obviously-awesome

Define product positioning by mapping competitive alternatives, unique attributes, and best-fit customers to the right market category. Use when the user…

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Score

Description

0-2

No clear positioning. Customers can't explain what the product is or who it's for.

3-4

Vague positioning. Category is unclear, differentiation is weak, target customer is "everyone."

5-6

Partial positioning. Some components are clear but others are missing or inconsistent. Team members describe the product differently.

7-8

Strong positioning. All five components are defined. Team is aligned. Customers generally understand the value.

9-10

Exceptional positioning. Every component reinforces the others. Customers immediately understand the product, why it's different, and why they should care. The positioning creates an "aha" moment.

The 10 Positioning Components

Component

Description

Example

Competitive Alternatives

What customers would use if your product didn't exist

Spreadsheets, manual processes, hiring a consultant, doing nothing

Unique Attributes

Features or capabilities only your product has

Real-time collaboration on financial models

Value Themes

Benefits customers get from your unique attributes

Save 10 hours/week on financial reporting

Best-Fit Customers

Characteristics of people who care most about your value

Mid-market CFOs managing 3+ business units

Market Category

The market you describe yourself as part of

Financial planning and analysis (FP&A) software

Relevant Trends

Market dynamics that make your positioning resonate now

Remote finance teams need real-time collaboration

Positioning Statement

Internal summary of positioning for team alignment

"For mid-market CFOs, we are the FP&A platform built for real-time collaboration across distributed teams"

Sales Narrative

How positioning translates into a compelling sales story

Problem → old way → new way → your solution → proof

Messaging

External-facing language derived from positioning

"Financial planning that keeps up with your business"

Content Strategy

How positioning guides what content to create

Thought leadership on collaborative finance, case studies from multi-unit companies

The 5-Step Positioning Process

Step 1: Identify Your Competitive Alternatives

Core concept: Start by understanding what your best customers would do if your product vanished tomorrow. These are your true competitive alternatives — not just direct competitors, but any way customers solve the problem today, including manual processes, spreadsheets, hiring someone, or simply doing nothing.

Why it works: Customers always evaluate products relative to alternatives. If you don't understand the real alternatives, you can't understand what "differentiated" means in your customer's mind. Your positioning is only as strong as the alternatives you're positioning against.

Key insights:

  • Ask existing happy customers, not prospects — they've already chosen you and can tell you what they switched from
  • The most common competitive alternative is often not another product — it's a spreadsheet, a manual process, or the status quo
  • "Do nothing" is your biggest competitor in many markets
  • Different customer segments may have different competitive alternatives
  • Group similar alternatives together (e.g., "general-purpose spreadsheets" rather than listing Excel, Google Sheets, and Numbers separately)
  • Focus on what your best-fit customers considered, not all customers

Product applications:

Context

Application

Example

New product launch

Interview early adopters about what they used before

"Before us, 70% used spreadsheets, 20% used a generic PM tool, 10% hired contractors"

Repositioning

Survey churned and retained customers about alternatives

Discover that retained customers compared you to consultants, not software

Competitive analysis

Map alternatives by customer segment

Enterprise buyers compare to Salesforce; SMBs compare to spreadsheets

Copy patterns:

  • "Unlike [competitive alternative], [product] does [unique thing]"
  • "Stop using [painful alternative] for [job]"
  • "You've outgrown [alternative]. Here's what comes next."

Ethical boundary: Never misrepresent competitive alternatives. Base them on actual customer research, not assumptions or wishful thinking.

See: Competitive Alternatives Analysis

Step 2: Identify Your Unique Attributes

Core concept: List every attribute — feature, capability, company characteristic, or approach — that you have and your competitive alternatives don't. These must be both unique AND true. Not "better" versions of common features, but genuinely different capabilities.

Why it works: Unique attributes are the raw material of differentiation. If an attribute isn't unique, it can't differentiate you. If it isn't true, you'll lose trust. The goal is an honest inventory of what makes you objectively different.

