(And why adapting them usually makes things worse.)
Most healthcare GTM strategies start with a borrowed playbook. A framework that worked in SaaS, fintech, or verticalized B2B sales-led growth environments. Then it gets "customized for healthcare" with a few compliance slides and a longer sales cycle assumption. The results are always the same: activity increases, pipelines look healthy, but revenue lags far behind effort. The problem isn’t execution. It is that generic GTM playbooks are built on assumptions healthcare fundamentally violates.
Models accounts and contacts rather than complex decision ecosystems.
Models the true buying reality and ecosystem identity mapping.
Generic ICPs define who should want the product, not who can approve or control contracts.
Authority follows risk and external governance rather than just the org chart.
Healthcare buying is recursive and committee-driven.
Demand forms when operational pain becomes financial exposure.
Healthcare buys because it is compelled by risk and governance.
CRMs miss unengaged pressure and external decision controls.
Hover over each stage to see the shift toward Network Power.
Lead Focus
Long Cycles
Layer Mapping
Governance Control
Decision Intel
Healthcare GTM requires a different starting point: Decision Intelligence.
"In healthcare, competitive advantage does not stem from having more data. It comes directly from understanding what that data actually means and acting upon it with precision."
The only decision intelligence platform built natively for the complexity of the U.S. healthcare ecosystem.
Transform Your GTM Strategy