A go-to-market plan for Foresight Data Machines.
Premise.
The role is two jobs stitched together. First, grow Foresight inside steel using the accounts you already have. Second, take a real AI company out of steel into the next heavy industry without losing the credibility you have built.
This memo covers both. It is operator-level. Proof points are inline, deliberately brief. I would rather talk them through with you than pre-polish them.
Week one. Day one.
- Ask you three questions. Which deal is stuck. Which two customers you would walk through fire for. What "hire worked" looks like at day 90.
- Get Rachael's target-account list. Sit in on the next three sales calls, muted, taking notes.
- Ask an engineer to walk me through ScrapChef — physics, not pitch — until I can draw the architecture on a napkin.
- Book a flight to Hamburg. Stand next to the furnace. Everything I write afterward will be better for it.
Ninety days.
Listen. Audit. Ship one small win.
- Fifteen structured customer interviews. Output: one messaging doc the team can memorise.
- Clean UTMs. Event tracking on the demo flow. One weekly dashboard you will actually open.
- Rewrite the ScrapChef homepage above-the-fold around the strongest piece of customer evidence we have.
Build what compounds.
- ArcelorMittal Hamburg case study, done properly. Numbers. Named operators if permission allows.
- Biweekly technical posts co-written with an engineer. One bylined to Steel Times International or AIST.
- AISTech 2026 locked. ESTAD and the European EAF Conference scoped.
- Inside the Furnace — episode one in production.
One campaign. One press hit. One dinner.
- One integrated campaign on one theme — e.g., the real cost of mix decisions in an EAF — shipped across paper, social, webinar, paid, sales enablement.
- One tier-one press placement. Three trade-press placements in parallel.
- First self-hosted dinner. Twelve people, invite-only, London or Austin.
- Episode one shipped.
Targets.
I will not promise pipeline numbers before a baseline exists. Operational targets I hold myself to:
| Metric | Day 30 | Day 60 | Day 90 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long-form assets published | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Technical posts shipped | 0 | 2 | 5 |
| Conferences confirmed (12 mo) | scoped | 4–6 locked | 6–8 locked |
| Self-hosted events | 0 | 0 | 1 done |
| Press placements | 0 | 1 | 3–4 |
| Video episodes | 0 | 1 in post | 1 shipped |
| Demo bookings (marketing-influenced) | baseline | +25% | +50% |
If I cannot connect a metric to revenue or customer depth, I do not report on it.
Creative bet.
Inside the Furnace.
<$60K · 6 episodesShort-form documentary on YouTube. Eight to twelve minutes per episode, shot inside a customer mill. One technical problem per episode. Reference: Wendover, Apple design docs. Not corporate B2B video.
Audience: metallurgists and operations leaders who watch Practical Engineering on their lunch break. Zero companies in heavy-industry AI are making this. Cost of being wrong: one quarter of video spend. Cost of being right: an eighteen-month moat.
Ship one. Judge after three. Clear kill criteria set up front.
What I would need.
- Engineering timeOne hour per engineer per month. I draft 80%. They make sure I am not lying.
- Your voiceFirst integrated campaign and first tier-one press story need you on the record. After that we build out others.
- Permission to killIf something is not working at day 60 or 90, I stop it. Includes things I argued for.
- Customer championOne person at ArcelorMittal willing to go on the record. Most important variable in whether this function works.
- Budget shapeWeek-two conversation. Not for approval. So I know the shape. Events will be the largest line.
- BoundariesI use a wheelchair. Site visits are non-negotiable. Plan logistics early.
The cross-industry playbook.
Heavy industries do not share buyers. They share buyer behaviour.
A mini-mill plant manager, a foundry director, a cement ops lead, an aluminium smelter engineer — different press, different conferences, same buying pattern. Peers over vendors. Pilot over big-bang. Skeptical of AI. Operators influence the decision as much as the budget holder. The real conversation happens at the dinner, not the booth.
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Find the anchor customer first.
No marketing launch into a new vertical. Commercial closes an anchor. Marketing wraps the story. ArcelorMittal Hamburg was a commercial outcome we amplified, not an asset we manufactured.
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Translate. Do not transplant.
Steel messaging will not work in aluminium even when the product does. Technical credibility is the one thing that carries across.
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Hire one industry native per vertical.
Retired plant engineer, trade-mag editor, ex-ops director. On contract. Credibility filter and relationship opener. Cost is small. Time saved is large.
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Find the three rooms that matter.
Every heavy industry has a short list of conferences, publications, committees that serious buyers watch. First move in a new vertical is a paper, a byline, a committee seat — not a campaign.
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Port the infrastructure, not the content.
Video capability, event playbook, case template, PR relationships, brand system, dashboard. Content reused verbatim kills credibility. Infrastructure reused compounds.
Brand architecture.
FDM / ScrapChef is already set up for cross-industry expansion. Protect it.
| Foresight Data Machines | ScrapChef & future product brands | |
|---|---|---|
| Role | The company. The scientists. The lab. | The product. What operators and plant managers touch. |
| Carries | Technical credibility. Recruiting. Investors. Research. Cross-industry press. | Product messaging. Demos. Case studies. Industry events. Merch. |
| Scales by | Staying constant. Same brand in steel, aluminium, cement. | Proliferating. New product brands per vertical on the same FDM platform. |
| Implication | Modest refresh. Becomes the brand that speaks to analysts, journalists, investors. | Stays sharp and steel-focused. Not diluted into "AI for metals." |
We never rebrand to enter a new industry. We add a product on the FDM platform.
Year one, built for year two.
- Case templateNot a case study. A template with a slot for different nouns.
- Production capabilityNot video. Director, DP, edit pipeline. Ports to Inside the Foundry.
- Event playbookNot events. Paper + booth + dinner + capture + follow-up, documented.
- Brand systemNot guidelines. A system that already accommodates product brand two and three.
- PR relationshipsNot hits. Journalists who cover industrial and climate-tech broadly.
- DashboardNot reports. Multi-brand, multi-vertical from day one.
None of this adds cost. It adds discipline. The marketer who skips it makes choices in steel that have to be unwound in year two.