positioning-messaging

Positioning & Messaging

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Install skill "positioning-messaging" with this command: npx skills add oldwinter/skills/oldwinter-skills-positioning-messaging

Positioning & Messaging

Scope

Covers

  • Positioning (category, ICP, differentiation, “against what alternative”)

  • Messaging hierarchy (core message + pillars + proof)

  • Value proposition + copy primitives (one-liner, tagline, headline/subhead, elevator pitch)

  • Channel adaptation (website, sales, press pattern-matching)

  • Lightweight message validation plan

When to use

  • “We need clearer positioning and messaging.”

  • “Rewrite our value prop / one-liner / tagline / homepage hero.”

  • “People don’t ‘get it’—pipeline is sluggish and sales keeps re-explaining.”

  • “Create a messaging hierarchy and proof points for .”

  • “Give me 5 headline/tagline options that fit our positioning.”

When NOT to use

  • You need to decide what to build (use a problem definition / strategy workflow first)

  • You need a full brand identity system (visual identity guidelines, logo, UI kit)

  • You need only copyediting/tone-polish of existing copy with no positioning change

  • You don’t have (or refuse to assume) an ICP/use case and “alternative” to position against

Inputs

Minimum required

  • Product: what it is + what it does (1–3 sentences)

  • Target audience (ICP/persona) and primary use case / job-to-be-done

  • Primary alternative(s): status quo, competitor, internal build, agency, manual workaround

  • Differentiators + proof (features, results, customer quotes, credibility signals)

  • Primary surface(s): website hero, sales pitch, deck, ads, press, app onboarding

  • Constraints: tone/voice, compliance/claims, taboo words, time box

Missing-info strategy

  • Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md.

  • If answers aren’t available, proceed with explicit assumptions and label unknowns. Provide 2–3 alternate positioning directions if uncertainty is high.

Outputs (deliverables)

Produce a Positioning & Messaging Pack in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if requested):

  • Context snapshot (decision, ICP, use case, surfaces, constraints)

  • Positioning brief (category + “against” alternative + differentiation + proof + tradeoffs)

  • Messaging hierarchy (core message + 3 pillars + proof points + objections)

  • Copy set (one-liner, elevator pitch, tagline options, homepage hero headline/subhead, CTA suggestions)

  • Consistency enablement (“say this / not that”, internal script, sales talk track)

  • Validation plan (how to test for understanding + recall; next iteration loop)

  • Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)

Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md

Workflow (8 steps)

  1. Intake + success definition
  • Inputs: User context; references/INTAKE.md.

  • Actions: Clarify ICP, use case, primary surface(s), and what “better” means (pipeline response, conversion, comprehension, recall).

  • Outputs: Context snapshot.

  • Checks: A stakeholder can answer: “Who is this for, and what will this messaging change?”

  1. Choose the “against” alternative + category frame
  • Inputs: Known competitors/status quo; market context.

  • Actions: Identify the real alternative in the decision (status quo/workaround/competitor). Choose a category frame and a simple pattern match (“ for ”).

  • Outputs: “Against” alternative + category statement options.

  • Checks: The category is understandable without a glossary; the “against” alternative is explicit.

  1. Write the positioning brief (specific, with tradeoffs)
  • Inputs: Differentiators + proof.

  • Actions: Draft a positioning statement and supporting brief: value, differentiation, proof, and what you don’t do (tradeoffs/non-goals).

  • Outputs: Positioning brief.

  • Checks: The positioning could not plausibly fit 3 different competitors; proof is concrete or labeled “to validate”.

  1. Build a messaging hierarchy (listener-first)
  • Inputs: Positioning brief; audience pains/goals; objections.

  • Actions: Create: core message → 3 pillars → proof points. Add “what we mean / what we don’t mean” to prevent confusion.

  • Outputs: Messaging hierarchy + proof bank.

  • Checks: A first-time reader can restate the value in one sentence; message is memorable (see checklist).

  1. Generate copy primitives (tight + pattern-matched)
  • Inputs: Messaging hierarchy; target surfaces.

  • Actions: Draft one-liner, elevator pitch, tagline options, and hero headline/subhead. Keep it direct; use pattern matching when helpful (especially for press).

  • Outputs: Copy set (v1).

  • Checks: Copy is concrete (specific nouns/verbs), avoids vague superlatives, and matches the category frame.

  1. Create consistency + enablement assets
  • Inputs: Copy set; internal stakeholders; sales/support needs.

  • Actions: Produce “say this / not that”, internal description script, and a short sales talk track + “reset” explanation for confused prospects.

  • Outputs: Consistency enablement section.

  • Checks: Two different team members would describe the product the same way.

  1. Draft a validation plan (understanding + recall)
  • Inputs: Channels + time box; access to customers/prospects.

  • Actions: Propose a lightweight test plan: comprehension (“what is it?”), relevance (“is this for you?”), and recall (“what do you remember tomorrow?”). Include 5–8 test questions and a decision rule.

  • Outputs: Validation plan + iteration loop.

  • Checks: Plan is feasible given constraints; includes a clear “revise/keep” rule.

  1. Quality gate + finalize
  • Inputs: Draft pack.

  • Actions: Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Add Risks/Open questions/Next steps.

  • Outputs: Final Positioning & Messaging Pack.

  • Checks: The pack is usable as-is by marketing + sales + founders; assumptions are explicit.

Quality gate (required)

  • Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.

  • Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.

Examples

Example 1 (B2B SaaS): “We’re an AI QA tool for customer support teams. Create positioning + messaging and 5 homepage hero options.”

Expected: positioning brief (against ‘manual QA + spreadsheets’), messaging pillars with proof, one-liner/taglines, hero headline/subhead set, and validation questions.

Example 2 (Marketplace): “We’re moving upmarket. Reposition for IT managers and draft an elevator pitch + sales talk track.”

Expected: revised category frame and “against” alternative, updated messaging hierarchy for the new buyer, pitch + talk track, and a short enablement section.

Boundary example: “Write me a logo and brand identity.”

Response: decline visual identity work; offer to produce positioning/messaging and a brief for a brand designer.

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