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Go-to-Market Strategy for Education and EdTech Companies

by Jason Shafton

Selling direct-to-consumer subscriptions and selling institutional licenses require different motions, different sales cycles, and different team structures. Most EdTech companies try to run both with the same GTM approach and end up mediocre at each. Winston Francois builds the strategy that executes both properly.

Why EdTech GTM Stalls After Initial Traction

Founder-led sales doesn't transfer to a repeatable sales motion

Most EdTech companies get their first $1M-$3M in revenue from founder-led sales – direct outreach, personal relationships, conference meetings, and evangelism that only works when the founder is in the room. When it comes time to build a sales team, there is no documented playbook, no qualification criteria, no discovery framework – just a founder who knows how to sell this specific product from lived experience. The transition to a scalable GTM motion requires externalizing that knowledge into a system.

B2C and B2B channels misallocating spend because they share a single budget

EdTech companies serving both direct consumers and institutions often fund both channels from one marketing budget without clear segmentation of what is working in each. A consumer acquisition campaign on Facebook and an institutional outreach sequence are drawing from the same resource pool but have completely different CAC, sales cycle, and LTV profiles. Without separate P&L tracking for each motion, the one that looks better on a blended metric gets over-funded while the other starves.

Pricing architecture that worked at launch breaks during scaling

EdTech pricing at launch tends to be simple: one consumer tier, one institutional price. By $10M ARR, the product has expanded and the market is clearer, but the pricing structure is still the original launch version. Institutional buyers are asking for per-seat pricing. Power users are outgrowing the single tier. A pricing architecture built for launch will leave significant revenue on the table as the product matures and use cases diversify.

School procurement cycles are misaligned with how the company generates leads

School districts often run formal RFP and procurement processes with evaluation windows in the spring (March-May) for the following academic year. EdTech companies that generate leads through content, paid acquisition, and outreach year-round and then try to close institutional deals whenever leads come in are misaligned with the buyer's timeline. Missing a district's evaluation window means waiting 12 months for the next one.

How We Help

We begin every EdTech GTM engagement with a motion audit: reviewing your current customer base by segment, average sales cycle by segment, CAC and LTV by acquisition channel, and where the current GTM motion breaks down at scale. For most EdTech companies between $3M-$20M ARR, the breakdown is at the founder-to-sales-team handoff – the sales motion exists but is not documented or transferable.

GTM strategy for EdTech is developed as two parallel tracks: the consumer motion and the institutional motion, each with its own playbook, channel strategy, and success metrics. We define the ideal customer profile for each track separately – the consumer ICP is a specific parent persona with specific pain points; the institutional ICP is a specific district size and curriculum context with specific procurement requirements. Two ICPs, two sales plays, one company.

For the consumer motion, we build the acquisition funnel: channel mix, trial-to-paid conversion optimization, and onboarding sequence. For most EdTech consumer products, the highest-leverage GTM work is in the trial experience – reducing the time between signup and the first moment of perceived value.

For the institutional motion, we build the outreach system, qualification criteria, and sales playbook. This includes the procurement calendar mapped to outreach timing, the discovery framework for qualifying a district opportunity, the demo structure that connects product capabilities to curriculum standards, and the proposal format that survives a committee review. We also define what a pilot looks like: how long, what metrics define success, and what the conversion path is from pilot to license.

Pricing architecture is reviewed and updated as part of the GTM strategy. We model the current pricing against what the market will bear at each customer stage, identify where revenue is being left on the table, and recommend a pricing structure that captures more value without increasing churn. For institutional EdTech, this often means a per-seat or per-classroom model that scales with district adoption.

What we deliver

The EdTech companies that scale past $20M have made a clear decision about whether they are a consumer company or an institutional company – and built their entire GTM motion around that answer. The ones stuck at $10M are usually trying to be both without the infrastructure to support either properly.

