Early-stage B2B marketing is where momentum is made or lost. In my product leadership work, I’ve seen that getting from zero to one requires uncommon focus, founder-led GTM discipline, and a tight feedback loop between product, sales, and marketing. In this narrative, I share the playbook I use—and the patterns I took from top operators—to help SaaS teams build credibility fast, compound learnings, and scale repeatable growth.
Alex Kracov is the CEO and Co-Founder at Dock, and the former VP of Marketing at Lattice. Alex joined Lattice as the first marketer and third employee, and he helped to grow the business from seed to 1850+ customers. Prior to Lattice, Alex was a consultant at Blue State Digital — the team that elected President Obama and orchestrated projects at Google. Since leaving Lattice in 2021, Alex co-founded Dock, a B2B platform that has streamlined the customer buying experience for clients like Loom, Origin, and Instabug.
Here’s the agenda I use to guide founders and early marketing leaders: the 2023 SaaS marketing playbook; how to start your early-stage B2B marketing; how to prioritize resources across multiple marketing bets; how to think about attribution; Lattice’s unorthodox million-dollar marketing campaign; how to hire for early marketing roles; what makes a standout marketer; and advice for building your first website.
When I spin up early-stage B2B marketing, I start by defining the shortest path to signal. That means a crisp ICP, problem-first messaging, and one or two channels where our buyers already congregate. At this stage, I bias toward founder-led discovery calls, live product walkthroughs, and tight content that proves outcomes—not features. This creates the raw material for positioning, case studies, and a credible top-of-funnel narrative.
Short-term versus long-term goals must be explicitly balanced. I set near-term pipeline and learning targets (e.g., qualified conversations per week, time-to-insight from experiments) alongside long-term brand assets (evergreen content, customer proof, category POV). The rule of thumb I apply: stabilize one growth motion before layering the next, so we don’t overfit to noise or dilute the message.
Allocating resources across marketing bets is a portfolio problem. I structure it as 70/20/10: 70% on the core motion that’s already working, 20% on adjacent bets with clear hypotheses, and 10% on contrarian experiments that could unlock step-change distribution. Weekly syntheses convert experiment data into decisions—double down, redesign, or retire.
On attribution, I’m pragmatic. Early on, precision is less valuable than directionality. I pair multi-touch analytics with qualitative inputs (self-reported attribution, sales notes, community signals). The question I ask: which narratives and channels consistently show up in won deals? That blend avoids over-crediting the last click and keeps us honest about how trust is actually formed in B2B.
Your first website is a conversion engine and a trust anchor. The first thing people should see on your website is the problem you solve, the outcomes you deliver, and a frictionless way to see the product in action. I recommend a tight hero message, social proof above the fold, a short demo video or interactive experience, and clear CTAs for both buyers who are ready now and those who need to explore.
Brand and positioning mature with evidence. I translate discovery insights into a simple hierarchy: category, problem, unique insight, product proof, outcomes. At Lattice, strong brand clarity met operational excellence; at Dock, product-led collaboration sells the value by making the buying experience itself the demo. In both cases, the lesson stands: great B2B brands tell a truth buyers can quickly verify.
Bold bets can be force multipliers. Lattice’s unorthodox million-dollar marketing campaign underscores a principle I use sparingly but decisively: when the narrative, timing, and distribution are aligned, a high-conviction investment can set the agenda for your category. The bar is high. The insight must be non-obvious, the creative durable, and the measurement plan rigorous.
Hiring for early marketing roles, I optimize for learning velocity, narrative craft, and cross-functional empathy. The ideal first marketer is a full-stack generalist who can research, write, ship, analyze, and partner with sales and product. Experience matters, but potential—ownership, curiosity, systems thinking—often outperforms. I scale the team once one motion is repeatable and there’s a clear backlog of work we can’t tackle without specialization.
Conferences and communities are underrated if used deliberately. I set specific objectives (target accounts, partners, customer content) and treat events as field research and content engines. Every conversation informs messaging; every meeting has a next step; every session becomes a clip, post, or asset. The outcome is pipeline plus reusable proof.
My 2023 SaaS marketing stack emphasizes speed to insight: product analytics to observe behavior; a CRM and marketing automation platform to orchestrate journeys; lightweight data pipelines for attribution; a CMS for shipping content fast; and collaboration tools that put buyers and sellers in the same workspace. What matters most is not the logo set—it’s the operating cadence that converts data into action.
If you’re going from zero to one, keep it simple: validate your ICP, ship a compelling narrative, pick one channel to master, and measure what buyers say and do. Sequence beats scope. Credibility compounds. And the best marketing is a mirror of a product that solves a painful, urgent problem—beautifully.
Timestamps: [00:00:00] Intro [00:02:45] The challenges and opportunities in early-stage B2B marketing [00:05:13] How to think about short-term versus long-term marketing goals [00:07:31] Allocating resources across marketing bets [00:09:13] Signs your marketing is working [00:11:20] The most underutilized marketing strategy [00:13:03] Creating your company’s first website [00:14:22] How Lattice formed its brand messaging and positioning [00:18:22] Dock’s innovative approach to marketing software [00:20:14] The first thing people should see on your website [00:23:10] Lattice’s most successful early-stage marketing tactics [00:28:05] Determining which marketing strategies are still relevant [00:30:25] Lattice’s unorthodox million-dollar marketing campaign [00:33:26] Why Alex had an outsized impact at Lattice [00:37:05] Lessons from his first marketing hires [00:39:41] When to scale your marketing team [00:40:55] Building an effective early-stage marketing team [00:42:30] A tough conversation with the CEO & Co-founder of Lattice [00:44:46] Achieving early-stage marketing alignment [00:46:20] Transitioning from employee to entrepreneur [00:49:19] Getting the most out of conferences [00:50:47] Selecting marketing channels in the early stages [00:52:44] Hiring marketers for experience versus potential [00:56:34] The 2023 SaaS marketing stack [00:58:19] Advice for Zero to One marketing [00:60:46] What successful B2B marketing looks like
Referenced: Dock: https://www.dock.us/ Lattice: https://lattice.com/ Jack Altman: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackealtman J Zac Stein: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jzacstein
Where to find Alex Kracov: Twitter: https://twitter.com/kracov/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexkracov Website: https://www.kracov.co/
Where to find Brett Berson: Twitter: https://twitter.com/brettberson LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brett-berson-9986094/












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