Agent skill

positioning-strategy

Develop a competitive positioning strategy for a solopreneur business. Use when deciding how to differentiate from competitors, what market position to own, how to frame your offering against alternatives, and how to communicate that position. Covers positioning frameworks (Jobs-to-be-Done, against/for, category creation), positioning statements, and translating position into messaging. Trigger on "how do I differentiate", "positioning strategy", "how to stand out", "differentiate from competitors", "market positioning", "what makes me different", "competitive positioning", "own a position".

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SKILL.md

Positioning Strategy

Overview

Positioning is the single most important strategic decision a solopreneur makes. It determines who you attract, what you can charge, and whether you're memorable or forgettable. Bad positioning = competing on price against everyone. Good positioning = being the obvious, only choice for a specific group. This playbook builds your position from the ground up and turns it into messaging.


Step 1: Understand What You're Positioning Against

You are not just competing against other products. You're competing against every alternative your customer has — including doing nothing. Map the full competitive set:

  • Direct alternatives: Products that solve the exact same problem.
  • Indirect alternatives: Different approaches to the same outcome.
  • The status quo: Whatever they're doing RIGHT NOW. This is often the strongest competitor.

For each alternative, write one sentence: what it does well, and what it fails at. This gap analysis feeds directly into your position.


Step 2: Choose a Positioning Archetype

Pick the archetype that fits your situation. Each dictates a different strategy.

Archetype A: The Specialist

"We do one thing, and we do it better than anyone."

  • Best when: The market is full of generalist tools, and one specific use case is underserved.
  • How it works: You narrow the scope ruthlessly. Fewer features, tighter focus, deeper expertise.
  • Example: "The only invoicing tool built for freelance designers" (vs. generic invoicing tools like FreshBooks).

Archetype B: The Simplifier

"We do what everyone else does, but without the bloat."

  • Best when: Dominant competitors are complex, over-featured, and intimidating to your target customer.
  • How it works: You strip away everything unnecessary. Fewer options = faster decisions = happier users.
  • Example: "Project management for people who hate project management tools."

Archetype C: The Niche Aggregator

"We bring together things that are currently scattered."

  • Best when: Customers use 3-5 separate tools to accomplish a workflow, and the switching between them is the pain.
  • How it works: You combine the critical pieces into one seamless experience.
  • Example: "One place to manage client contracts, invoices, and communication — no more app-switching."

Archetype D: The Opposite

"We deliberately do the opposite of what the market leader does."

  • Best when: The market leader has made a strategic choice that a significant segment of customers disagrees with.
  • How it works: You position yourself as the anti-[leader]. Every decision is framed as the alternative.
  • Example: If the market leader charges per-user and scales expensively → you offer flat-rate unlimited users.

Archetype E: The Category Creator

"This problem didn't have a name before. Now it does, and we invented the solution."

  • Best when: You're solving a problem that customers feel but haven't seen a product category for yet.
  • How it works: You name the category, define what it means, and position yourself as the creator/authority.
  • Example: "Automated client health scores" — if no one called it that before, you name and own it.

Step 3: Write Your Positioning Statement

Use this template. Every word earns its place.

FOR [specific customer segment]
WHO [has a specific problem or need]
[YOUR BRAND] IS A [product category]
THAT [delivers a specific, measurable benefit]
UNLIKE [primary alternative — competitor or status quo]
WHO [what that alternative does or fails to do]
WE [the key difference that makes your benefit possible]

Fill it in. Then cut it down to 2-3 sentences max for external use. The full template is internal strategy. The shortened version becomes your elevator pitch and website headline.

Example (full internal version): "For freelance developers managing 3-8 client projects, who struggle with keeping clients informed without spending hours on updates, DevPulse is a project status tool that delivers automatic client-facing progress reports in under 2 minutes per project. Unlike Basecamp or Asana, which are built for large teams and require manual updates, DevPulse pulls data directly from your existing workflow and generates reports automatically."

Example (shortened for external use): "Automatic client progress reports for freelance developers. No manual updates. No bloated PM tools. Just done."


Step 4: Validate Your Position

Before committing, stress-test against these questions:

  1. Is it believable? Can you actually deliver on this position given your current skills and resources?
  2. Is it important? Does your target customer actually care about this differentiator? (Check against customer discovery notes — did this come up unprompted?)
  3. Is it defensible? Can a well-funded competitor copy this position in 3 months? If yes, it's not strong enough. Look for positions rooted in your unique access, data, or niche expertise.
  4. Is it specific enough? If your position could apply to 20 other businesses, it's too generic. Tighten it.
  5. Is it testable? Can a customer experience the difference in the first 5 minutes of using your product? Position should be felt immediately, not only understood intellectually.

Step 5: Translate Position Into Messaging Hierarchy

Your positioning statement feeds every piece of messaging you create. Build a messaging hierarchy — a ranked list of messages, ordered by importance.

Level 1 — The headline (one line): The single most important thing to communicate. Usually the core benefit. Level 2 — The sub-headline (one sentence): Adds context or specificity to the headline. Level 3 — Supporting claims (2-3 bullet points): Evidence or features that back up the headline promise. Level 4 — Social proof (1 line): A number, a quote, or a result that makes the claim credible.

Example:

  • L1: "Client reports, on autopilot."
  • L2: "Freelance developers save 4+ hours/week and keep clients in the loop without lifting a finger."
  • L3: "Pulls from your existing tools automatically. Generates reports in your brand. Sends on your schedule."
  • L4: "Used by 200+ freelancers. Average time saved: 4.2 hours/week."

This hierarchy goes on your homepage, in your pitch deck, in your outreach emails — adapted to each format but keeping the same core message and order.


Step 6: Position Consistency Across Touchpoints

Your position must be felt everywhere, not just stated on one page.

Touchpoint How Position Shows Up
Website homepage Headline + sub-headline = your L1 and L2
Sales conversations Lead with L1, back up with L3 and L4
Outreach emails Subject line reflects L1. Body delivers L2 + one L3 point.
Onboarding First experience demonstrates the core differentiator
Proposals Open with the position, close with proof
Social media Content consistently reinforces the same theme

Audit rule: Every 30 days, pick one touchpoint and check: does this still accurately reflect the position? If the product has evolved but the messaging hasn't, fix the messaging.


Positioning Pitfalls

  • Trying to be everything to everyone. That's not a position, it's a panic.
  • Positioning based on features ("We have X feature"). Position on outcomes ("You achieve Y result").
  • Ignoring the status quo as a competitor. Many customers will do nothing rather than switch. Your position must make "do nothing" feel worse than switching.
  • Setting a position and never revisiting. Markets shift. Revisit quarterly.

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