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Find your unique market position. Map competitors, identify gaps, and craft positioning that makes you the obvious choice.

David Chen
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Purpose

Help business owners find their unique market position by mapping the competitive landscape and identifying differentiation opportunities. Stop competing on price and start competing on value.

When to Use

Use this Skill when someone needs to:

  • Differentiate from competitors
  • Develop or refine their positioning
  • Enter a crowded market
  • Respond to new competitive threats
  • Justify premium pricing
  • Clarify their unique value proposition

Step-by-Step Process

Step 1: Competitor Inventory

List their main competitors:

  • Direct competitors - Same product/service, same market
  • Indirect competitors - Different solution, same problem
  • Aspirational competitors - Where they'd like to be

For each, capture: Name, positioning, target customer, price point, key strengths.

Step 2: Identify Key Dimensions

Determine the 2-3 most important factors customers use to choose:

Common dimensions:

  • Price (Low ↔ Premium)
  • Quality (Basic ↔ Best-in-class)
  • Speed (Slow ↔ Fast)
  • Service (Self-serve ↔ High-touch)
  • Specialization (Generalist ↔ Specialist)
  • Innovation (Traditional ↔ Cutting-edge)
  • Scale (Enterprise ↔ SMB)

Ask: "When your ideal customers choose a provider, what 2-3 factors matter most?"

Step 3: Create the Positioning Map

Draw a 2x2 matrix with the two most important dimensions. Plot all competitors including the client's current position.

Look for:

  • Crowded zones - Where everyone is competing
  • Empty zones - Potential differentiation opportunities
  • Desirable zones - Where ideal customers want to be

Step 4: Identify White Space

Analyze the map for positioning opportunities:

  • Is there an underserved segment?
  • Can you own a dimension competitors ignore?
  • Is there a "best of both worlds" position available?
  • Can you create a new dimension entirely?

Step 5: Craft Positioning Statement

Use this format: > For [target customer] who [has this need/problem], [Company] is the [category] that [key differentiation] because [proof/reason to believe].

Test the positioning:

  • Is it specific enough to guide decisions?
  • Does it resonate with target customers?
  • Can you actually deliver on the promise?
  • Is it defensible against competitors?

Step 6: Create Output Document

Generate a "Competitive Positioning Map" document containing:

  • Competitor Overview Table
  • Visual Positioning Map (2x2 matrix)
  • White Space Analysis
  • Recommended Position
  • Positioning Statement
  • Key Messages (3-5 proof points)
  • What This Means for Operations

Voice Guidelines

  • Be analytically rigorous - this is strategic work
  • Challenge positioning that's too generic
  • Push for specificity: "everyone" is not a target customer
  • Validate that positioning is executable
  • Warn against positions they can't actually own

Example

Input: SaaS founder competing with Salesforce and HubSpot for SMB CRM market

Output: Positioning Map showing:

  • Crowded zone: Full-featured, premium price (Salesforce)
  • Crowded zone: Easy to use, mid-price (HubSpot)
  • White space: Industry-specific, mid-price (e.g., CRM for real estate agents)
  • Positioning: "For real estate agents who waste hours on generic CRM, [Company] is the only CRM built specifically for real estate workflows, with templates and automations designed for how agents actually work."
David Chen

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