This page is for Northwestern Garage founders looking for free GTM feedback from a B2B SaaS marketing operator with five startup VP of Marketing roles.

For Northwestern Garage Founders

You built something at The Garage that cuts across disciplines. Now let's make sure the B2B marketing story is just as sharp.

Free 30-60 minute GTM session for Northwestern The Garage founders. Honest feedback on your positioning, messaging, and early pipeline. No prep required. No pitch from me.

Request Your Free Session
Why this exists

I got help early. This is how I return it.

I have been VP of Marketing at five early-stage startups. Every one of them was built by people sharper than me on the technical side. What I could do that they couldn't, at least not yet, was take a complex product and turn it into a message that made a buyer say yes.

People gave me their time when I needed it most. That changed where I ended up. These sessions are how I build the bridge behind me.

The session is free because I think the right way to work with early-stage founders is to be useful before anything else. Some of those conversations turn into ongoing work. Most don't, and that's fine. The goal is that you leave with something you can act on that week.

If you're a Garage founder trying to figure out how to sell what you've built, that's the conversation I want to have.

Who this is for

Built for The Garage founder profile

If you're a Garage founder and at least two of those land, this session was built for you.

What we cover

30-60 minutes. One problem. Real feedback. Really free.

01

Positioning and messagingWhy your current language isn't turning technical depth into buyer urgency, and what to change first.

02

ICP sharpnessWhether your ideal customer is actually buyable at your stage, or whether you're aimed at a segment that can't move fast enough to matter right now.

03

Early pipeline structureHow you're generating demand, where the drop-off is, and what a realistic first GTM motion looks like with what you actually have.

04

First marketing hireWhether you're ready to hire, what to look for, and how to avoid the hire that looks right on paper and sets you back six months.

05

Your specific questionBring the thing that's been sitting on your whiteboard for three weeks. That's usually where we start.

No prep required. No slides. No pitch deck. Just show up and we'll dig in.

The Northwestern ecosystem

A few companies with Northwestern roots

Northwestern alumni have built notable companies across enterprise software, B2B SaaS, and deep tech. A few from the ecosystem you may know.

Fieldglass
Cloud-based vendor management system founded by Kellogg MBA alum Jai Shekhawat. Became one of the leading enterprise software platforms for managing contingent labor and was acquired by SAP.
Northwestern Alumni
Amper Technologies
Manufacturing operations software that started at The Garage. Raised $15M+ and serves industrial companies optimizing factory floor performance.
The Garage
Rheaply
B2B SaaS resource management platform for circular economy operations in enterprises. Founded by Northwestern PhD alum and raised significant venture funding.
Northwestern Alumni
Adaptly
Social advertising optimization platform founded by Northwestern alum Nikhil Sethi. Raised $13M and served major enterprise brand clients before acquisition.
Northwestern Alumni
About Tom

Five startups. Marketing Leadership.

Tom Berger

Northwestern produces founders with an unusual combination: technical depth from McCormick, business instincts from Kellogg, and communication skills from Medill. The challenge I see most often with Garage founders is that the cross-disciplinary background makes the commercial story too broad. Every potential customer looks like a fit. Getting specific about who the first 10 buyers should be is the most valuable thing you can do before you build a go-to-market motion on top of it.

I've been VP of Marketing at five B2B SaaS startups, from pre-revenue through Series B. The job was always the same: take a technically strong product, figure out who actually needs to buy it, and build the smallest marketing motion that proves the thesis before you scale it.

I run a Portfolio CMO practice with a small number of Series A and B companies. The free sessions sit outside that. No sales agenda.

More about my background
What comes after

Most sessions end at the session.

The session stands on its own. You'll leave with feedback you can act on. No follow-up pitch, no invoice.

A small number of founders want to keep going after the session. Some are trying to hire their first marketing leader and want a thought partner through that process. Some are a few months from a Series A and need someone in the room while they build the GTM motion. For those conversations, I work as an advisor or a senior marketing leader embedded in the business on a part-time basis, without the overhead of a full-time executive hire.

If that's relevant after we talk, I'll tell you what it looks like. If it's not, the session still stands. More on how I work with founders.

Common questions

Frequently asked

Yes. Fully free. No invoice at the end, no pitch. I do a small number of these for founders in programs like The Garage because the conversations are genuinely useful to both of us. You leave with something concrete. I stay sharp on what early-stage founders are actually wrestling with. The only ask is a real question.
Post-program is the right time. You've done the customer discovery and pitch work. Now the question is how to build a pipeline motion that repeats. That transition from validation to commercial traction is where most founders need the most help, and where this session is most useful.
The Garage's mentors and EIRs cover a wide range: business model, fundraising, team building, product. This session is specifically about GTM: your ICP, your positioning, and your first pipeline motion. I've been VP of Marketing at five startups. If the question is about how to sell what you've built, this is where you get depth.
Yes, and it's one of the most common problems I help Garage-stage founders solve. The large market framing you used to get into The Garage and win VentureCat is not the same framing you need to close your first 10 customers. Narrowing the ICP is the first thing we'd work through.
The session is one conversation. You bring a problem, I give honest feedback, you leave with something you can act on. Advisory work means I'm embedded part-time in the business: team meetings, GTM strategy over months, accountable to pipeline results. The session is the starting point. Advisory is for founders who want to keep going.
Send one sentence on what you're building and one sentence on what you want to think through. I'll reply within 48 hours. The session is 30-60 minutes over video call. No deck, no prep.
Ready when you are

One conversation. Something concrete to act on.

Send a quick email with what you're building and what you want to think through. I'll get back to you within 48 hours.

[email protected] Subject line: Free GTM Session -- Northwestern The Garage