positioning

📁 guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills 📅 Feb 13, 2026
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Skill 文档

Positioning Expert (April Dunford Method)

Master product positioning using April Dunford’s proven 5+1 framework from “Obviously Awesome”. Transform how customers perceive your product by deliberately setting the right context.

When to Use This Skill

  • Launching a new product and need to define market position
  • Current positioning feels “off” – customers don’t “get it”
  • Facing price resistance or wrong competitor comparisons
  • Pivoting product to new market or segment
  • Preparing sales pitch and need positioning foundation
  • Evaluating “Head-to-Head” vs “Niche” vs “Category Creation” strategies

Methodology Foundation

Source: April Dunford – “Obviously Awesome” (2019) & “Sales Pitch” (2023)

Core Principle: Positioning is context setting. By deliberately choosing the market category (frame of reference), you fundamentally alter prospects’ assumptions about pricing, value, and competition—without changing a single line of code.

The Cake vs Muffin Paradigm: The same baked good positioned as “cake” competes with ice cream and pie (dessert), but positioned as “muffin” competes with bagels and yogurt (breakfast). The product hasn’t changed—the context has. A “dry cake” becomes a “hearty muffin.”


What Claude Does vs What You Decide

“Claude handles the framework. You bring the judgment.”

Claude handles You provide
Applying Dunford’s 5+1 framework systematically Strategic context about YOUR business reality
Generating competitive alternatives to consider Knowledge of what customers ACTUALLY use today
Following the 10-step workshop structure Cross-functional input (Sales, CS, Product POV)
Synthesizing into positioning canvas format Validation with real customers
Translating positioning to sales narrative Final positioning decision and accountability

Remember: This skill accelerates positioning work. The strategic choices remain yours.


What This Skill Does

  1. Diagnoses positioning problems – Identifies if issues are positioning vs product
  2. Applies 5+1 Component Framework – Systematic positioning development
  3. Guides 10-Step Workshop Process – Cross-functional positioning exercise
  4. Recommends positioning style – Head-to-Head, Niche, or Category Creation
  5. Translates to Sales Narrative – 8-step pitch structure
  6. Creates Positioning Canvas – Single-page strategic document

How to Use

Diagnose Positioning Issues

Analyze if my product has a positioning problem. Here's the situation: [describe symptoms like price objections, customer confusion, wrong comparisons]

Develop New Positioning

Help me position my product using April Dunford's framework.
Product: [description]
Current customers: [who buys it]
Problem: [what problem they have with current positioning]

Choose Positioning Style

Should I go Head-to-Head, Big Fish Small Pond, or Create a New Category for [product]? Help me evaluate each approach.

Build Sales Pitch from Positioning

Convert this positioning into an 8-step sales narrative: [positioning canvas or description]

Instructions

When helping with positioning, follow April Dunford’s methodology precisely:

Step 1: Diagnose – Is This a Positioning Problem?

Before developing positioning, confirm the issue is actually positioning-related:

## Positioning Problem Diagnosis

**Symptoms of Weak Positioning:**

| Symptom | What It Looks Like | Score (1-5) |
|---------|-------------------|-------------|
| "What is it?" confusion | Prospects ask "So, are you like X?" 15 min into demo | |
| Price resistance | "I love it but it's too expensive" (wrong comparison) | |
| Feature gap requests | Prospects ask for irrelevant features | |
| High churn | Customers leave saying "thought it would do X" | |
| Long sales cycles | Takes forever to explain value | |

**Diagnosis**: If 3+ symptoms score 3+, this is likely a positioning problem.

**Key Insight**: A product can fail in one market category and succeed in another without any R&D—purely by changing the frame of reference.

Step 2: Apply the 5+1 Components Framework

Work through each component in order—they have logical dependencies:

## The 5+1 Positioning Components

### Component 1: Competitive Alternatives
**Question**: What would customers do if your solution didn't exist?

**Common alternatives:**
- Direct competitors (rare - usually not the real threat)
- Status quo ("doing nothing", "living with the pain")
- Manual processes (Excel, email, pen & paper)
- In-house solutions ("script the CTO wrote 5 years ago")

**Warning**: Avoid the "Phantom Competitor" fallacy. Don't position against Salesforce if customers are using spreadsheets.

