positioning-statement

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Create a Geoffrey Moore-style positioning statement. Use when clarifying who you serve, what problem you solve, your category, and why you're different from alternatives.

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## Purpose Create a Geoffrey Moore-style positioning statement that clearly articulates who your product serves, what need it addresses, how it's categorized, what benefit it delivers, and how it differs from alternatives. Use this when you need to align stakeholders on product strategy, guide messaging, or test if your value proposition is crisp and defensible. This is not a tagline or elevator pitch—it's a strategic clarity tool that forces you to make hard choices about target, need, and differentiation. ## Key Concepts ### The Geoffrey Moore Framework From *Crossing the Chasm*, Moore's framework splits positioning into two parts: **Value Proposition:** - **For** [target customer] - **that need** [underserved need] - [product name] - **is a** [product category] - **that** [benefit statement] **Differentiation Statement:** - **Unlike** [primary competitor or competitive alternative] - [product name] - **provides** [unique differentiation] ### Why This Structure Works - **Forces specificity:** You can't say "for everyone" or "unlike all competitors" - **Exposes assumptions:** If you can't fill in "unlike X," you may not have defensible differentiation - **Focuses on outcomes, not features:** "That reduces churn by 40%" beats "that has analytics" - **Category anchors perception:** Saying "is a CRM" vs. "is a workflow tool" changes how buyers evaluate you ### Anti-Patterns (What This Is NOT) - **Not a tagline:** "Positioning" ≠ "Nike: Just Do It" - **Not a feature list:...

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Author
getcrew44
Repository
getcrew44/crew44
Created
4 weeks ago
Last Updated
yesterday
Language
Go
License
MIT

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