Unified GTM Portfolio Marketing

Unified Go-to-Market through Portfolio Marketing and Contextual Value

The Need for a Unified Approach in Today’s Tech Landscape

In today’s competitive tech environment, successful companies are those that not only offer a comprehensive portfolio of solutions but also align their go-to-market (GTM) strategies across marketing, sales, and product teams. As these teams work together to connect with customers, the complexity of conversations increases. This is where portfolio marketing, combined with a sales-driven and product-focused approach on contextual value, becomes crucial. Together, they expand beyond traditional product marketing to create a more customer-centric approach that drives growth, customer satisfaction, and seamless experiences.

For companies with diverse product offerings, growth lies not just in promoting individual products but in understanding the unique challenges of their customers and presenting an integrated combination of solutions that best fits those needs—strengthening the synergy between marketing, sales, and product development.

What is Product Marketing and Selling?

Product marketing and selling traditionally focus on promoting and selling a single product. The strategy revolves around communicating the unique value proposition—features, benefits, and how it solves a specific problem for the customer. However, this approach can be limiting as it often presents a fixed solution that may not fully address the customer’s broader needs. In sales, this can translate into missed opportunities for upselling or cross-selling, while for product teams, it may restrict the potential for developing integrated features.

What is Portfolio Marketing and Selling?

Portfolio marketing and selling take a broader, more integrated view. Instead of focusing on a single product, they align multiple products into a cohesive value proposition that is tailored to specific customer segments or industries. This integrated approach enhances the customer experience by ensuring that all products within the portfolio work together seamlessly—offering a smooth flow of data and a unified user experience.

From a product perspective, portfolio marketing enables the development of features and integrations that align with broader customer needs, ensuring that each product not only stands out on its own but also contributes to a stronger, interconnected offering. As one sales leader noted, “Portfolio selling is about communicating how your suite of solutions can collectively solve a customer’s problems better than any single product could, while also delivering an integrated experience that customers increasingly demand.”​ 

This approach not only drives deeper customer engagement but also opens up opportunities for larger deals by bundling products and services that meet various customer needs while ensuring seamless integration.

Balancing Portfolio and Product: The Power of an “And” Approach

While portfolio marketing and selling offer a comprehensive way to engage customers and position a company as a strategic partner, it’s important to acknowledge that product marketing and selling still play a crucial role. The value and differentiators of individual products must be clearly communicated, especially to customers who know exactly what they need and are seeking a specific solution.

In this context, portfolio and product selling should be seen as complementary strategies. Product selling is essential for highlighting the unique features and benefits of each product, ensuring that customers can easily identify how a particular solution fits their needs. Meanwhile, portfolio selling drives the broader conversation, enabling sales teams to position the company as a customer-centric organization that understands and addresses a wide range of challenges through integrated solutions.

When marketing, sales, and product teams collaborate closely, they can align their messaging, strategies, and product development to deliver an integrated portfolio that meets diverse customer needs. This alignment not only enhances the relevance of each conversation but also ensures that customers experience a seamless journey from discovery to purchase and beyond.

As Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, has remarked, “The key to successful selling is not choosing between strategies but understanding how to integrate them effectively to meet the diverse needs of your customers.”​

Meet the Needs of your Customers

This approach allows sales teams to cater to both types of customers: those looking for a single, well-defined product and those needing an integrated, context-driven solution. As Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, has remarked, “The key to successful selling is not choosing between strategies but understanding how to integrate them effectively to meet the diverse needs of your customers.”​

By combining the precision of product selling with the strategic breadth of portfolio selling, sales teams can meet customers where they are—whether that’s with a single product or a comprehensive suite of solutions tailored to their specific challenges.

Understanding How Customers Solve Problems

Customers approach problem-solving with varying levels of awareness. Some know exactly what solution they need, while others are still exploring options. Regardless of their stage in the buying journey, customers seek solutions to specific challenges—whether improving quality, enhancing productivity, or driving innovation. In a product-centric sales approach, companies might push a single product as the answer, but this risks missing the mark if the product doesn’t fully align with the customer’s needs.

An integrated portfolio approach, however, allows marketing, sales, and product teams to present a unified front, offering tailored combinations of products that are specifically designed to work together. This not only enhances the customer experience but also maximizes the value delivered through seamless integration across the portfolio.

Conversations with Contextual Value: Lessons from Steve Jobs for Sales and Marketing

You may ask what Portfolio Marketing has to do with the iPhone – quite a lot. Steve Jobs’ introduction of the iPhone in 2007 is a powerful example of contextual value in action. At the time, most smartphones came with physical keyboards, which were fixed and limited in their functionality. Jobs pointed out that these keyboards were the same regardless of the app being used, which limited their effectiveness. The iPhone changed the game by offering a touch screen that could adapt to different contexts—providing a keyboard when needed, but also offering other tools like a dial pad or media controls depending on what the user was doing.

This idea of contextual adaptability is central to portfolio selling. Just as the iPhone’s interface adapts to the user’s needs, portfolio selling allows sales teams to adapt their offerings to the customer’s specific challenges, delivering a more personalized and effective solution

Practical Application: A Portfolio Approach in Automotive Digital Transformation

Consider an automotive company navigating the shift from being a traditional hardware manufacturer to becoming a software-driven enterprise. In this transformation, quality is no longer just about hardware—ensuring the reliability and durability of physical components through inspection and assurance. It now extends to software development, where the focus is on building safe, reliable, and high-quality software that enhances the end-user experience through new features and updates.

To achieve this, an integrated portfolio of solutions is essential. The workforce requires modern tools that enable them to deliver exceptional quality at every level, while agile collaboration between hardware and software teams becomes critical. For sales teams, this means offering a combination of products—from tools for software development to quality control and collaborative platforms—that not only improve processes but also ensure seamless integration.

When marketing, sales, and product teams are aligned in their approach, they can present a unified message and product experience that enhances customer satisfaction and drives growth. As Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, emphasizes, “In today’s world, companies that can connect their product offerings to the unique needs of their customers will drive greater engagement and, ultimately, greater success.”​

Conclusion: The Combined Power of a Unified Go-to-Market through Portfolio Marketing

By focusing on integrated portfolio marketing and selling with a unified GTM strategy, companies can move beyond the limitations of traditional product marketing and selling. When marketing, sales, and product teams collaborate closely, they can deliver a seamless customer and product experience that is not only more relevant but also more effective. This alignment enables the delivery of contextual value, tailored solutions, and a superior customer journey that drives long-term growth and success.

As the tech landscape continues to evolve, the companies that embrace integrated portfolio strategies will be the ones that lead the way—driving innovation, customer satisfaction, and sustainable growth.


Dirk Schart is the global go-to-market and marketing lead for PTC’s Engineering and Lifecycle Management portfolio. He is the former CMO of the No. 1 Enterprise AR startup RE’FLEKT where he built their US operations in Silicon Valley.

Previous to this role, Dirk built and led the SaaS portfolio of HyperloopTT. As a seasoned brand and growth leader, Dirk focuses on bringing B2B software and SaaS products to market —from zero to hero. He mentors startups at the German Accelerator in Silicon Valley and is the author of “Augmented Reality for Marketing”.