Channels Are Vehicles: Choose GTM That Matches Your Ability to Execute

Channel is not strategy; it’s a vehicle. Learn why the biggest GTM failures aren't strategic, but rather a mismatch between ambition and operational capability.
Josh Rosenberg
Published on
03/26/2026

If you choose a vehicle you can’t operate, the market won’t blame the channel; it will blame your brand.

I learned this lesson at scale: Great ideas can be easy to understand and still incredibly hard to execute. When you hit the realities of last-mile delivery, labor constraints, time studies, training gaps, and the hidden cost to serve, the "perfect" channel can quickly become a liability.

The Pre-Expansion Checklist

Before you expand your channels, you must ask the hard questions:

  • Customer Behavior: Where does the customer already buy?
  • Brand Integrity: What experience does our brand require?
  • Execution: What capabilities must be true to deliver consistently?
  • Economics: What margin model funds the engine?
  • Accountability: What will we measure weekly?
  • Focus: What will we stop doing to protect our focus?

Capability vs. Ambition

The biggest GTM failures are rarely strategic failures. Instead, they are mismatch failures. These happen when an organization’s capability cannot support the promise being made in a specific channel.

At Forward Thinkers, we believe the winning GTM plan is the one you can actually execute with discipline. Ambition matters, but capability converts.

The Bottom Line

If you’re planning channel expansion this year, map your capabilities first. Your brand promise should drive your channel selection—not the other way around.

Contact Forward Thinkers to Audit Your GTM Strategy

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Josh Rosenberg