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Go-to- Services Market - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2026-2031)

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    Report

  • 170 Pages
  • June 2026
  • Region: Global
  • Mordor Intelligence
  • ID: 6254377
The go-to-market services market size is expected to increase from USD 42.1 billion in 2025 to USD 46.05 billion in 2026 and reach USD 72.85 billion by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 9.60% over 2026-2031. This report is Segmented by Service Type (GTM Strategy and Market Entry, Positioning and Messaging Strategy, and More), Delivery Model (Onsite Delivery, Remote Delivery, and More), Enterprise Size (Large Enterprises, Mid-Sized Enterprises, and More), End-Use Industry (Retail and E-Commerce, IT and Telecom, BFSI, and More), and Geography. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).

Global Go-to-Market Services Market Trends and Insights

AI-Led Sales and Marketing Transformation

The go-to-market services market is being pushed forward by a deeper change than simple workflow automation, because generative and agentic AI are replacing core assumptions behind planning, engagement, and measurement. Forrester described this shift as a point where older go-to-market structures become difficult to sustain, especially when marketing, sales, and customer success still operate on separate systems and separate definitions of buyer progress. This change matters because AI-mediated buying weakens older demand metrics, which makes it harder for internal teams to defend spend using legacy activity dashboards and easier for specialist advisers to win work around measurement redesign and execution discipline. Salesforce highlighted that business leaders expect meaningful revenue gains from generative AI in commercial functions, but those gains depend on tight coordination across sales, marketing, and service, which many organizations still do not have in place. EY’s March 2026 launch of an agentic sales orchestration platform with Snowflake and Canva also showed how prospecting, pricing support, and contract automation are now being tied together in a single commercial workflow, raising the complexity of implementation. In this setting, the go-to-market services market is rewarding providers that can connect AI orchestration to real revenue operations, rather than those that only offer isolated tools or short-term experimentation support.

Omnichannel Buying and Sales Alignment Demand

The go-to-market services market is also benefiting from the fact that B2B buying is now spread across more channels, more information sources, and more moments where buyers expect continuity rather than disconnected outreach. Gartner reported in May 2026 that buyers used multiple information sources during a purchase and that 45% had used generative AI in a recent transaction, yet 69% still turned to sales representatives to validate AI-generated information at critical stages. That finding supports a simple commercial reality, digital self-service is expanding, but it does not remove the need for human validation when deals become larger, more technical, or more risky. Hokodo found that European B2B buyers wanted several distinct sales channels and expected digital experiences that were fast, simple, and accurate, which reinforces demand for GTM specialists who can rebuild channel design, data flow, and seller readiness together. Forrester had already signaled that more than half of large B2B transactions above USD 1 million would move through digital self-serve channels, which means seller-led interactions are being reserved for the points where confidence, compliance, and deal structure matter most. As a result, the go-to-market services market is seeing sustained demand for work that spans channel architecture, RevOps redesign, and front-line enablement in one connected program.

Budget Compression and Project-Based Procurement

The go-to-market services market continues to face pressure from tighter client spending, especially when boards demand clearer revenue outcomes while leaving operating budgets constrained. Gartner’s 2025 CMO Spend Survey showed that marketing budgets remained stalled at 7.7% of company revenue and that many chief marketing officers were being asked to do more with less. In that environment, many buyers are shifting away from open-ended retainers and toward short, milestone-based engagements that require providers to prove value faster and carry more commercial risk within the same contract. Analytic Partners reported in February 2026 that senior decision-makers were leaning more heavily on econometric models and commercial analytics for budget allocation, which raises the screening threshold for any GTM provider that cannot demonstrate a measurable contribution. PepsiCo reinforced the same efficiency mood when its 2025 disclosures pointed to a USD 500 million advertising reduction tied to productivity gains across spending categories. For the go-to-market services market, this does not remove demand, but it does compress deal size, lengthen approval cycles, and push vendors toward clearer ROI framing at the point of sale.

Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
  • Cross-Border Expansion and Localization Needs
  • Pricing and Monetization Redesign for AI and Subscription Offers
  • In-House Martech and AI Teams Reducing Outsourced Execution

Segment Analysis

Demand generation and lead generation held 25.67% of the go-to-market services market share in 2025, which shows that pipeline creation remained the first budget priority even as buying behavior became less linear and less responsive to older outreach models. This part of the portfolio stayed resilient because boards continued to judge commercial teams on pipeline coverage, conversion discipline, and deal flow visibility, all of which kept top-of-funnel support central to spending decisions. Within the broader go-to-market service industry, GTM strategy and market entry, positioning and messaging, and product launch and commercialization retained a premium role because enterprises needed help translating AI-enabled offers into clear commercial narratives. Channel partner and distribution strategy work also gained relevance as companies revisited hybrid direct and indirect routes that had become harder to govern once digital self-serve motions were layered onto existing partner models. The others segment remained smaller, but it captured commercially important mandates such as positioning refreshes and analyst relations support that influenced buying pathways in a more AI-mediated environment.

Sales enablement and go-to-sales support is projected to expand at a 15.86% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing service type in the go-to-market services market as clients shift from tool buying to adoption support. ZS’s positioning in the 2026 IDC MarketScape for life sciences R&D strategic consulting and its wider commercial AI offerings point to a market where enablement is no longer limited to content libraries and training sessions. Highspot’s documentation around AI sales enablement for life sciences and healthcare shows that coaching, contextual content delivery, and workflow integration are becoming part of a more embedded readiness model. The core issue is that many companies adopted platforms faster than managers and sellers could absorb them, which expanded demand for external support around behavior change, process design, and manager-led reinforcement. In effect, the go-to-market services market is seeing enablement grow faster than the overall category because adoption and execution discipline now matter more than simple software access.

Hybrid delivery accounted for 38.81% of the go-to-market services market size in 2025, reflecting continued enterprise preference for models that combine on-site access with remote efficiency rather than relying on only one mode of engagement. This format works well for mandates that need executive trust, rapid iteration, and hands-on change support, especially when projects touch pricing, sales process, partner management, and customer engagement at the same time. On-site delivery still matters for high-stakes war-room situations, leadership alignment, and complex redesign work where workshops and direct stakeholder management can improve execution quality. Remote delivery remained important for broader execution support, mid-tier program management, and workstreams where distributed collaboration has become operationally normal. Across these patterns, the go-to-market services market favored providers that could flex staffing and delivery design without weakening speed or accountability.

Managed delivery is projected to advance at a 15.43% CAGR through 2031, and this marks a deeper shift in the go-to-market services market from episodic advisory toward recurring operating support. McKinsey’s January 2026 launch with AWS showed how major firms are moving toward joint transformation models that link strategic planning to platform execution and measurable business value. That move reflects client demand for fee structures tied more closely to outcomes and less to time and staffing inputs, especially in AI programs that need continuous tuning rather than one-time recommendations. Managed delivery also helps clients keep institutional knowledge inside a stable service relationship, which matters when revenue operations, demand generation, and enablement are expected to improve quarter after quarter. For providers, the go-to-market services market is rewarding those that can operate ongoing GTM functions while proving measurable performance against client KPIs.

Complete Report Scope:

  • By Service Type
    • Strategy and Planning (includes GTM Strategy, Market Entry, Positioning and Messaging Strategy)
    • Product Launch and Commercialization
    • Channel Partner and Distribution Strategy
    • Demand Generation and Lead Generation
    • Sales Enablement and Go-to-Sales Support
    • Other Service Types
  • By Delivery Model
    • Onsite Delivery
    • Remote Delivery
    • Hybrid Delivery
    • Managed Delivery
  • By Enterprise Size
    • Large Enterprises
    • Mid-sized Enterprises
    • Small Enterprises
  • By End-use Industry
    • Retail and E-commerce
    • Consumer Goods and Beauty
    • Media and Entertainment
    • IT and Telecom
    • BFSI
    • Healthcare and Life Sciences
    • Other End-use Industries (Education, Travel and Hospitality, Industrial, Automotive)
  • By Geography
    • North America
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Mexico
    • South America
      • Brazil
      • Argentina
      • Chile
      • Rest of South America
    • Europe
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • Italy
      • Spain
      • Rest of Europe
    • Asia-Pacific
      • China
      • Japan
      • India
      • South Korea
      • Australia
      • Rest of Asia-Pacific
    • Middle East
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Qatar
      • Rest of Middle East
    • Africa
      • South Africa
      • Egypt
      • Nigeria
      • Rest of Africa