**Your alternatives**:
1. ________________________________
2. ________________________________
3. ________________________________

---

### Component 2: Unique Attributes
**Question**: What features/capabilities do YOU have that alternatives LACK?

**Rules:**
- Must compare to alternatives from Component 1
- Must be factual and provable
- "Easy to use" doesn't count unless you have data

**Your unique attributes**:
| Attribute | Why Competitors Don't Have It |
|-----------|------------------------------|
| | |
| | |
| | |

---

### Component 3: Value (and Proof)
**Question**: What benefit do those attributes enable?

**Translation Layer:**
- Engineers speak: "10ms latency", "ISO 27001"
- Buyers hear: "Don't lose customers at checkout", "Don't get sued"

**Value Cluster Template:**

| Unique Attribute | → | Value to Customer | Proof |
|-----------------|---|-------------------|-------|
| [technical feature] | → | [business outcome] | [data/case study] |
| | → | | |

---

### Component 4: Target Market Characteristics
**Question**: Who cares DISPROPORTIONATELY about this value?

**Bad segmentation**: "We target mid-sized banks"
**Good segmentation**: "We target mid-sized banks currently undergoing regulatory audit on data privacy"

**Situational Triggers**:
- What situation makes this value urgent?
- What event triggers the buying decision?

**Your target**: Companies/people who ________________________________
**Because**: They're experiencing ________________________________

---

### Component 5: Market Category
**Question**: What frame of reference makes your unique attributes look like strengths?

**The category dictates:**
- Competitive set
- Budget category
- Buyer expectations

**Category options to consider**:
| Category Option | Competitive Set | Your Position |
|-----------------|-----------------|---------------|
| [Category A] | [Competitors] | [Strong/Weak/Irrelevant] |
| [Category B] | [Competitors] | [Strong/Weak/Irrelevant] |
| [Category C] | [Competitors] | [Strong/Weak/Irrelevant] |

**Best category**: Where your unique attributes = must-have features

---

### Component +1: Relevant Trends (Optional)
**Question**: What trend makes this solution urgent RIGHT NOW?

**Rules:**
- Trend must connect to your value pillars
- Don't attach to irrelevant trends (cynicism)
- Creates urgency, not the position itself

**Trend**: ________________________________
**Connection to value**: ________________________________

Step 3: Choose Positioning Style

## Three Positioning Styles

### Style 1: Head-to-Head
**The play**: Enter existing market, claim to be the best
**When to use**: Market fragmented (no leader) OR leader complacent with obsolete tech
**Risk**: HIGH - Fighting the "Gorilla" with more budget and brand
**Requirement**: Distinct, quantifiable advantage for majority of market

### Style 2: Big Fish, Small Pond (RECOMMENDED FOR MOST B2B)
**The play**: Carve out specific sub-segment of existing market
**Example**: "CRM for Investment Banks" instead of "CRM"
**When to use**: Default for most B2B startups
**Risk**: LOW - Caps TAM but gains dominance, pricing power, low CAC
**Requirement**: Features highly specific to niche that generalist would never build

### Style 3: Create a New Game (Category Creation)
**The play**: Create category that didn't exist
**When to use**: Truly disruptive innovation that defies comparison
**Risk**: VERY HIGH - Must educate market or die
**Requirement**: Massive marketing resources, long education cycle
**Reward**: If successful, become "Category King" (HubSpot, Drift)

---

**Decision Framework:**

| Factor | Head-to-Head | Big Fish Small Pond | New Category |
|--------|--------------|---------------------|--------------|
| Market maturity | Mature | Mature | Emerging |
| Your resources | High | Low-Medium | Very High |
| Differentiation | Better at core | Better for niche | Different paradigm |
| Sales cycle | Medium | Short | Long |
| Risk | High | Low | Very High |

Step 4: Create Positioning Canvas

## Positioning Canvas

**Product**: ________________________________

| Component | Definition |
|-----------|------------|
| **Competitive Alternatives** | [What customers would use otherwise] |
| **Unique Attributes** | [What you have that alternatives lack] |
| **Value** | [Benefits those attributes enable] |
| **Target Customers** | [Who cares most about that value] |
| **Market Category** | [Frame of reference for value] |
| **Trend** (optional) | [Why this matters now] |

---

**Positioning Statement** (internal use):
For [target customers] who [situation/trigger], [product] is a [category] that [key value].
Unlike [alternatives], we [unique differentiation].

