TP-Insights

Case Story: Building a Scalable Launch Engine at ZeroNorth

Written by Oliver Brunchmann | Oct 31, 2025 11:36:47 AM

Turning chaos into a launch system

When I joined ZeroNorth, product marketing was reactive — every release was treated as an isolated event. The challenge was clear: we needed a repeatable, scalable way to launch products that could keep up with the company’s growth and pace of innovation.

The goal was not just to launch faster, but smarter — creating consistent value communication across teams and touchpoints, from engineers to enterprise buyers.

Challenge

ZeroNorth had evolved from a single-product company into a multi-solution platform serving multiple industries. But each product team worked in silos. Launches were late, inconsistent, and missed opportunities to build thought leadership and drive adoption.

We needed a structured launch engine that could:

  • Handle dozens of concurrent releases without burning out the team.

  • Align Product, Marketing, Sales, and Customer Success around one launch plan.

  • Differentiate between what truly deserved market attention — and what didn’t.

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The Solution: A Tiered Launch Framework

I designed and rolled out a P1–P4 launch framework that tied marketing intensity to business impact.

Priority Definition Purpose & Actions
P1 – New Product Major new product or market entry. Full launch package with market research, sales enablement, PR, paid campaigns, and training.
P2 – Major Release Industry-relevant update with clear customer value. External comms, customer webinars, and internal revenue training.
P3 – Minor Release Incremental updates for existing customers. Blog post, in-app message, short training session.
P4 – Silent Release Backend or minor improvements. Logged internally only — no public campaign.

 

This framework allowed us to prioritize effort based on value, not volume — freeing the team to focus on launches that moved the needle.

Process & Automation

To scale the process, I built a standard launch workflow that started early in the product cycle — often before development began.
Each launch followed the same rhythm:

  1. Discovery — Interview product manager, record and transcribe.

  2. Research — Use AI to benchmark competitors and surface differentiators.

  3. Messaging — Create key value statements and messaging for all channels (Sales, CX, Web, Social, Platform).

  4. Enablement — Deliver a joint training session (live or recorded) for Sales and CX.

  5. Execution — Launch across mapped channels with updated assets and Q&A insights.

Automation tools supported the process — from AI-generated competitor insights to standardized templates for emails, web content, and training decks.

Impact

Within 3 months, we turned a fragmented process into a launch engine that drove alignment, speed, and market impact.

Results:

  • 72 successful launches completed in a single year.

  • 100% of Sales and CX teams trained on each relevant release.

  • 5 new products brought to market with full GTM readiness.

  • Improved visibility with structured release communications across all customer levels — users, buyers, and market.

  • Higher engagement and adoption rates post-launch, especially among existing customers.

Key Learnings

  • Launches are not just about new products — they’re powerful retention and acquisition tools.

  • Speaking to all customer levels (users, buyers, decision makers) multiplies impact.

  • Process and prioritization make creativity scalable.

  • AI and automation don’t replace good marketing — they amplify it.

Why It Matters

A launch process is more than a marketing checklist — it’s an organizational discipline. At ZeroNorth, it became a growth engine that connected Product, Sales, and Marketing under one shared system.

It’s a model I continue to refine through Traction Partners: helping scaleups build launch systems that create traction, not just noise.