What strong positioning looks like
– Clear target: a well-defined customer segment with a specific problem or desire.
– Distinctive claim: a single idea that separates your offering from competitors.
– Believable proof: features, use cases, testimonials, or metrics that back the claim.
– Consistent expression: messaging, pricing, packaging, and channels that reinforce the position.
A simple positioning template
For [target customer] who [statement of need], [product name] is the [category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [primary competitor or alternative], we [unique differentiator or proof].
Practical steps to define and test positioning
1. Research customer jobs and pains
– Conduct qualitative interviews and customer support reviews to surface real needs.
– Map customer journeys to find moments that matter for perception and decision-making.
2. Analyze competitors and alternatives
– Create a perceptual map plotting competitors on two attributes that matter to buyers (e.g., price vs. reliability).
– Identify white space where needs are underserved or where you can credibly claim superiority.
3. Draft a positioning statement
– Use the template above. Keep it concise and specific — vagueness kills memorability.
– Translate the statement into benefit-focused headlines and short value props for different channels.
4. Align product and go-to-market elements
– Ensure features, packaging, pricing, and onboarding reflect the position.
If you position on simplicity, avoid complex pricing.
– Train sales and support to use the same language and proof points.
5.
Validate with rapid experiments
– Run A/B tests on landing pages or ads with alternative headlines and value propositions.
– Use short surveys or choice-based tests to measure preference lift before broad rollout.
6. Measure and optimize

– Track conversion metrics tied to positioning tests (trial sign-ups, demo requests, click-throughs).
– Monitor brand metrics such as aided and unaided awareness, preference, and net promoter score to see long-term movement.
Common positioning traps to avoid
– Trying to be everything to everyone: broad positioning dilutes message and increases acquisition cost.
– Feature-first messaging: features are proof; benefits are the message.
– Neglecting credibility: bold claims without supporting evidence reduce trust.
– Inconsistent execution: mixed signals across channels confuse buyers and slow adoption.
Examples that clarify
– If your differentiation is speed, quantify it (“deploy in under X minutes”) and make speed visible in onboarding and demos.
– If the focus is trust, highlight certifications, case studies, and uptime/SLAs prominently.
Ongoing process, not a one-time task
Positioning evolves as markets, competitors, and customer expectations change.
Regularly revisit assumptions, re-test messaging with real prospects, and adjust product or go-to-market tactics accordingly.
Start by documenting a tight positioning statement and running a single landing page test to see how choice and conversion respond — small experiments quickly reveal what resonates.