Many companies that find success outside the United States have one thing in common: the need to succeed in the U.S. market.
That is not complicated or surprising. The United States is the largest economy in the world and, in many categories, the single biggest available market. World Bank data clearly shows the scale of the U.S. economy relative to most global markets. For companies in high-tech, scientific, medical, industrial, and systems integration sectors, the U.S. is not just attractive. It is strategic.
Company leaders want to grow. The U.S. is where they look. They are not wrong.
Companies expanding into the U.S. face the same challenges any growing organization faces. They must build scalable sales processes, drive demand generation, recruit talent, align marketing and sales, and fund expansion without burning excessive capital.
But moving into the U.S. market adds additional complexity. International expansion is rarely as simple as opening an office and hiring a few salespeople. There are predictable friction points. Remote resources. Language nuance. Time-zone gaps. Limited local networks. Uncertainty about partners. Matteo Fabiano outlines several of these in 9 Mistakes International Companies Make When Entering the US Market.
All of those issues are real.
But in my experience advising companies entering the U.S., there is one challenge that is more subtle, rarely named, and frequently underestimated. Go-To-Market cultural alignment.
When I speak with leaders of international companies entering the U.S., I often hear the same concerns:
“The U.S. market doesn’t appreciate our offering.”
“Americans don’t want to deal with a foreign company.”
“Prospects are unresponsive.”
“We know our product is superior. Why is it not landing?”
There can be many reasons companies struggle in new markets. Product-market fit may need refinement. Pricing may be off. Competition may be stronger than expected.
But many companies would benefit from confronting what I call the invisible elephant. Misalignment between how they go to market and how U.S. buyers expect to be engaged.
GTM cultural alignment may sound vague. It is not. It is the degree to which a company’s messaging, positioning, selling approach, leadership behavior, and partner strategy reflect the expectations, priorities, and decision-making norms of the target market.
This issue affects both companies coming to the U.S. and U.S. companies going abroad. Let’s focus on inbound expansion.
Buyers everywhere are complex and nuanced. Yet regions of the world place different emphasis on what matters most in a buying decision. Companies often carry the GTM assumptions of their home market into a new one and fail to adapt.
Then they suffer for it.
Example: Engineering Excellence vs. Solution Impact
Consider parts of Europe, particularly the Nordics and Germany, where engineering quality and technical rigor are deeply embedded in business culture. Both buyers and sellers often emphasize product superiority, architecture, and technical precision.
When companies from these regions enter the U.S., executives can become frustrated. Their product is stronger. The engineering is more elegant. The performance metrics are superior.
Yet U.S. marketing struggles. U.S. sales struggles. Pipeline stalls. Cash burn accelerates.
Why?
Surely U.S. customers care about engineering quality. Do they not?
They do.
But in the U.S., technical quality is often assumed as a baseline. The dominant commercial question is not, “How well is it engineered?” It is:
How will this improve my business?
U.S. buyers expect marketing and sales professionals to articulate solution impact clearly and early. Revenue growth. Cost reduction. Risk mitigation. Competitive advantage. If the primary message is “ours is technically superior,” the conversation rarely progresses.
It is not that the product is weak. It is that the cultural framing is misaligned.
Example: Relationship-Driven Markets vs. Outcome-Driven Markets
I experienced this directly with a partner in Asia during a prior SaaS venture. In their home markets, reputation, long-term relationships, and affordability were central. Business development often began with trust and familiarity.
When they attempted to enter the U.S., the effort stalled.
The issue was not product quality. It was not work ethic. It was not even pricing.
Their messaging did not clearly convey how they solved a pressing business problem for U.S. prospects. The emphasis was on who they were and how credible they were, not on measurable solution impact.
The result was predictable. Money was spent. Traction was slow. Internal frustration grew.
GTM cultural alignment is not the only challenge in U.S. expansion. It is foundational. If it is off, everything downstream becomes harder.
Once you diagnose it, you begin to see the ripple effects:
Messaging and materials must be adjusted, not just translated. Translation preserves words. Alignment reshapes value propositions.
Leadership must be tuned to the U.S. market. This often includes executives who deeply understand U.S. buyer psychology and competitive dynamics.
U.S. GTM staff must be properly enabled. Local teams can struggle if headquarters messaging and assumptions do not resonate in-market.
Partners can fill alignment gaps, but only if they are selected, positioned, and enabled in ways that reflect U.S. expectations.
Without alignment, companies often misdiagnose the problem as talent failure, brand bias, or market hostility. With alignment, the same product and team can perform very differently.
Company leadership has a choice.
They can attribute early U.S. struggles to market resistance and push harder with the same assumptions. Or they can step back and ask a more disciplined question.
Are we aligned with how this market actually buys?
Finding the right resources, whether internal leaders, external advisors, or experienced partners, to evaluate and correct GTM cultural alignment is not cosmetic work. It is strategic.
When alignment improves, other strengths such as engineering excellence, innovation, global perspective, and operational discipline become visible to prospects in the way that matters.
That is when the opportunity for real success in the U.S. market begins.