GTM Job board

The Best GTM Roles & GTM Jobs Board

Your go-to resource for everything Go-To-Market — from understanding GTM roles and salaries to finding the best GTM jobs in RevOps, Sales Ops, GTM Engineering, Growth, and Growth Marketing. 

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Why This GTM Jobs Board Exists

Most GTM job boards are a noisy flea market. Great roles get buried under irrelevant listings.

This page exists to do two things well:
  • Help you understand the GTM landscape — roles, responsibilities, salaries, and career paths
  • Make it easy to find high-quality GTM jobs at startups and scaling SaaS companies

No agency spam. No paywalls. No accounts.
Built by GTM operators, for GTM operators.

What Does GTM Mean? (Full Form & Job Title Explained)

GTM stands for Go-To-Market. As a business strategy, it refers to how a company takes its product to market, generates demand, closes revenue, and retains customers.

As a job title prefix, GTM signals that the role sits close to revenue — owning some combination of the systems, processes, data, or execution that drives growth.

The three most searched GTM job titles — and what separates them:

Title
Clay.com
Where They Sit
GTM Manager
Overall GTM strategy and execution
Cross-functional
GTM Engineer
Revenue automation and systems
RevOps / Growth
Head of GTM
Revenue automation and systems
Leadership

What Are GTM Roles?

GTM roles are responsible for how a company takes its product to market, generates demand, closes revenue, and expands customers.

In modern SaaS and startups, GTM is no longer just "sales" or "marketing." It's a tightly connected revenue system that includes how you acquire customers, how you convert them, how you retain and expand them, and how you run the entire revenue engine efficiently.

GTM Roles vs. Traditional Sales & Marketing Roles

The titles have changed — and so has the scope. Here's how modern GTM roles map to what came before:

Old Title
Modern GTM Title
Where They Sit
Sales Ops
Sales Ops / RevOps
Now owns data, tooling, forecasting + strategy
Marketing Manager
Growth / Demand Gen
Now owns full-funnel experiments, not just campaigns
Marketing Ops
GTM Engineer
Now codes automation workflows, not just runs tools
Field Marketing
Growth Marketing
Now performance-driven, not event-driven
CRM Admin
RevOps Analyst
Now a strategic revenue systems role

GTM Roles and Responsibilities — By Function

A breakdown of every major GTM function, what they own, and how they're measured.

RevOps (Revenue Operations)

RevOps owns the systems, data, and workflows behind the entire revenue engine — across sales, marketing, and customer success.

  • Day-to-day: CRM administration, pipeline reporting, forecast modeling, tool consolidation, workflow automation
  • Who they report to: CRO, VP Sales, or CFO
  • KPIs: Forecast accuracy, pipeline coverage, tool adoption, revenue per rep
  • Works with: Sales, Marketing, Finance, CS

Sales Ops (Sales Operations)

Sales Ops is the execution layer for the sales team — keeping the machine running so reps can focus on selling.

  • Day-to-day: Territory planning, quota setting, comp modeling, CRM hygiene, sales reporting
  • Who they report to: VP Sales or Head of RevOps
  • KPIs: Quota attainment, ramp time, win rate, pipeline velocity
  • Works with: Sales, Finance, RevOps

Sales Ops vs. RevOps — what's the difference? Sales Ops focuses specifically on the sales team. RevOps sits above it, connecting sales, marketing, and CS into one unified revenue system. At early-stage companies, one person often does both. At scale, they split.

GTM Engineering

GTM Engineering is the fastest-growing GTM role of 2025. GTM Engineers build the revenue automation systems that make outbound, enrichment, and pipeline generation run at scale — without proportional headcount growth.

  • Day-to-day: Building outbound workflows, lead enrichment pipelines, signal-based triggers, CRM integrations, AI-powered prospecting systems
  • Tools: Clay, Apollo, n8n, Zapier, Instantly, HubSpot, Salesforce
  • Who they report to: Head of Growth, VP RevOps, or CRO
  • KPIs: Meetings booked per workflow, lead-to-opportunity rate, pipeline generated per automated sequence
  • Works with: Sales, RevOps, Marketing, Product

GTM Engineering job postings grew 205% year-over-year in 2025. The role requires a rare combination of technical skills and revenue intuition — which is why it commands engineering-grade salaries.

Growth

Growth owns the experiments, acquisition loops, and pipeline generation systems that drive top-of-funnel demand.

  • Day-to-day: Running channel experiments, building acquisition funnels, A/B testing, conversion rate optimization, PLG motion design
  • Who they report to: Head of Growth, CMO, or CEO
  • Who they report to: Head of Growth, VP RevOps, or CRO
  • KPIs: CAC, MQLs, pipeline contribution, activation rate, North Star metric
  • Works with: Marketing, Product, Sales, Data

Growth Marketing

Growth Marketing sits at the intersection of performance marketing and demand generation — owning paid, content, email, and SEO channels to drive measurable pipeline.

  • Day-to-day: Paid campaigns, SEO content, email nurture, lifecycle marketing, attribution modeling
  • Who they report to: Head of Growth or CMO
  • KPIs: Pipeline from marketing, CPL, MQL-to-SQL conversion, channel ROI
  • Works with: Growth, RevOps, Sales, Content

Growth vs. Growth Marketing — what's the difference? Growth is typically broader and more experimental — focused on the full funnel including product. Growth Marketing is more execution-focused, owning specific channels and campaigns that generate pipeline.

GTM Role Salaries (2025–2026)

Salary ranges across GTM functions vary significantly based on seniority, company stage, technical depth, and US market location.

