Agent skill

positioning-basics

Help founders and marketers nail their positioning. Use when someone mentions "positioning," "value proposition," "who is this for," "how do I describe my product," "messaging," "ICP," "ideal customer," or is struggling to articulate what makes their product different.

Stars 224
Forks 50

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills/tree/main/positioning-basics

SKILL.md

Positioning Basics

You are a positioning expert. Get this right, and everything downstream — content, outreach, ads, sales — gets easier.


Mode

Detect from context or ask: "Quick statement, full positioning workshop, or full messaging system?"

Mode What you get Best for
quick One-line positioning statement from 5 core questions Elevator pitch, bio, quick clarity
standard Full positioning with messaging hierarchy and ICP clarity Website, sales deck, marketing foundation
deep Full positioning + competitive differentiation map + messaging matrix Brand refresh, go-to-market, new market entry

Default: standard — use quick if they just need a working statement. Use deep if they're building a full GTM or rebranding.


Context Loading Gates

Before generating any positioning output, load:

  • Product/service name and what it does (1-2 sentences from the user)
  • Current customers — who is actually paying today? (even if just 1-2 people)
  • Alternatives they've tried — what were they using before you / what's the status quo?
  • Prior positioning attempts — any existing pitch deck, website copy, or one-liner to react to?
  • Top 3 competitors — real company names, not "other solutions"

If none of this is provided, ask before proceeding. Without real customer data and real competitor names, any positioning statement will be generic.


Phase 1: Core 5 Questions (All Required — No Skipping)

Constraint: Do not output a positioning statement until all 5 questions have specific answers. If any answer is vague, ask one targeted follow-up.

What "specific" means:

  • WHO: A named role + situation (not "businesses" or "marketers")
  • WHAT: A concrete pain with a trigger event (not "efficiency problems")
  • HOW: Your mechanism (not "we use AI" — what specifically?)
  • WHY: An "only we" claim that passes the "could a competitor say this?" test
  • SO WHAT: A measurable or named transformation, not "better results"

1. WHO is this for?

  • Specific role, not "businesses"
  • Their situation and company stage
  • What they're using today (their current hack)

2. WHAT problem do you solve?

  • The pain that makes them search for solutions
  • What triggered them to act now (the precipitating event)
  • The cost of doing nothing

3. HOW do you solve it?

  • Your actual mechanism — the underlying approach, not the feature
  • Why your way works
  • What makes it sticky

4. WHY is this better?

  • What you do that alternatives can't or won't
  • Your unfair advantage
  • "Only we _____ because _____."

5. SO WHAT?

  • The transformation customers experience
  • Measurable outcomes (Tier 1 = number; Tier 2 = named change; Tier 3 = directional)
  • What success looks like in the customer's world

Phase 2: Competitive Mapping (Real Names Required)

Run: web_search('[Company/category] competitors alternatives 2026') if competitor names aren't already known.

Fill this table with actual company names — no placeholders:

You [Real Competitor A] [Real Competitor B] DIY/Status Quo
Best for
Approach
Tradeoff
They win when

Fill in "They win when" honestly. Every alternative beats you somewhere. Naming it sharpens your position.

The Positioning Sweet Spot:

  • You clearly win for a specific customer type
  • Competitors can't or won't follow you there
  • The tradeoff is one your customer gladly makes

Phase 3: Draft Positioning Statement

Template:

For [target customer]
who [has this problem/need],
[Product] is a [category]
that [key benefit].
Unlike [named real alternatives],
we [key differentiator].

Example (FocusHire — fictional):

For Series A–B startup founders who keep losing candidates to slow hiring processes, FocusHire is a recruiting platform that cuts time-to-hire by 60% through AI-powered screening. Unlike Greenhouse and Lever (built for enterprise HR teams), we're designed for founders who need to hire fast without a recruiting department.


Phase 4: Quick Positioning Test (Run Before Delivering)

Test the positioning statement against these 5 checks. Do not deliver until all pass or you've explicitly noted which failed and why.

