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From IC to GTM Leader: A Practical Playbook for Cross-Functional Growth

From IC to GTM Leader: A Practical Playbook for Cross-Functional Growth
# Challenge: Career Growth
# Theme: Leadership & Executive Perspectives
# Role: CX/Success/Support

Learn how to transition from individual contributor to GTM leader. See real-world examples, pitfalls to avoid, and actionable tactics for success.

December 4, 2025
Joshua Zerkel
Joshua Zerkel
From IC to GTM Leader: A Practical Playbook for Cross-Functional Growth
The leap from individual contributor (IC) to go-to-market (GTM) leader is one of the hardest transitions in business. As an IC, your success depends on your ability to execute: running campaigns, closing deals, shipping features, or supporting customers. As a leader, the definition of success shifts. It becomes less about what you deliver personally and more about how effectively you enable your team, build alignment across functions, and keep the customer’s voice at the center of strategy.
This is not just a title change. It requires a new mindset, new skills, and a willingness to redefine your professional identity. Here’s a playbook to help navigate the shift, with lessons drawn from companies that have built strong leadership pipelines.

Shifting from execution to enablement

Many new leaders struggle because they try to continue “doing the work.” The real value of a GTM leader lies in creating the conditions for others to succeed. That means moving from execution to enablement. At Adobe, for example, marketing managers often step into leadership by first creating playbooks and campaign frameworks. Instead of running every campaign themselves, they design repeatable systems that scale across global teams. This frees leaders to focus on strategy while empowering their teams to execute independently.
Key takeaways:
  • Define success by your team’s outcomes, not your own individual contributions.
  • Build reusable frameworks, templates, and processes that allow work to scale.
  • Focus on coaching and guiding thought processes instead of micromanaging tasks.
  • Resist the temptation to step in at the first sign of friction; let your team build problem-solving muscles.

Building cross-functional credibility

GTM leaders rarely operate in one lane. They sit at the intersection of marketing, sales, product, customer success, and community. Without credibility across these groups, alignment quickly breaks down. Shopify encourages new GTM leaders to spend their first months embedded across functions by shadowing merchant onboarding calls, joining sales demos, and reviewing CX tickets. This immersion helps leaders understand not just what each team does, but how those perspectives connect to the customer experience. It also builds trust that pays off when trade-offs need to be made.
Key takeaways:
  • Dedicate your first 60–90 days to learning how adjacent functions work.
  • Speak in each team’s language: pipeline with sales, adoption with product, retention with CX.
  • Use community insights as a shared reference point across teams.
  • Earn credibility by listening first, then making small, reliable contributions.

Leading with community at the core

Effective GTM leaders make sure strategies are anchored in reality. Community is the best way to achieve that. By integrating customer voices into planning, leaders ensure that GTM motions reflect what people actually need, not just what internal teams assume. At Miro, for example, product and GTM leaders regularly surface community-created templates in launches and enablement materials. This practice ensures marketing campaigns feel authentic, while giving sales and CX tangible stories they can use with customers.
Key takeaways:
  • Treat your community as a live focus group and feedback channel.
  • Bring community themes into GTM planning meetings and leadership reviews.
  • Highlight community contributions in company-wide communications.
  • Encourage your team to participate directly in community discussions to stay grounded.

Developing a leadership operating system

ICs manage their own workflows. Leaders need an operating system that scales across a team and connects with other functions. This includes setting goals, tracking progress, and creating communication rhythms that keep everyone aligned. Twilio, for example, centers its GTM rhythms around its developer community. Leaders use regular syncs to share what developers are saying, connect those insights to product roadmaps, and adjust campaigns accordingly. These rituals give the entire GTM team shared visibility into priorities and reduce silos.
Key takeaways:
  • Establish recurring cadences such as weekly standups or monthly retrospectives.
  • Document decisions and goals in shared spaces so alignment doesn’t depend on meetings.
  • Create transparency by explaining the “why” behind decisions, not just the “what.”
  • Integrate community data and stories into regular updates to maintain an external focus.

Redefining your identity as a leader

Perhaps the hardest part of the transition is internal. As an IC, you may have built your reputation on personal expertise. As a leader, your value shifts to enabling others, aligning functions, and making trade-offs in service of the broader strategy. That requires patience and humility. At Airbnb, for instance, early host community engagement demanded that leaders let go of being the expert in every detail. Instead, they empowered hosts to share knowledge and elevated their stories. This mindset helped scale the platform globally.
Key takeaways:
  • Accept that leadership is a new craft, not simply a bigger version of your IC role.
  • Seek mentors who have made the transition and can help you navigate identity shifts.
  • Be transparent about mistakes; modeling vulnerability builds team trust.
  • Focus on scaling impact rather than holding onto personal control.

Why this transition matters

The move from IC to GTM leader is not just a career milestone. It shapes the effectiveness of the entire go-to-market system. Leaders who cling to execution become bottlenecks. Leaders who embrace enablement, cross-functional credibility, and community at the core accelerate outcomes across the organization.
Becoming a GTM leader is not about leaving execution behind. It is about elevating your ability to connect people, processes, and community so your organization can grow faster and smarter.
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