Key insights:

  • Features are the most obvious attributes, but don't stop there — consider architecture, business model, team expertise, approach, integrations, community
  • "Better" is not unique — "10% faster" is not a unique attribute; "uses a fundamentally different algorithm that enables real-time processing" might be
  • Attributes must survive the "only we" test: "Only we [attribute]"
  • Don't confuse attributes with benefits — attributes are facts about your product; benefits are what customers get from those facts
  • Cluster related attributes into groups (these will become value themes in the next step)
  • It's okay to have attributes that matter to some segments but not others

Product applications:

Context

Application

Example

Feature launch

Assess if new feature creates a unique attribute

"We're the only project management tool with built-in time-zone-aware scheduling"

Competitive response

Verify your attributes are still unique after competitor updates

Quarterly attribute audit against top 5 alternatives

Acquisition

Identify which attributes of the acquired product are truly unique

"Their NLP engine processes medical terminology — no other EMR does this"

Copy patterns:

  • "The only [category] that [unique attribute]"
  • "Built from the ground up to [unique capability]"
  • "No other [category] can [unique thing] because [reason]"

Ethical boundary: Never claim attributes that aren't genuinely unique. If a competitor also has the capability, it's table stakes, not a differentiator.

See: Unique Attributes Discovery

Step 3: Map Attributes to Customer Value

Core concept: For each unique attribute, apply the "So what?" test repeatedly until you reach a value that customers actually care about. Then group related values into value themes — the two or three key reasons customers choose you.

Why it works: Customers don't buy features. They buy outcomes. A unique attribute is meaningless unless you can articulate why it matters in terms the customer cares about. Value themes give your positioning narrative structure and make it memorable.

Key insights:

  • Use the "So what?" chain: Feature → "So what?" → Advantage → "So what?" → Value
  • Example: "Real-time collaboration" → "So what?" → "Finance teams can work simultaneously" → "So what?" → "Close the books 3 days faster each quarter"
  • Value must be expressed in terms the customer uses, not your internal jargon
  • Most products have 2-4 value themes — more than that and your positioning is unfocused
  • Each value theme should be backed by proof points (case studies, data, testimonials)
  • Value themes often cluster around: saving time, saving money, reducing risk, enabling growth, or improving quality

Product applications:

Context

Application

Example

Messaging development

Create messaging hierarchy from value themes

Primary: "Close books 3x faster." Secondary: "Eliminate version-control errors."

Sales enablement

Build talk tracks around value themes

Each theme becomes a section of the sales pitch with proof points

Content marketing

Create content pillars from value themes

Blog series, whitepapers, and webinars organized by value theme

Copy patterns:

  • "[Value outcome] with [product], powered by [unique attribute]"
  • "Our customers [measurable outcome] because [unique capability]"
  • "[Number]% of customers report [value] within [timeframe]"

Ethical boundary: Never exaggerate value claims. Back every value assertion with evidence from real customer outcomes.

See: Value Mapping Framework

Step 4: Define Your Best-Fit Target Customers

Core concept: Identify the characteristics that make someone care the most about the value only you deliver. This is not your total addressable market — it's the tightest possible definition of who your product is perfect for right now.

Why it works: Trying to position for everyone means positioning for no one. Best-fit customers are the ones who buy fastest, churn least, refer most, and expand most. When you nail positioning for them, it naturally expands outward. They're also the customers whose testimonials and case studies are most compelling.

Key insights:

  • Best-fit characteristics must be identifiable before you talk to the customer (job title, company size, industry, tech stack — not psychographics)
  • Start with your happiest, most successful existing customers and work backward to find common characteristics
  • The ideal best-fit definition lets your sales and marketing teams identify and target these customers proactively
  • "Everyone" is never a valid target — even horizontal products have best-fit segments
  • Best-fit customers are not necessarily the biggest market — they're the most reachable, convincible, and retainable
  • Consider negative criteria too: what characteristics indicate someone is NOT a fit

Product applications:

Context

Application

Example

Go-to-market strategy

Focus launch on best-fit segment

"Launch to Series B-D SaaS companies with 50-500 employees and a dedicated RevOps person"

Sales qualification

Build scoring model from best-fit criteria

Lead score: +20 for RevOps title, +15 for SaaS industry, +10 for 50-500 employees

Product roadmap

Prioritize features best-fit customers request

"Our best-fit customers consistently ask for Salesforce integration — build it next"

Copy patterns:

  • "Built for [specific customer type] who [specific situation]"
  • "If you're a [role] at a [company type], you know [pain point]"
  • "Purpose-built for [segment], not a generic tool adapted for everyone"

Ethical boundary: Defining best-fit customers is about focus, not exclusion. Be honest about who your product serves best without denigrating other segments.

