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Gabriel
Gabriel

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Why your GTM stack should be one product, not six

TL;DR — Most "GTM tooling" assumes you already know what you're doing. But for solo founders and small teams, GTM is one connected job: learn how it works → study how others did it → research your market → manage what you publish → gather feedback → run the publishing. So why is the tooling six different products?

I'm building GrowthHunt — an all-in-one workspace where every step of that loop lives in the same product. Four tools are live and free today. The full workspace (22 features across Research / Discovery / Outreach / Manage) ships across 2026.

This is my reasoning, written as transparently as I can.


What "doing GTM" actually looks like for a solo founder

Pretend you're me — one person, working on a SaaS, trying to grow it. A normal week looks like this:

  1. Monday morning, learning. I read a thread about how Cal.com hit $1M ARR. Notes go into a Notion page that I forget about.
  2. Tuesday, research. I open a tab to lurk in r/SaaS and screenshot complaints about a competitor. The screenshots go into a different folder.
  3. Tuesday evening, content. I draft tweets in Twitter's compose window. Some I send, some I save in Drafts and lose forever.
  4. Wednesday, outreach. I open Apollo to scrape leads, paste them into Smartlead, run the campaign, then forget to check replies for two days.
  5. Thursday, feedback. A reply lands in my inbox. I have to remember which campaign, which list, which copy variant. The CRM is already stale.
  6. Friday, publishing. I queue up a launch on Product Hunt. Separately. In a different tool. With copy that doesn't match what I learned from Monday's reading.

Every box on this list is a real job. Every box has its own SaaS. None of them know about each other.

This is what "your GTM stack" actually is: six pieces of software that share zero context, plus a spreadsheet you maintain by hand to pretend they do.

The thesis: it's one job

The premise of GrowthHunt is that those six things aren't actually six things. They're six moves in one job called "go-to-market," and they share more context than the tooling admits.

  • The thing you learned Monday (how Cal.com grew) is the prior for what you research Tuesday.
  • The reply you got Thursday is feedback for the copy you wrote Tuesday evening.
  • The launch you queue Friday is the publishing surface for the brand voice that has been forming all week.

When all six steps share a workspace, the loop closes. When they don't, you ship on hope and a spreadsheet.

What's already live (and what each tool covers)

I deliberately shipped four small tools before the full workspace, because I wanted to see real usage on the moves first. Each one covers one corner of the loop:

Tool Move it covers What it actually is
Growth Story Learn / See how others did it 11 deep-dive timelines of breakout startups — funding rounds, viral moments, GTM bets
Xhunter Research / Manage content Searchable lab of 3,447 viral tweets from 277 AI startup founders, filterable by category, voice, content tag
Get Backlinks Manage publishing A no-touch agent that fans your launch out across 70+ directories
OPChampion Gather feedback / Discover Weekly launch board for one-person companies; 12 picks every Monday with comments and votes

All four already share the same underlying primitive — a brand-memory store that holds tone-of-voice, prior outputs, and reply patterns. The full workspace will read and write the same store.

That's the part that matters: it's not four products that happen to be on the same domain. It's four entry points into one connected dataset.

What's coming (the bet)

The roadmap is 22 features across four modules:

  • Research (5 features) — see what your buyers actually complain about, verbatim, on Reddit / YouTube / X
  • Discovery (7 features) — find creators / podcasts / communities your buyers already trust
  • Outreach (5 features) — write + send + handle replies, in your founder voice
  • Manage (4 features) — pipeline, brand memory, pattern library, content calendar

Notice the shape: Research and Discovery are read-heavy. Outreach is write-heavy with feedback. Manage is the memory that ties the loop. That's the textbook closed-loop workspace, not a "suite of features."

Things I'm wrong about (probably)

I'll list these because the engineers on this site will spot the holes faster than I will:

  1. Trust horizon. Most founders are not ready to let a tool send cold email under their domain on autopilot. The autonomy slider has to start very low.
  2. Verticalization. A YC SaaS founder's GTM is not the same as an indie info-product creator's. One workspace might be too generic.
  3. The "all-in-one" tax. Best-in-class single-purpose tools (Apollo for leads, Smartlead for sending) are very good at their one thing. An all-in-one has to be at least 70% as good at each move and meaningfully better at the seams. If it's worse at any step and the seams aren't worth it, the bet fails.
  4. Compliance. GDPR, CAN-SPAM, deliverability reputation. These don't get easier when the workspace is opinionated.

I don't have great answers to all of these yet. I'm shipping the bounded tools first, then expanding the surface as evidence comes in.

Try it

If you're a one-person company, freelancer, or growth lead at a small team:

  • All four live tools, free, no signup wall: https://growthhunt.ai
  • I'd love feedback in the comments — especially on the "one job, not six" thesis. Does your week look like the Mon-through-Fri above? Or have you actually wired your six tools together with Zapier and it works?

— Built by GrowthHunt Labs. No tracking, no waitlist on the live tools. Email at djyjoyce@gmail.com.

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