Everyone says they’re “experimenting.”

New sequences.
New segments.
New tools.
New messaging.

Activity everywhere.

Learning… not so much.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:

Most GTM teams are not running experiments.
They’re running hope.

Hope that volume will fix relevance.
Hope that tools will fix prioritization.
Hope that next quarter will look better than the last.

An experiment has three things:

  1. A hypothesis
  2. A controlled change
  3. A way to tell if it worked

Most GTM motions skip straight to step four:

“Let’s try this and see.”

That’s not experimentation.
That’s motion.

When GTM is treated like a plan, teams ask:

Those are outcomes, not learning signals.

When GTM is treated like an experiment, teams ask:

Very different posture.

This is where CROs and RevOps either unlock leverage or stall it.

RevOps already owns:

GTM engineering augments that by:

Together, they turn GTM from a guessing game into a learning system.

In practice, the shift is subtle but powerful:

Less chaos.
More clarity.

A simple diagnostic:
👉 If I asked your team what they learned about buyers last week, could they answer clearly?

If not, GTM isn’t experimenting yet.

Next edition: why most GTM reviews feel busy, yet still fail to improve anything.

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