The GTM Engineer career ladder
GTM Engineering sits between RevOps, growth, and software engineering. It is the technical seat that ships workflows, runs data stacks, and increasingly builds internal agents. This is the canonical ladder — from IC1 to VP — with responsibilities, tool fluency, and live compensation bands from AI company job postings.
IC Track
Deep dive →IC1 — GTM Engineer I
Executes defined playbooks: list builds, campaign setup, enrichment, and basic workflow maintenance.
- GTM Engineer I
- Associate GTM Engineer
- Junior GTM Engineer
- GTM Analyst I
- Clay
- Apollo
- HubSpot
- Salesforce
- Zapier / Make
- Run list-building and enrichment jobs in Clay, Apollo, or similar.
- Maintain CRM hygiene and basic automation rules.
- Support senior engineers on larger workflow projects.
IC2 — GTM Engineer
Owns one motion or tool stack end-to-end and ships reliable workflows for a single team.
- GTM Engineer
- Growth Engineer
- Revenue Engineer
- Sales Engineer (Ops)
- Clay
- Apollo
- Smartlead / Instantly
- HubSpot
- Salesforce
- Design and ship workflows for one GTM motion (outbound, inbound, CS).
- Own data routing between CRM, engagement, and product data.
- Debug and optimize existing automations.
IC3 — Senior GTM Engineer
Designs cross-tool architecture, mentors junior engineers, and defines standards for one function.
- Senior GTM Engineer
- Senior Growth Engineer
- Lead GTM Engineer
- GTM Engineer III
- Clay
- Apollo
- Outreach / Salesloft
- HubSpot
- Salesforce
- Architect multi-tool systems across CRM, enrichment, and engagement.
- Mentor IC1/IC2 engineers and review workflow designs.
- Define stack standards and data governance for a function.
IC4 — Staff GTM Engineer
Org-wide platform decisions: evaluates vendors, sets data models, and scales systems across multiple teams.
- Staff GTM Engineer
- Staff Growth Engineer
- Principal GTM Engineer (early)
- GTM Architect
- Clay
- Apollo
- Outreach
- Salesforce
- HubSpot
- Set the company-wide GTM data model and routing rules.
- Evaluate and consolidate vendor stacks across teams.
- Build reusable components other engineers adopt.
IC5 — Principal GTM Engineer
Industry-level influence: defines how GTM engineering is practiced, publishes standards, and shapes vendor ecosystems.
- Principal GTM Engineer
- Distinguished GTM Engineer
- Fellow GTM Engineer
- All core GTM tools
- Agent frameworks
- Data warehouses
- AI infrastructure
- Define industry standards and frameworks for GTM engineering.
- Advise executives on multi-year GTM systems strategy.
- Publish teardowns, benchmarks, and open-source tooling.
Management Track
Deep dive →M1 — Lead / Manager, GTM Engineering
Leads a pod of GTM engineers, manages execution, and hires for the team.
- Lead GTM Engineer
- Manager, GTM Engineering
- GTM Engineering Lead
- Head of GTM Engineering (small team)
- Clay
- Apollo
- HubSpot
- Salesforce
- Project management
- Manage a small team of GTM engineers (2–6).
- Set sprint priorities and balance requests from sales, marketing, CS.
- Hire and onboard new engineers.
M2 — Director / Head of GTM Engineering
Owns the function strategy, budget, and roadmap across all GTM teams.
- Director of GTM Engineering
- Head of GTM Engineering
- Director of Revenue Operations & Engineering
- All core GTM tools
- BI / analytics
- AI tooling
- Vendor management
- Own the GTM engineering budget and vendor roadmap.
- Define function-level OKRs and hiring plan.
- Partner with C-suite on go-to-market strategy.
M3 — VP of GTM Engineering
Company-wide systems strategy: aligns GTM engineering with revenue, product, and finance at the executive level.
- VP of GTM Engineering
- VP of Revenue Operations
- Chief Revenue Officer (systems-heavy)
- Enterprise GTM stack
- AI infrastructure
- Data platform
- Board-level metrics
- Define company-wide GTM systems and data strategy.
- Align GTM engineering with revenue targets and product roadmap.
- Lead through M&A integrations and global expansion.
How we map levels
Levels are inferred from job titles and verified against responsibilities and tool fluency in the description. Compensation bands are computed from live job postings that disclose USD salary ranges; bands are p25–p75 with the median marked. Sample sizes are shown per level so you can judge how much data is behind each band.