Our Methodology

EdTech GTM engagements run 90 days. The first phase is the motion audit and ICP definition – two weeks of data analysis and stakeholder interviews that produce a clear picture of which customer segments are most valuable, where the current GTM motion creates friction, and what the highest-leverage changes are. We present findings and get alignment before building strategy.

The build phase (weeks 3-8) is playbook and infrastructure development. We write the consumer and institutional playbooks in parallel so the two motions are designed with each other's resource requirements in mind. Pricing analysis runs in this phase as well. We do not deliver strategy documents; we build working tools your sales and marketing teams can use immediately.

The final phase (weeks 9-12) is implementation support and measurement setup. We work with your team as they deploy the new playbooks, set up attribution and tracking to measure each motion's performance, and adjust based on initial results.

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How We Work

Month one is motion audit and strategy development. We complete the ICP definition, channel audit, and initial GTM strategy for both tracks. Weekly check-ins with your leadership team keep the strategy grounded in operational reality.

Month two is playbook development. The consumer and institutional playbooks are written, the procurement calendar is built, and the trial conversion optimization plan is developed. Your sales and marketing leads review drafts and provide input before the playbooks are finalized.

Month three is implementation and measurement. We support deployment of the new GTM motion, set up tracking for both tracks, and present a 90-day performance baseline. Engagements frequently extend for ongoing GTM execution support, particularly for institutional outreach which has a longer feedback cycle.

If your education / edtech company needs go-to-market leadership, we should talk.

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Frequently asked questions

How much does a go-to-market engagement cost for an EdTech company?

GTM engagements for EdTech companies at Winston Francois typically run $20,000-$45,000 for a 90-day sprint. The range depends on whether we are building one or two channel playbooks, whether pricing architecture work is included, and whether we are supporting implementation or delivering strategy only. A VP of Marketing hire for an EdTech company at $5M-$20M ARR costs $150,000-$220,000 per year – a GTM sprint delivers the strategic foundation in 90 days before you make that hire.

How quickly can we see results from a new EdTech go-to-market strategy?

Consumer motion improvements are measurable fastest – trial-to-paid conversion changes are visible within 30-60 days of implementing onboarding and messaging updates. Institutional motion improvements have a longer feedback cycle because procurement timelines are quarterly or annual. Most EdTech companies see initial results from the consumer motion within 60 days and institutional pipeline quality improvement within one procurement season.

What does the handoff from founder-led sales to a sales team look like in this engagement?

We structure the playbook development around explicit knowledge extraction from whoever is currently closing deals. We run structured discovery sessions to document the qualification criteria they use intuitively, the objection handling approaches that work, and the positioning that resonates with each buyer type. The output is a written playbook that a new sales hire can study and reference – not just shadow-and-imitate. Documenting the playbook before hiring significantly reduces ramp time.

What makes Winston Francois different from a traditional go-to-market consultant?

Most GTM consultants deliver frameworks and strategy documents. We are operators who have run consumer and institutional sales motions at the growth stage, and we build working tools – not slide decks. The difference shows up in what we deliver: a sales playbook your team actually uses, a prospect qualification scorecard that tells a new hire what to look for, and a pricing model tested against your actual buyer conversations rather than built from first principles.

How do you measure the success of a go-to-market engagement for an EdTech company?

We set baseline metrics at engagement start: consumer trial-to-paid conversion rate, institutional pipeline size and velocity, CAC by channel, and time-to-first-close for new sales hires. At 90 days post-engagement we measure against those baselines. The primary indicators of a successful GTM engagement are faster time-to-close, higher conversion rate at each funnel stage, and reduced dependence on the founder for deal progress.

What type of EdTech company is the right fit for a GTM strategy engagement?

The right fit is an EdTech company at $3M-$20M ARR that has proven the product works but is hitting a ceiling on growth because the go-to-market motion cannot scale beyond the founding team. If your growth depends on the founder being in sales conversations, or if your consumer acquisition is inconsistent and not tied to a repeatable channel strategy, a GTM engagement addresses the root cause. Pre-product or pre-revenue companies should focus on product-market fit before GTM investment.


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