See: Target Customer Analysis

Step 5: Choose Your Market Category

Core concept: Select the market frame of reference that makes your unique value most obvious. You have three strategic options: compete head-to-head in an existing category, create a subcategory of an existing category, or create an entirely new category.

Why it works: The market category you choose triggers a set of assumptions in the customer's mind about what your product does, who it competes with, and how it should be priced. Choosing the right category leverages these assumptions in your favor. Choosing the wrong one fights them.

Key insights:

  • Head-to-head (existing category): Best when your product can credibly claim to be the best in an established category. Customers already understand the category — you just need to prove you're the best option. Risk: you inherit all the category's assumptions and competitors.
  • Subcategory: Best when you have unique attributes that redefine how a portion of the existing category should be evaluated. You get the category's built-in awareness while shifting evaluation criteria. Example: "CRM for real estate" vs. just "CRM."
  • New category: Best when your product is genuinely different from anything that exists. Highest potential upside but requires significant investment in education. You pay an "education tax" — customers need to learn what the category is before they can evaluate you. Only viable if you have the resources and time to define the category.
  • Changing your market category changes everything: competitors, evaluation criteria, pricing expectations, and buyer expectations
  • Test your category choice by checking if prospects "get it" in the first 30 seconds of a conversation
  • You can change categories over time as you grow

Product applications:

Context

Application

Example

Startup positioning

Choose initial market category

Start as "AI writing assistant" (existing) rather than "content intelligence platform" (new category)

Market expansion

Shift category as product matures

Move from "email marketing tool" (existing) to "customer engagement platform" (broader category)

Competitive response

Reframe category when competitors flood yours

Shift from "project management" to "product development workflow" to escape commodity comparisons

Copy patterns:

  • Existing: "The best [category] for [best-fit customers]"
  • Subcategory: "[Modifier] [category] — [category] reimagined for [specific need]"
  • New category: "Introducing [new category]: [one-sentence definition]"

Ethical boundary: Don't create a new category purely to avoid competition. Only create a new category when your product genuinely can't be understood within existing frameworks.

See: Market Category Strategy

Market Reference Points

Trends act as tailwinds for your positioning. When a relevant market trend aligns with your unique value, referencing it makes your positioning feel timely and inevitable rather than arbitrary.

How to use trends effectively:

  • Trends must be real and widely acknowledged — don't fabricate or exaggerate trends
  • The trend must connect directly to your unique value, not just your category
  • Trends are supporting evidence, not the core of your positioning
  • Common powerful trends: remote/distributed work, AI/automation, data privacy regulations, sustainability, creator economy, vertical SaaS, product-led growth

Example: If your unique attribute is real-time collaboration across time zones, the remote work trend makes your value feel urgent and timely. "As finance teams go remote, real-time collaboration isn't a nice-to-have — it's essential."

Warning signs of trend abuse:

  • Your positioning only makes sense in light of the trend
  • The trend doesn't connect to any unique attribute
  • The trend is aspirational rather than actually happening
  • You're the only one who thinks the trend is real

The Positioning Canvas

Use this template to capture your positioning decisions in one place. Every member of the team should be able to fill this out consistently.

Component

Your Answer

Competitive Alternatives

What would customers use if we didn't exist?

Unique Attributes

What do we have that alternatives don't?

Value Themes

What value do those attributes enable for customers?

Best-Fit Customers

Who cares the most about that value?

Market Category

What market frame makes our value obvious?

Relevant Trends

What market dynamics create urgency?

