The B2B Revenue Executive Experience
How AI and Revenue Orchestration Are Reshaping B2B Marketing Strategies
June 9, 2026
Operational friction is quietly eroding revenue performance across B2B organizations, yet most leaders continue treating disconnected workflows, bloated approval chains, and misaligned teams as isolated issues rather than systemic problems. Matt Heinz, Founder and President of Heinz Marketing, argues that collaboration drag has become one of the biggest hidden threats to modern go-to-market strategy. In this episode of The B2B Revenue Executive Experience, Matt joins host Cory Cotten-Potter to unpack why B2B marketing strategy is failing under growing complexity, how AI in marketing is reshaping revenue orchestration, and why most organizations are automating broken systems instead of redesigning them. The conversation explores everything from marketing automation and demand generation to change management, ICP alignment, and the future of go-to-market leadership.

Operational friction is quietly eroding revenue performance across B2B organizations, yet most leaders continue treating disconnected workflows, bloated approval chains, and misaligned teams as isolated issues rather than systemic problems. Matt Heinz, Founder and President of Heinz Marketing, argues that collaboration drag has become one of the biggest hidden threats to modern go-to-market strategy.

In this episode of The B2B Revenue Executive Experience, Matt joins host Cory Cotten-Potter to unpack why B2B marketing strategy is failing under growing complexity, how AI in marketing is reshaping revenue orchestration, and why most organizations are automating broken systems instead of redesigning them. The conversation explores everything from marketing automation and demand generation to change management, ICP alignment, and the future of go-to-market leadership.


Collaboration Drag Is a Revenue Problem, Not Just an Operations Problem
One of the most important ideas in the conversation centers around Gartner’s concept of “collaboration drag.” According to Matt, organizations with high internal friction are significantly less likely to hit their revenue goals and experience dramatically higher burnout rates across teams.

This matters because many companies still view operational inefficiency as an inconvenience rather than a strategic threat. In reality, collaboration drag slows decision-making, weakens marketing orchestration, delays campaigns, and creates disconnects between sales enablement, marketing, and customer success.

The problem often becomes visible in simple day-to-day workflows. Matt offers a straightforward diagnostic question: How many meetings does it take your organization to launch a webinar?

For many B2B teams, the answer exposes the issue immediately. Campaigns require layers of approvals, multiple stakeholders, overlapping tools, and endless coordination across departments. Instead of accelerating execution, organizations unintentionally create systems that slow down every part of the customer journey.

This friction has a direct impact on demand generation and revenue performance. When workflows become overly complex, teams spend more time managing internal processes than engaging buyers or improving pipeline quality.

Reducing collaboration drag requires more than adding another project management tool. It requires organizations to rethink how work actually moves across the business.


Strategy Must Come Before Technology
A recurring theme throughout the episode is Matt’s framework for building effective go-to-market systems: strategy first, process second, technology third.

Many organizations reverse this sequence. They purchase marketing automation tools, CRM systems, or workflow platforms, expecting the technology itself to solve operational problems. Instead, they end up automating unclear processes and scaling confusion.

This challenge is especially common in revenue orchestration initiatives. Leadership teams align at a high level during planning meetings, but those discussions rarely translate into detailed operational execution. Teams may agree they want better sales and marketing alignment, but no one defines what actually happens when a lead enters the system, how accounts are prioritized, or how buying committees are engaged.

Without documented workflows, technology becomes difficult to operationalize consistently.

Matt emphasizes that organizations must first define their go-to-market strategy in writing, including their target market, customer journey, and operational expectations. From there, they can map the process required to support those goals. Only then should they select technology that enables the workflow.

This sequencing becomes even more important as companies adopt AI-driven systems and increasingly complex marketing technology stacks.


Your ICP Cannot Live in Someone’s Head
Another critical insight from the discussion is the importance of documenting the Ideal Customer Profile.