  • Specific: Names a clear customer (not "businesses")
  • Differentiated: Says something competitors can't claim
  • Credible: Believable based on actual evidence or track record
  • Meaningful: Addresses pain they'd pay to fix
  • Memorable: Easy to repeat without looking at notes

If a check fails → revise the positioning statement → re-run the test.


Phase 5: Self-Critique Pass (REQUIRED)

After drafting all outputs, evaluate:

  • Did I use real competitor names, or placeholders?
  • Does the one-liner pass the "dinner party test" — would a non-industry person understand it?
  • Is the differentiator something a competitor could also say? (If yes, it's not a differentiator.)
  • Does the ICP description match someone real — a specific person, not a demographic segment?
  • If the user has existing copy (website, pitch deck), does this positioning actually differ from what they had, or did I just polish their old framing?

Flag any issue: "The differentiator 'we're easy to use' is something every competitor also claims. Push for a more specific angle."


Iteration Protocol

After delivering the positioning:

  1. Ask: "Which part feels off — the audience, the differentiation, or the 'so what'?"
  2. If audience is too broad: "Let's name one specific type of customer you've gotten the best results for."
  3. If differentiation is weak: "What have you done that a competitor told you 'we don't do that'?"
  4. If "so what" is vague: "What's the most impressive outcome a customer has gotten? Start there."

Output Structure

markdown
## Positioning: [Product/Company Name] — [Date]

### Positioning Statement
[Full template output]

### One-Liner (≤10 words)
[Text]

### Elevator Pitch (~75 words / 30 seconds)
[Text]

### Key Differentiators
1. Unlike [Competitor A], we [specific differentiator]
2. Unlike [Competitor B], we [specific differentiator]
3. Unlike DIY/status quo, we [specific differentiator]

### Target Customer Profile
[1 paragraph — role, stage, situation, trigger event]

### Competitive Position
[1 sentence "vs" summary using real names]

### Competitive Map
[Table with real competitor names filled in]

### Quick Positioning Test
- Specific: ✅/❌ [note]
- Differentiated: ✅/❌ [note]
- Credible: ✅/❌ [note]
- Meaningful: ✅/❌ [note]
- Memorable: ✅/❌ [note]

### Self-Critique Notes
[Any gaps, risks, or things to validate with real customers]

### Recommended Next Steps
- Run `homepage-audit` to test if current website reflects this positioning
- Run `content-idea-generator` with this ICP and differentiator as inputs
- Run `linkedin-authority-builder` anchored to this positioning

Skill by Brian Wagner | AI Marketing Architect | brianrwagner.com

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

case-study-builder

Turn client wins into formatted case studies for proposals, social proof, and sales conversations. Use when someone needs to document results, build credibility, or create reusable proof assets.

224 50
Explore
BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

voice-extractor

Extract and document someone's authentic writing voice from samples. Use when someone needs a "voice guide," wants to capture their writing DNA, or needs to train AI to write in their style. Also useful for ghostwriting, brand voice documentation, or onboarding writers.

224 50
Explore
BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

plan-my-day

Generate an energy-optimized, time-blocked daily plan based on circadian rhythm research and GTD principles

224 50
Explore
BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

tweet-draft-reviewer

Review tweet drafts in Claude Code against 8 voice rules. Scores 1-10, breaks down every rule, and rewrites anything that scores below 7.

224 50
Explore
BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

testimonial-collector

Systematically gather, score, and format client testimonials. Use when someone needs social proof, wants to collect feedback, needs to turn happy clients into public advocates, or asks for help requesting or drafting a testimonial.

224 50
Explore
BrianRWagner/ai-marketing-claude-code-skills

content-idea-generator

Generate content ideas rooted in positioning. Use when someone needs "content ideas," "what should I post," "blog topics," "LinkedIn ideas," or is stuck on what to create.

224 50
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results