology deep-dives and community archive. Two content types: (1) Produced best-practice demos — screen recordings, methodology walkthroughs, tool demos. "Smart colleague at a whiteboard." (2) LinkedIn Live archive — practitioner conversations, case study walkthroughs, Q&A.
Audience: CEOs (nurture) and practitioners (onboarding/community). CtO: 1, 2 for CEOs; 4 for practitioners.
Goal: Nurture prospects toward marketplace engagement. Follow up on advisor conversations. Practitioner onboarding and community updates. From a person (Angus/Neil), not "the OM team." Short, specific, clear next step.
Blog / Content
Audience: CEOs (primary), practitioners (secondary). CtO: All four.
Goal: SEO/AEO, methodology education. Every post connects to a CtO and a pattern. 800–1500 words.
Content engine: Start with LinkedIn Lives and practitioner conversations. AI repurposes recordings into blog posts, case studies, social clips, and templates. LinkedIn Live transcript → blog post or case study is the primary workflow. The book provides the conceptual foundation and framework language — chapters inform content themes but the book itself is a reference for informed buyers, not a mass-market funnel.
Slack Community
Audience: Practitioners (primary), with client and alumni access to shared spaces. CtO: 4.
Goal: Practitioner peer support and deal flow. This is where the belonging promise becomes real — daily peer support, not quarterly check-ins. Most casual, most human. No brand voice policing. Mixed-audience spaces — no competitor bashing or proprietary details.
Execution Governance
Ownership
Brand sign-off: Angus Robertson + Neil Anderson (co-founders, shared authority)
Book co-author: Brad Whittington (credited as co-author; not involved in ongoing operations)
This Guide Governs
All external-facing communication: website, social, email, blog, sales materials, AI-generated content, practitioner onboarding, and anything a prospect, customer, or partner might see.
How AI Systems Reference This Guide
Include Layers 1–3 in system prompts for strategic context. Add Channel Modifiers for channel-specific content. This HTML file is both human-readable and machine-readable by design.
Review Triggers
Review quarterly or when: marketplace engagement patterns shift, new practitioner type joins, AI tools ship (update claims to "current"), competitive landscape changes, book updated, or any signal from the Learning Loop. Signal-based, not ritual-based.
Companion Documents
- Persona Slides — 2-slide template per persona (Who They Are in a Decision / How to Win Them). Essential for AI agent page-level targeting.
- Pain Map — Operational content planning: CtOs → Personas → Pains → SEO Keywords → Content → Proof. Essential for AI agent content generation.
- Digital Marketing Assessment — GA4/GSC/competitive data informing positioning and market strategy.
Strategy informs this guide. This guide governs execution. The companion docs route strategy to content and pages.
Version History
| Version | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| v12 | 20260311 | CtO 4 reframed: subtitle from "Practitioner-First Economics, Methodology Portability" to "You Don't Have to Work Alone." Belonging-first narrative with three-layer value stack (belonging → economics → freedom). "Two doors" note added to discovery model (recruitment leads with economics, site/LinkedIn lead with belonging). "deliver peer reviews" → "conduct peer reviews" throughout (Neil feedback). Scope Boundary updated ("facilitate" → "conduct"). Slack Community channel modifier expanded with belonging connection. Contact form dropdown updated ("Joining the OM Network" → "Join OM Network"). |
| v11 | 20260308 | Document renamed to GTM Blueprint (title, nav, hero). CtO 3 renamed from "AI-Accelerated Website — Strategy That Builds Itself" to "AI Marketing Agents — Autonomous AI, Grounded in Methodology" — full card rewrite (buyer search language, methodology-grounded framing). CtO 4 reframed: subtitle to "Practitioner-First Economics, Methodology Portability," discovery model note added (reputation/referral, not search-driven). CtO 2 core tension refined (PMF may exist but bets aren't focused/persistent enough — every quarter resets). CEO/practitioner audience tags added to all four CtO cards. Certification language removed from CtO 2 and CtO 4 "Not competing" lines (on roadmap via LinkedIn Learning). Book reference added to Brand Snapshot methodology sentence. Version corrected from v9 display to v11. |
| v10 | 20260307 | Neil-reviewed updates from March 5 session: Agency Churn & Reset definition broadened (label stays, definition widens to any reset that prevents compounding). Intellectual hierarchy section added (book as shared foundation, OM delivery methodology and Saprel tools as parallel paths). Five Patterns mapped to book's five core capabilities (internal reference). Brand Blueprint renamed to GTM Blueprint in positioning contexts (style guide / brand book retained for SEO and customer-facing language). Setup → Execute → Scale framework defined: Setup = GTM Blueprint, Execute = delivery methodology, Scale = outcome state. "Methodology endures. Outcomes compound." tagline anchored. |
| v9 | 20260303 | Layer 4 visual overhaul: logo lockups with transparent embedded assets (4 official variants — primary, reversed, icon only, monochrome), rendered type hierarchy with live samples, color-in-context component examples. Logo clear space specified (1x = icon height). "15+ years average experience" simplified. Vision/Mission approved. Open Gaps reduced to 1. |
| v8 | 20260228 | Neil feedback incorporated: values adopted, CtO acronym, "architected" language, Five Cards differentiator, proof standard clarity, visual motion, logo gap marker, website posture. |
| v7 | 20260225 | Initial guide. Pre-launch — pending founder review and operationalization. |
Open Gaps
| # | Gap | Owner | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | First OM marketplace case study — Critical for CtO 1 + CtO 2. | Neil | Critical |