Many companies claim they have a clearly defined ICP, yet very few can actually produce a written document that sales, marketing, and customer success teams consistently use. Instead, organizations rely on tribal knowledge and assumptions that vary between departments.

The consequences become significant. Marketing may target one audience while sales pursues another. Customer success may optimize for entirely different accounts. Over time, this creates fragmented messaging, inconsistent lead generation, and poor alignment across the revenue organization.

The problem intensifies when AI in marketing enters the picture.

AI systems depend on clear inputs and structured targeting. If an organization lacks alignment around its ICP, AI-powered workflows simply amplify confusion at scale. Poor targeting, irrelevant personalization, and disconnected campaigns become automated rather than corrected.

Matt argues that narrowing the ICP is often uncomfortable because it forces companies to prioritize specific industries, company sizes, or buyer personas. However, specificity improves positioning and strengthens messaging.

Organizations that document their ICP clearly create a stronger foundation for account-based marketing, multi-threaded sales motions, and more effective buyer engagement.


AI Should Redesign Workflows, Not Just Accelerate Them
Most organizations focus on how to make existing workflows faster. Matt argues they should instead ask what outcome they are actually trying to achieve and whether the current process should exist at all.

He compares this to adding more horses to a stagecoach while ignoring the existence of jet engines.

This shift in thinking matters because AI is changing what is operationally possible inside B2B marketing and sales organizations. Teams can now synthesize market intelligence faster, analyze buyer behavior in real time, automate research, and improve personalization across complex buying committees.

However, simply layering AI onto outdated workflows produces limited gains. The real opportunity comes from reimagining work design itself.

Instead of asking how to produce webinars more efficiently, teams should ask whether webinars are even the best solution for the business objective they are trying to solve. Instead of automating repetitive outreach sequences, organizations should rethink how buyer engagement happens across the entire customer journey.

This approach moves AI beyond task automation and into strategic transformation.


Change Management Determines Whether AI Adoption Succeeds
Matt repeatedly returns to one overlooked issue: change management.

Organizations often underestimate how disruptive these transitions feel to employees. Teams are not just adapting to new tools. They are questioning how their jobs will change, whether their skills remain valuable, and what the future of their role looks like.

Matt describes this using the metaphor of “the bowl.” If leadership does not fill employees’ understanding with context and clarity, employees will fill the gaps themselves with assumptions, fears, and speculation.

This dynamic creates resistance even when the technology itself is valuable.

Successful AI adoption requires leaders to communicate clearly about why changes are happening, how workflows will evolve, and what employees will gain from the transition. Teams need to understand how AI supports better work rather than simply replacing people.

This is especially important in B2B marketing and sales environments where collaboration, creativity, and strategic judgment still matter deeply.

The organizations that manage change effectively will likely gain a significant advantage as AI becomes more integrated into the go-to-market strategy.


The Future of B2B Marketing Will Be Built Around Revenue Orchestration

Looking ahead, Matt predicts that B2B organizations will increasingly move toward integrated revenue orchestration models where marketing plays a more central role in coordinating the entire go-to-market motion.

Rather than functioning primarily as a lead generation department, marketing leaders may evolve into orchestrators of customer acquisition, buyer engagement, and long-term market strategy.

This shift reflects the growing complexity of modern buying committees, customer journeys, and sales cycles. Success now depends less on isolated campaigns and more on coordinated systems that connect sales enablement, customer insights, marketing automation, and revenue strategy.

At the center of this evolution is a simple but important idea: technology alone is not the differentiator.

Organizations that win will be those that reduce friction, clarify strategy, align teams around shared outcomes, and design workflows that reflect how modern buyers make decisions. The companies that continue layering tools onto broken systems may move faster, but they will still be heading in the wrong direction.


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Previous guests include: Eric Shaver, Managing Partner at Kensei Partners, Harry Spaight, Founder of the Selling with Dignity, Jeroen Corthout, Co-Founder at Salesfare

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