Why Your ICP Is the Most Expensive Problem You’re Not Fixing?
1. We have been operating for several years. Isn’t our ICP already implicit in who we have sold to?
Implicit is the problem. Once you are scaling, implicit knowledge is one leadership departure away from being lost. More importantly, who you have sold to is not the same as who you should be selling to. Many companies discover that a meaningful portion of their customer base sits outside their optimal ICP — and those accounts account for a disproportionate share of churn, support costs, and lost expansion revenue. Formalizing and pressure-testing your ICP often surfaces that your best customer looks quite different from your average customer.
2. Our sales team says every deal is different. How do we define an ICP without being too rigid?
This is the most common objection from sales leaders — and it is worth taking seriously. A well-defined ICP does not eliminate sales judgment, rather focuses on it. Think of it as the difference between a compass and a cage. Your ICP defines the direction; your sales team still navigates the terrain. Companies with the highest win rates and lowest CAC are not closing every deal — they are closing a higher proportion of the deals that actually fit. Saying no to bad-fit deals is a revenue strategy, not a constraint.
3. Can a company at our stage have more than one ICP?
Yes — particularly if you serve distinct verticals or have a multi-product portfolio. However, each ICP should be treated as a separate GTM motion with its own targeting criteria, messaging, channel strategy, and success metrics. The risk of multiple ICPs is dilution: if your sales and marketing teams are stretched across three or four ICPs simultaneously without sufficient resources dedicated to each, you will underperform in all of them. It is usually better to dominate one ICP before formally expanding to a second.
4. How do I know if our current ICP is wrong rather than just our execution?
The clearest signal is cohort divergence: segment your customer base by how closely accounts match your stated ICP and compare net revenue retention, churn rate, CAC payback period across high-fit versus low-fit cohorts. If high-fit customers significantly outperform low-fit customers on retention and expansion metrics, your ICP hypothesis is likely right and execution is the issue. If even high-fit customers are churning or failing to expand, the ICP itself needs to be revisited. This analysis is one of the first things we do when engaging with a leadership team.
5. What is an Anti-ICP, and should we define one?
An Anti-ICP is as valuable as the ICP itself — it defines the profile of accounts you should actively avoid pursuing, even if they express interest. This matters enormously once you are scaling because the cost of acquiring and serving a bad-fit customer is not just the lost revenue when they churn. It is the product feedback that distorts your roadmap, the support burden that strains your customer success team, and the reference account that sends the wrong signal to the market. Being able to articulate who is not your customer is a sign of organizational maturity that boards and investors find deeply reassuring.
Employee-First GTM Culture: Your Environment Drives Performance
1. Why does employee first culture matter for business performance?
2. How does company culture affect GTM performance?
Culture directly shapes how your GTM teams show up — in pipeline conversations, customer calls, and renewal discussions.
Sales people who feel valued and aligned with company mission bring energy, resilience, and genuine customer investment to every interaction. Those who feel unrecognized or culturally misaligned disengage quietly, and that gap is felt by prospects and customers alike. According to Harvard Business School’s Service Profit Chain model, internal service quality drives employee satisfaction, which in turn drives customer satisfaction, loyalty, and ultimately revenue growth.
3. How does employee engagement affect CSAT (Customer Satisfaction Scores)?
4. What is the difference between company perks and company culture?
5. What role does leadership play in building an employee-first culture?
6. How should companies handle employee feedback to strengthen culture?
7. How can a growing company maintain its culture as it scales from 50 to 500+ employees?
The Fractional CPO as a Growth Catalyst
1. How is a Fractional CPO different from a product consultant?
Unlike a consultant who delivers strategy decks or a project manager who tracks timelines, a Fractional CPO leads the product team end-to-end. They sit in leadership discussions, align product strategy with corporate goals, and drive execution in a disciplined, hands-on manner. Their goal is to build lasting processes and culture — not just provide recommendations.
2. What are the key signs your product team needs a Fractional CPO?
Watch for these warning signs:
(1) Your roadmap is a feature backlog with no strategic prioritization,
(2) expansion revenue from existing customers has stagnated,
(3) churn is rising despite a functional product,
(4) all product decisions escalate to the founder, and
(5) sales, engineering, and marketing are misaligned on what the produt should be doing.

