Bain & Company recently posed a question that should give mid-market PE investors and CEOs pause:
“Is your go-to-market strategy built for future opportunities—or is it still calibrated to yesterday’s market?” Bain
For mid-market Technology companies, the answer determines whether growth compounds or stalls. Buyer behavior has rewired: AI is now board-level spend, cybersecurity is non-negotiable, and B2B buyers increasingly prefer to buy without ever speaking to a sales rep.
Here’s what a future-ready GTM looks like and how PE leaders can reshape portfolio companies to capture growth in this next cycle.
The Market has moved: Three Forces Reshaping GTM
Bottom line: yesterday’s GTM optimized coverage and MQL volume; tomorrow’s GTM optimizes the full self-serve-to-human continuum, quantifies risk/ROI in the language of AI, security, and compliance, and treats post-sale outcomes as growth fuel. These shifts are the new imperatives for winning future opportunities.
Building a Future-Ready GTM
Better KPIs: time-to-first-value, % of opportunities from self-serve, regret-rate (post-purchase escalation).
Better KPIs: AI attach rates, $ impact per account, time-to-security approval.
Better KPIs: time-to-green on reviews, % of deals requiring no additional discovery, assurance upsell rates.
Better KPIs: revenue mix by vertical, marketplace-sourced pipeline, deal velocity vs. direct.
Better KPIs: Net revenue retention (NRR), time-to-value, verified, quantified customer outcomes.
The PE-Grade Modernization Plan
Phase 1 (0–90 days): Diagnose & de-risk
Phase 2 (Quarter 2–3): Rewire around buyer reality
Phase 3 (Quarter 4+): Compound & differentiate
What PE Investors Should Ask
What “Good” Looks Like at Exit
The Call to Action
The era of easy growth is over. Technology companies can no longer rely on market momentum alone. Winning requires a go-to-market engine that mirrors how buyers actually buy—digital-first, AI-enabled, security-proofed, and outcome-driven.
For PE investors, that’s not optional; it’s the difference between average returns and premium exit multiples.
About the Author
John Auer is a Managing Partner with Veritac Group. Having worked with over 300 companies, John brings deep expertise in B2B revenue design. A former PE Managing Director and CRO, he quickly identifies Go-To-Market gaps and designs solutions that drive measurable enterprise value. John has helped firms such as Symphony Technology Group, HIG Growth, and Riverside.
About Veritac Group: We are a mid-market, B2B, GTM consulting firm with deep experience in technology and healthcare. We create scalable, effective processes and advise clients on a wide variety of GTM solutions (designing for the future being one element). John Auer is a Partner at Veritac Group with over 25 years of sales, consulting, and Private Equity experience.
Footnotes
(1)An AI-powered assistant or augmentation tool that works alongside a human user to make them faster, more effective, and more accurate.
(2) A model card is a structured “report card” for an AI model that explains what it does, how it performs, where it works well, and where it doesn’t — to promote responsible, transparent use.