Geography Analysis

North America held 47.02% of the go-to-market services market share in 2025, making it the clear revenue center because the region combines dense enterprise technology demand with early AI adoption and a large installed base of sophisticated buyers. The United States remained the largest national contributor in the go-to-market services market, while Canada and Mexico added meaningful support as companies expanded North American operations and needed localized commercial execution. Mexico gained added relevance as nearshoring trends encouraged manufacturing and technology firms to establish or deepen regional commercial footprints that required market entry support, partner development, and local route-to-market planning. The go-to-market services market in North America also benefited from the density of AI-native boutiques around hubs such as Silicon Valley, New York, and Boston, which raised both delivery speed and competitive intensity. At the same time, evolving digital advertising and disclosure expectations increased the need for compliance-aware commercialization support across larger enterprise accounts.

Europe remained a mature but still meaningful part of the go-to-market services market, with Germany, the United Kingdom, and France standing out as the main demand centers for AI adoption, omnichannel redesign, and regulated commercial execution. Companies operating across the UK and EU continued to face channel and compliance complexity, especially when data governance, AI rules, and cross-border expansion plans had to be coordinated in a single commercial model. Spain and Italy represented underpenetrated opportunities in the go-to-market services market because local enterprises increasingly sought support for expansion into neighboring regions while still managing cost discipline at home. South America stayed smaller in absolute terms, but Brazil, Argentina, and Chile remained the main focal points for multinational entry programs and digitally led domestic expansion. Regulatory variability across South America kept diligence, positioning, and localization work important, which preserved room for specialist advisers even when project timing was uneven.

Asia-Pacific is projected to register a 14.48% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing region in the go-to-market services market as digital transformation and cross-border investment continue to lift demand. India’s strong AI adoption profile and China’s role as both a destination and a source of commercial expansion are widening the need for local execution support, partner strategy, and market-specific messaging. Japan and Singapore are also shaping the regional opportunity, with one influencing planning cycles through industrial policy guidance and the other acting as a preferred operating base for Southeast Asian commercialization programs. In the Middle East, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar are drawing stronger demand from enterprise transformation agendas, while Africa remains earlier stage but is expanding through markets such as South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria where digital commercial infrastructure and mobile-first buying behavior continue to improve.


List of Companies Covered in this Report:

  • Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited
  • Accenture plc
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited
  • Publicis Groupe S.A.
  • Capgemini SE
  • International Business Machines Corporation
  • Ernst & Young Global Limited
  • KPMG International Limited
  • Bain & Company, Inc.
  • McKinsey & Company, Inc.
  • Boston Consulting Group, Inc.
  • Simon-Kucher & Partners Strategy & Marketing Consultants GmbH
  • ZS Associates, Inc.
  • Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation
  • Infosys Limited
  • Wipro Limited
  • Tata Consultancy Services Limited
  • NMS Consulting, Inc.
  • Oliver Wyman, Inc.
  • P&C Global, LLC

Additional Benefits:

  • The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
  • 3 months of analyst support