---

**One-liner** (external use):
[Product] helps [target] achieve [value] through [unique approach].

Step 5: Translate to Sales Narrative (8-Step Pitch)

## Sales Pitch Structure (from Positioning)

### THE SETUP (Market Context)

**1. The Insight**
Start with tension about customer's world:
> "We've noticed that [trend/problem] is affecting [target market]..."

**2. The Alternatives**
Validate current pain:
> "Most teams try to manage this with [alternative 1] or [alternative 2]..."

**3. The Perfect World**
Define buying criteria BEFORE introducing product:
> "In a perfect world, you would be able to [ideal state]..."

### THE FOLLOW-THROUGH (Solution)

**4. The Introduction**
Now introduce product:
> "That's why we built [Product], a [category]..."

**5. Differentiated Value**
Show how you deliver the perfect world:
> "We do this through [unique attribute], which means [value]..."

**6. Proof**
Social proof, case studies, data:
> "For example, [customer] achieved [specific result]..."

**7. Objections**
Pre-handle resistance:
> "You might be wondering about [common objection]. Here's how we handle that..."

**8. The Ask**
Close for next step:
> "The next step would be [specific action]..."

Examples

Example 1: Database → Data Warehouse Pivot

Situation: Startup built a database. Positioned as “Database,” prospects asked about SQL, ACID compliance, transaction volume. Product was weak on transactions but incredible at analytics.

Problem: In “Database” context, they were a “bad database” losing to Oracle.

Positioning Pivot:

  • Unique attribute: Incredible speed on massive aggregate queries
  • Context shift: Repositioned as “Data Warehouse”
  • Result: In “Data Warehouse” context, no one expects transaction support. Weakness became irrelevant. Speed became hero feature.

Outcome: Sales cycle collapsed from months to weeks. Pricing power increased.


Example 2: Userlist – Email Tool → SaaS Messaging

Situation: Userlist entered as email tool facing Intercom (expensive) and Mailchimp (not SaaS-specific).

Problem: “We are like Intercom but cheaper” = feature war they couldn’t win.

Positioning Analysis:

  • Alternatives: Best customers used in-house scripts, not competitors
  • Unique attribute: Data model understanding “User” vs “Company” (B2B SaaS necessity)
  • Value: “Email automation specifically for B2B SaaS”

Result: Big Fish Small Pond strategy. Became “Customer Messaging for SaaS.”

  • Premium pricing for SaaS-specific features
  • Ignored e-commerce customers (wrong fit)
  • Focused roadmap and marketing

Example 3: The Cake vs Muffin

Product: Dense, not very sweet, portable baked good with chocolate.

Positioned as “Cake”:

  • Competitors: Ice cream, pie, tiramisu
  • Expectation: Sweet, frosted, celebratory
  • Review: “Dry and boring” → FAIL

Positioned as “Muffin”:

  • Competitors: Bagel, yogurt, banana
  • Expectation: Substantial, portable, not too sweet
  • Review: “Hearty and healthy” → SUCCESS

Same product. Different context. Opposite outcomes.

Checklists & Templates

Positioning Workshop Checklist (10 Steps)

## Pre-Workshop

- [ ] Identify "Best-Fit" customers (those who "get it" instantly)
- [ ] Assemble cross-functional team (Sales, CS, Product, Marketing, CEO)
- [ ] CEO committed to attend (required for authority)
- [ ] Team aligned on vocabulary and willing to release baggage

## Workshop

- [ ] Step 1: List TRUE competitive alternatives (from customer POV)
- [ ] Step 2: Isolate unique attributes (factual, provable)
- [ ] Step 3: Map attributes to value clusters (So What?)
- [ ] Step 4: Determine who cares most (situational triggers)
- [ ] Step 5: Test market category options
- [ ] Step 6: Layer on relevant trend (if applicable)
- [ ] Step 7: Document in Positioning Canvas