Positioning Statement

One sentence: For [target], we are the [category] that [key value]

Key Proof Points

Evidence that our claims are true

Primary Message

External headline derived from positioning

Sales Narrative

How we tell this story in a sales conversation

See: Positioning Canvas with Worked Examples

Team Positioning Exercise

Effective positioning requires cross-functional alignment. The positioning exercise should include representatives from:

  • Founders/Leadership — vision and strategic context
  • Product — unique attributes and roadmap
  • Sales — customer objections and competitive alternatives
  • Marketing — messaging and market category
  • Customer Success — best-fit customer characteristics and value proof

Exercise overview:

  • Pre-work: Gather customer research, competitive data, and win/loss analysis (1-2 weeks before)
  • Workshop: Walk through all 5 steps as a team, building consensus at each step (2-3 hours)
  • Post-work: Document the positioning canvas, create messaging, and align all customer-facing materials (1-2 weeks after)

The most important output is team alignment — everyone describing the product the same way.

See: Team Exercise Facilitator Guide

Common Mistakes

Mistake

Why It Fails

Fix

Positioning for everyone

Dilutes differentiation. No one feels the product was built for them.

Tighten best-fit customer definition to the segment that cares most.

Confusing positioning with messaging

Messaging without positioning is words without strategy. It sounds good but doesn't resonate.

Do the positioning work first; derive messaging from positioning.

Listing features instead of value

Customers don't buy features. They buy outcomes. Feature lists overwhelm and confuse.

Apply the "So what?" test to every feature until you reach customer value.

Copying competitor positioning

If you position the same as competitors, you invite direct comparison on their terms.

Start from your unique attributes and build positioning that only you can own.

Changing positioning too frequently

Confuses customers, sales team, and market. Creates perception of instability.

Commit to positioning for at least 6-12 months. Adjust messaging more frequently.

Creating a new category prematurely

Pays the "education tax" without the resources to educate the market. Customers can't buy what they don't understand.

Start in an existing category or subcategory. Create a new category only when you have traction and resources.

Ignoring competitive alternatives

Without understanding alternatives, you can't articulate differentiation. Your positioning exists in a vacuum.

Interview 15-20 happy customers about what they used before and what they'd switch to.

Quick Diagnostic

Question

If No

Action

Can every team member describe the product the same way?

Positioning isn't aligned

Run a team positioning exercise

Do prospects understand what you do in under 30 seconds?

Category is wrong or unclear

Re-evaluate your market category choice

Can you name 3 things you do that no competitor does?

Weak unique attributes

Deep-dive attribute discovery with customer input

Do you know what customers would use if you didn't exist?

Unknown competitive alternatives

Interview 15-20 happy customers about alternatives

Can you articulate why best-fit customers choose you over alternatives?

Value themes are unclear

Run the "So what?" mapping exercise

Is your best-fit customer definition specific enough to target proactively?

Target is too broad

Analyze best customers for common actionable characteristics

Reference Files

  • Competitive Alternatives Analysis — Customer interview scripts, clustering techniques, and the "do nothing" analysis for discovering true competitive alternatives
  • Unique Attributes Discovery — Workshop process for identifying genuinely unique attributes, verification techniques, and attribute clustering
  • Value Mapping Framework — The "So what?" chain technique, value theme identification, proof point creation, and value hierarchy
  • Target Customer Analysis — Best-fit customer analysis, actionable segmentation criteria, persona creation, and TAM differentiation
  • Market Category Strategy — Deep dive on all three category strategies, decision framework, education tax analysis, and when to change categories
  • Positioning Case Studies — Real-world positioning examples including repositioning wins, niche discovery, and category creation

Further Reading

About the Author

April Dunford is a positioning consultant and author who has worked with over 200 companies on their product positioning, including Google, IBM, Postman, and Epic Games. With 25 years of experience as a VP of Marketing at a series of successful startups, she developed a repeatable methodology for product positioning that has become the industry standard. Her book "Obviously Awesome" (2019) codified this methodology and became the go-to resource for startups and growth-stage companies seeking to define or redefine their market position. Her follow-up, "Sales Pitch" (2023), extends the methodology into sales conversations. She is widely regarded as the world's foremost expert on product positioning.

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