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five-step-product-positioning

一个系统框架,用于定义您产品的独特价值和市场背景。在推出新产品、难以与已建立的竞争对手赢得交易,或者您的销售团队无法清楚地解释为什么您的产品比电子表格更好时使用。

person作者: jakexiaohubgithub

Positioning is the act of defining the context for your product so that your unique value is obvious to your best-fit customers. Instead of starting with a market category, this framework builds from the ground up based on what you actually beat in the real world.

The Five-Step Positioning Process

1. Identify Competitive Alternatives

Define what a customer would do if your product didn't exist.

  • Include the Status Quo: In B2B, roughly 40% of deals are lost to "no decision." Your real competition is often a spreadsheet, an intern, or "the way we've always done it."
  • Identify the Shortlist: List the other products that actually land on the customer's shortlist when they decide to buy.

2. List Differentiated Capabilities

Document the specific features or capabilities you have that the competitive alternatives do not.

  • Product Features: Unique functionality or technical specs.
  • Company Capabilities: Pricing models, specialized professional services, or unique delivery methods.

3. Translate Capabilities into Value

For every differentiated capability, ask: "So what? Why does the customer care?"

  • Group these benefits into 2–3 "Value Buckets" or themes.
  • The Filter: Only include value that is differentiated. If a competitor can also provide that value, it is not a positioning pillar.

4. Define Your Best-Fit Customer

Not everyone who has the problem will care about your unique value equally.

  • Identify the specific characteristics (industry, team size, technical stack, urgency) of the accounts that would find your "Value Buckets" indispensable.
  • Focus on the segment where you have the highest win rate.

5. Select the Market Category

Pick the context (e.g., "CRM for SMBs" or "Security Orchestration") that makes your value obvious.

  • Rule of Thumb: If you have to spend 20 minutes explaining what you are, you are in the wrong category.
  • The category should trigger a set of assumptions in the customer's mind that work in your favor.

Examples

Example 1: Specialized Project Management Tool

  • Context: A PM tool for boutique architectural firms.
  • Competitive Alternative: Generic tools like Trello or physical blueprints/email.
  • Differentiated Capability: Built-in CAD file viewer and automated permit tracking.
  • Value Mapping: "Reduced revision cycles" and "Automated compliance."
  • Target Customer: Firms with 10-50 employees handling municipal contracts.
  • Market Category: "Compliance-First Architecture Management Platform."

Example 2: Data Analytics Startup

  • Context: A tool for marketing teams to track attribution.
  • Competitive Alternative: Google Analytics (Status Quo) or expensive enterprise BI tools.
  • Differentiated Capability: One-click integration with 50+ ad platforms.
  • Value Mapping: "Real-time ROI visibility without data engineering."
  • Target Customer: Performance marketing leads at mid-market e-commerce brands.
  • Market Category: "Ad-Spend Attribution Engine."

Common Pitfalls

  • Ignoring the Status Quo: Focusing only on "head-to-head" competitors while failing to realize the customer is perfectly happy staying with their current "crappy" manual process.
  • Starting with Category First: Choosing a category (e.g., "We are an AI company") before understanding your differentiated value. This forces you to "back up" into a positioning that might not fit.
  • Feature Dumping: Listing 20 features instead of 2–3 cohesive value themes. Customers cannot remember more than three reasons why you are better.
  • Positioning for Everyone: Trying to appeal to the whole market. Effective positioning is a "stake in the ground" that explicitly excludes customers who aren't a perfect fit.