Role
Entry Level
Mid Level
Senior / Lead
GTM Engineer
$90K–$120K
$130K–$175K
$185K–$250K+
RevOps Manage
$80K–$100K
$110K–$140K
$150K–$180K
Sales Ops Manager
$75K–$95K
$100K–$130K
$140K–$170K
Growth Manager
$70K–$90K
$100K–$130K
$140K–$180K
Growth Marketing Manager
$75K–$95K
$105K–$135K
$140K–$175K
Head of GTM
-
$140K–$170K
$180K–$240K+
SDR / BDR
$50K–$65K
$65K–$85K OTE
$85K–$110K OTE
Why GTM Engineer salaries are the highest in the function: GTM Engineers command a premium because the role requires both technical skills (coding, API integrations, automation) and revenue intuition (ICP, pipeline logic, outbound strategy). Pure engineers don't understand RevOps. Pure ops people can't code. GTM Engineers do both — and companies pay for that combination.

What Are GTM Roles in Recruiting & Staffing?

"GTM roles in recruiting" is one of the most searched variations of this query — and it means two different things depending on who's asking.

If you work at a recruiting or staffing firm, GTM refers to your business development and revenue function — the team responsible for winning new clients, managing accounts, and growing revenue. Here's how standard recruiting titles map to GTM equivalents:
Recruiting Title
GTM Equivalent
What They Own
Business Development Rep
SDR / BDR
Outbound to new clients
Account Manager
Customer Success
Client retention + expansion
VP of Business Development
Head of GTM
Revenue strategy
Sourcing Operations Lead
RevOps / Sales Ops
Workflow, tooling, data
Recruiting Ops Manager
GTM Engineer
Automation, sourcing systems

If you're a recruiter sourcing for GTM roles, the key is understanding that GTM titles are not standardized. A "GTM Engineer" at one company might be called "Revenue Systems Engineer," "GTM Ops," or "Growth Engineer" at another. Search broadly.

GTM Team Structure — By Company Stage

How GTM teams are structured changes dramatically as a company scales. Here's what each stage typically looks like:

Seed / Pre-PMF (1–5 people total)

  • Founder owns GTM entirely
  • First GTM hire: generalist AE or a Growth hire
  • No dedicated RevOps or GTM Engineering yet
  • Tool stack: basic CRM, email sequencer, LinkedIn

Series A / Early Scale (5–15 GTM people)

  • Dedicated SDR, AE, and one RevOps or Sales Ops hire
  • First GTM Engineer or Growth Marketing hire
  • Light marketing ops and content
  • Tool stack expands: Apollo, Clay, HubSpot/Salesforce, Gong

Series B+ / Scaling (15–50 GTM people)

  • Full RevOps function (manager + analysts)
  • GTM Engineering as a standalone role or small team
  • Separate Growth, Growth Marketing, and CS tracks
  • Head of GTM or CRO layer added
  • Tool stack becomes a managed system, not a collection of point tools

GTM Career Paths — Where Do GTM Roles Lead?

GTM careers are no longer linear. The highest-growth paths in 2025–2026 run through RevOps and GTM Engineering — roles that combine systems thinking with revenue ownership.

RevOps track: RevOps Analyst → RevOps Manager → Senior RevOps Manager → Head of RevOps → VP Revenue Operations → CRO

Sales Ops track: Sales Ops Coordinator → Sales Ops Manager → Senior Sales Ops → Head of Sales Ops → RevOps → VP GTM Operations

GTM Engineering track: GTM Ops Specialist → GTM Engineer → Senior GTM Engineer → Head of GTM Engineering → VP GTM → CRO

Growth track: Growth Analyst → Growth Manager → Senior Growth Manager → Head of Growth → VP Growth → CMO

Growth Marketing track: Growth Marketing Coordinator → Growth Marketing Manager → Senior Growth Marketing Manager → Head of Growth Marketing → CMO

Who Should Use This GTM Jobs Board?

This board is for:

  • Early-stage operators joining their first or second startup
  • People becoming the first GTM, first RevOps, or first Growth hire
  • Scale-up operators looking for their next high-growth role
  • Anyone transitioning into RevOps, GTM Engineering, or Growth
  • Anyone who works closer to revenue than to function silos
If your work touches the revenue engine — this board is for you.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions
About GTM Roles

What does GTM stand for in a job title? icon
GTM stands for Go-To-Market. In a job title, it signals the role is directly tied to revenue — owning some part of how the company acquires, converts, or retains customers.
What is a GTM Engineer? icon
A GTM Engineer builds the revenue automation systems that power outbound, enrichment, and pipeline generation. The role requires both technical skills (coding, APIs, automation tools) and GTM knowledge (ICP, outbound strategy, CRM logic).
What's the difference between Sales Ops and RevOps? icon
Sales Ops focuses on the sales team — quota, comp, pipeline, reporting. RevOps sits above it, connecting sales, marketing, and CS into one unified revenue system. At early-stage companies, one person often does both.
What's the difference between Growth and Growth Marketing? icon
Growth is broader and more experimental — focused on the full funnel including product loops. Growth Marketing is more channel-execution focused, owning paid, SEO, email, and lifecycle campaigns.
How much do GTM roles pay? icon
GTM Engineer roles pay $130K–$250K+ in the US. RevOps and Sales Ops roles typically range from $80K–$180K depending on seniority. Growth and Growth Marketing roles range from $70K–$175K.
Are GTM roles only in SaaS? icon
No — but SaaS and tech companies have the highest concentration and the highest salaries. GTM roles increasingly appear in fintech, healthtech, recruiting/staffing, and any business with a complex B2B revenue motion.
What skills do you need for a GTM job? icon
Depends on the track. RevOps and Sales Ops require CRM expertise, data skills, and process design. GTM Engineering requires coding (Python, SQL), API integrations, and automation tool fluency. Growth requires analytics, experimentation, and funnel thinking. Growth Marketing requires channel expertise, attribution, and performance marketing skills.

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