Table of Contents

1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Study Assumptions and Market Definition
1.2 Scope of the Study
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
4 MARKET LANDSCAPE
4.1 Market Overview
4.2 Market Drivers
4.2.1 AI-Led Sales and Marketing Transformation
4.2.2 Omnichannel Buying and Sales Alignment Demand
4.2.3 Cross-Border Expansion and Localization Needs
4.2.4 Pricing and Monetization Redesign for AI and Subscription Offers
4.2.5 Agent-Engine Optimization and Machine-Readable Offer Design
4.2.6 Channel Governance for Hybrid Direct and Partner Routes
4.3 Market Restraints
4.3.1 Budget Compression and Project-Based Procurement
4.3.2 In-House Martech and AI Teams Reducing Outsourced Execution
4.3.3 Data Governance and Agentic AI Readiness Gaps
4.3.4 Channel Conflict and Discount Leakage Across Routes-to-Market
4.4 Impact of Macroeconomic Factors on the Market
4.5 Industry Value Chain Analysis
4.6 Regulatory Landscape
4.7 Technological Outlook
4.8 Porter's Five Forces Analysis
4.8.1 Bargaining Power of Buyers
4.8.2 Bargaining Power of Suppliers
4.8.3 Threat of New Entrants
4.8.4 Threat of Substitutes
4.8.5 Competitive Rivalry
5 MARKET SIZE AND GROWTH FORECASTS (VALUE)
5.1 By Service Type
5.1.1 Strategy and Planning (includes GTM Strategy, Market Entry, Positioning and Messaging Strategy)
5.1.2 Product Launch and Commercialization
5.1.3 Channel Partner and Distribution Strategy
5.1.4 Demand Generation and Lead Generation
5.1.5 Sales Enablement and Go-to-Sales Support
5.1.6 Other Service Types
5.2 By Delivery Model
5.2.1 Onsite Delivery
5.2.2 Remote Delivery
5.2.3 Hybrid Delivery
5.2.4 Managed Delivery
5.3 By Enterprise Size
5.3.1 Large Enterprises
5.3.2 Mid-sized Enterprises
5.3.3 Small Enterprises
5.4 By End-use Industry
5.4.1 Retail and E-commerce
5.4.2 Consumer Goods and Beauty
5.4.3 Media and Entertainment
5.4.4 IT and Telecom
5.4.5 BFSI
5.4.6 Healthcare and Life Sciences
5.4.7 Other End-use Industries (Education, Travel and Hospitality, Industrial, Automotive)
5.5 By Geography
5.5.1 North America
5.5.1.1 United States
5.5.1.2 Canada
5.5.1.3 Mexico
5.5.2 South America
5.5.2.1 Brazil
5.5.2.2 Argentina
5.5.2.3 Chile
5.5.2.4 Rest of South America
5.5.3 Europe
5.5.3.1 Germany
5.5.3.2 United Kingdom
5.5.3.3 France
5.5.3.4 Italy
5.5.3.5 Spain
5.5.3.6 Rest of Europe
5.5.4 Asia-Pacific
5.5.4.1 China
5.5.4.2 Japan
5.5.4.3 India
5.5.4.4 South Korea
5.5.4.5 Australia
5.5.4.6 Rest of Asia-Pacific
5.5.5 Middle East
5.5.5.1 United Arab Emirates
5.5.5.2 Saudi Arabia
5.5.5.3 Qatar
5.5.5.4 Rest of Middle East
5.5.6 Africa
5.5.6.1 South Africa
5.5.6.2 Egypt
5.5.6.3 Nigeria
5.5.6.4 Rest of Africa
6 COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE
6.1 Market Concentration
6.2 Strategic Moves
6.3 Market Share Analysis
6.4 Company Profiles (includes Global Level Overview, Market Level Overview, Core Segments, Financials as available, Strategic Information, Market Rank/Share, Products and Services, Recent Developments)
6.4.1 Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited
6.4.2 Accenture plc
6.4.3 PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited
6.4.4 Publicis Groupe S.A.
6.4.5 Capgemini SE
6.4.6 International Business Machines Corporation
6.4.7 Ernst & Young Global Limited
6.4.8 KPMG International Limited
6.4.9 Bain & Company, Inc.
6.4.10 McKinsey & Company, Inc.
6.4.11 Boston Consulting Group, Inc.
6.4.12 Simon-Kucher & Partners Strategy & Marketing Consultants GmbH
6.4.13 ZS Associates, Inc.
6.4.14 Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation
6.4.15 Infosys Limited
6.4.16 Wipro Limited
6.4.17 Tata Consultancy Services Limited
6.4.18 NMS Consulting, Inc.
6.4.19 Oliver Wyman, Inc.
6.4.20 P&C Global, LLC
7 MARKET OPPORTUNITIES AND FUTURE OUTLOOK
7.1 White-space and unmet-need assessment

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited
  • Accenture plc
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited
  • Publicis Groupe S.A.
  • Capgemini SE
  • International Business Machines Corporation
  • Ernst & Young Global Limited
  • KPMG International Limited
  • Bain & Company, Inc.
  • McKinsey & Company, Inc.
  • Boston Consulting Group, Inc.
  • Simon-Kucher & Partners Strategy & Marketing Consultants GmbH
  • ZS Associates, Inc.
  • Cognizant Technology Solutions Corporation
  • Infosys Limited
  • Wipro Limited
  • Tata Consultancy Services Limited
  • NMS Consulting, Inc.
  • Oliver Wyman, Inc.
  • P&C Global, LLC