Revenue Operations (RevOps) Blog | RevPartners

Essential Elements for Crafting Your Market Entry Strategy

Written by Adam Statti | February 14, 2024

Expanding into new markets is exciting, but also complex and full of friction.

The problem is most market entry strategies aren’t built for today’s buying environment. They focus on where to go and how to get in but ignore how to scale once you’re there.

That’s where Go-To-Market (GTM) alignment matters. A strong market entry framework only works when backed by a revenue engine that’s been engineered for repeatability, across acquisition, retention, and expansion.

Let's take a look at what that actually looks like.

Understanding the Role of a Market Entry Framework

A market entry framework helps you decide where to grow, how to apply the market entry strategy, and which types of market entry cases best fit your customer segment. It includes evaluating market attractiveness, understanding buyer behavior, assessing internal capabilities, and choosing the right strategy to enter.

But most frameworks stop at the entry point. They assume your internal systems are ready to support growth.

Most aren’t.

Modern market entry is about market potential and revenue system readiness. Without the latter, expansion efforts stall under the weight of misalignment, poor handoffs, and disconnected tools.

Your GTM isn’t static, it’s a product. And just like any product, it needs ongoing iteration and optimization to perform.

Step 1: Conduct Smarter Market Research

Traditional market research looks at things like market size, potential market attractiveness, profit margin expectations, and competitive activity. That’s still important, but it’s not enough.

You also need to analyze:

  • Buyer intent signals and journey patterns

  • Points of friction across your funnel

  • Where handoffs break between SDRs, AEs, and CSMs

  • Whether your CRM is actually capturing the full picture

This goes beyond surface-level analysis. It’s about building a unified data model that shows you not just where leads come from, but what happens after they enter the funnel.

If your research doesn’t inform your process design, your entry plan won’t hold up in the real world.

Step 2: Evaluate New Markets and Your Own GTM Maturity

Picking the right market is half the battle. But the other half is understanding if your internal GTM engine can actually support growth in that market.

Many teams expand while:

  • Sales cycles are already dragging

  • CRM adoption is inconsistent across roles

  • Reporting is piecemeal or manually built

  • Marketing and sales are measuring success differently

Scaling a broken system into a new market just multiplies the dysfunction.

Step 3: Choose the Right Entry Strategy and Align Execution Around It

Once you’ve picked the right market and confirmed internal readiness, the next step is choosing how to enter.

Common options include:

  • Exporting: Fastest and lowest risk, but limited local control

  • Licensing or franchising: Scalable, but hard to maintain consistency

  • Joint ventures: Share the load with a local partner, but requires cultural alignment

  • Direct investment: Highest potential, but highest resource requirement

Choosing the wrong strategy can slow you down. But even the right strategy won’t work if your execution model can’t support it.

If your GTM handoffs are unclear, your CRM is poorly configured, or your teams are relying on tribal knowledge, things will break fast.

Step 4: Navigate the Real-World Challenges of Market Entry

Even with the right strategy and tools in place, expanding into new markets brings friction. Here's a look at some of the most common challenges and how to address them.

Navigating Legal, Regulatory, and Compliance Roadblocks

Entering a new market means navigating a new legal landscape. That might include data protection regulations, tax implications, local employment law, or product compliance standards. Overlooking them can lead to long delays, failed launches, or even legal risk.

Overcoming Cultural Differences and Buyer Behavior Shifts

You can’t copy-paste your messaging and expect results in a different region. Tone, language, value props, even channel preferences can vary dramatically by culture. And buyers today don’t follow your funnel, they follow their own. Most of the journey happens before anyone talks to your sales team.

That’s why outbound-only strategies fall flat.

Fixing the Fractured Tech Stack Before It Slows You Down

Disconnected tools are annoying expensive. Poor integrations lead to reporting gaps, broken automations, and manual workarounds that bleed time and morale. When teams don’t trust the data, everything slows down.

Find out how to fix your disconnected systems with this webinar from RevPartners and Clay 👇

Allocating Resources Strategically (Instead of Reactively)

It’s tempting to hire fast, launch fast, adjust later. But without the right process infrastructure, you’ll spend more time cleaning up than growing. The smartest teams treat CRM and RevOps strategy as core components of market entry, not afterthoughts.

RevPartners’ HubSpot Technical Consulting helps you tailor your CRM setup to each market’s unique needs—so you can scale intentionally, not reactively.

Bonus: Aligning Around the Bowtie Framework

Most market entry strategies end at “Closed-Won.”

That’s a mistake, and one frequently made in market entry case interviews, where frameworks stop at acquisition and overlook what happens after a customer buys your product or service.

The bowtie model expands the traditional funnel into a full revenue lifecycle, tracking how prospects convert into customers, how those customers are retained, and how they expand over time.

It gives visibility across three critical motions:

  • Acquisition: How you attract and convert net new logos

  • Retention: How you drive activation and reduce churn

  • Expansion: How you identify and grow revenue within existing accounts

When you build your GTM around the bowtie, you’re building a revenue engine that can sustain them.

Bringing It All Together

A strong market entry strategy is about choosing the right market and preparing your business to succeed in it.

That means:

  • Building a data model that connects pipeline to performance

  • Aligning teams around shared goals and clean handoffs

  • Adapting your tech stack to scale

  • Investing in RevOps as a function, not a nice-to-have