## Post-Workshop

- [ ] Translate to sales narrative
- [ ] Update all marketing materials
- [ ] Train sales team on new pitch
- [ ] Schedule 6-month review

Positioning Red Flags Checklist

- [ ] "We are the Uber of X" → Brings competitor baggage
- [ ] "All-in-one platform" → Diluted, unclear message
- [ ] Marketing wrote it without Sales → Will be ignored
- [ ] Based on what we WANTED to build, not what we BUILT
- [ ] Positioning against competitor customers don't use
- [ ] No proof for value claims
- [ ] Target market = "Everyone"

Governance: When to Revisit Positioning

## Scheduled Reviews
- [ ] Every 6 months: Sanity check

## Event-Driven Triggers
- [ ] Major competitor enters market
- [ ] Significant product feature released
- [ ] External environment shift (new regulation, trend)
- [ ] Acquisition or merger
- [ ] Entering new geographic market

Skill Boundaries (Frontier Recognition)

This skill excels for:

  • B2B products with unclear competitive positioning
  • Pivots where existing positioning no longer fits
  • New products needing go-to-market framing
  • Sales teams losing deals due to “wrong comparison” objections

This skill is NOT ideal for:

  • Brand-new categories with no analogous market → Consider category-design skill instead
  • Commodity products where positioning = price/features only → Focus on differentiation first
  • Consumer products where emotional positioning dominates → Supplement with brand-strategy skill
  • Technical implementation of positioning (website, sales deck) → Use sales-pitch-dunford after

Quality Checkpoints

Before accepting the output, verify:

  • Competitive alternatives are what customers ACTUALLY use (not just direct competitors)
  • Unique attributes are provable and specific (not “easy to use”)
  • Target segment has a clear situational trigger (not just demographics)
  • Market category makes your weaknesses irrelevant
  • Positioning statement could NOT be used by a competitor

Iteration Guide

“The first output is a starting point, not a destination.”

Recommended Iteration Pattern

Pass Focus Questions to Ask
1st Alternatives “Are these the REAL alternatives my customers consider?”
2nd Attributes “Can I prove these? Would customers agree?”
3rd Value “Is this the language customers use to describe the benefit?”
4th Target “Is the segment specific enough to build a sales playbook for?”

Useful Follow-up Prompts

After the first output, try:

  • “My customers actually compare us to [X], not [Y]. Redo with that context.”
  • “The value statement feels generic. Here’s what customers say in their own words: [quotes]”
  • “Stress-test this positioning against [specific competitor]. Where does it break?”
  • “My sales team would object that [objection]. How do we address this in the positioning?”

Learning Curve

Usage What You’ll Experience
1st use Full framework walkthrough, discover the 5+1 structure
3rd use You anticipate the questions, prep better inputs
10th use Framework becomes second nature, you focus on nuance

Pro tip: The quality of your positioning output directly correlates with how well you know your best-fit customers. If outputs feel generic, go interview 5 customers first.


References

  • Dunford, April. “Obviously Awesome: How to Nail Product Positioning” (2019)
  • Dunford, April. “Sales Pitch: How to Craft a Story to Stand Out and Win” (2023)
  • April Dunford’s website: aprildunford.com
  • “Positioning is Context Setting” – April Dunford talks (YouTube, conferences)

Related Skills


Skill Metadata

  • Mode: cyborg
name: positioning
category: strategy
subcategory: market-strategy
version: 2.0
author: GUIA
source_expert: April Dunford
source_work: Obviously Awesome, Sales Pitch
difficulty: intermediate
mode: centaur  # Centaur = high-stakes strategic work, human judgment on decisions
estimated_value: $15,000 positioning workshop
tags: [positioning, strategy, April Dunford, B2B, market-category, sales]
created: 2025-01-24
updated: 2026-01-28

This skill is part of the GUIA Premium Marketing Skills Library — the 201 layer that bridges AI basics and technical implementation.