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Found 3 Skills
Product positioning framework based on April Dunford's "Obviously Awesome". Use when you need to: (1) define competitive alternatives your customers actually consider, (2) identify unique attributes that differentiate your product, (3) map attributes to customer value themes, (4) define best-fit target customers, (5) choose the right market category, (6) create a positioning canvas for team alignment, (7) run team positioning exercises and workshops.
Market positioning strategy using the April Dunford framework, enriched with JTBD discovery, Moore positioning statement, and Neumeier's Onliness Test. Produces a complete positioning document, positioning statement, competitive alternatives map, and market category analysis. Use when the user wants to define or refine their market positioning, find their unique position, differentiate from competitors, craft a positioning statement, choose a market category, or figure out "how should we position this product." Triggers for "positioning", "how to position", "market position", "differentiation strategy", "positioning statement", "competitive positioning", "category strategy", "where do we fit in the market", "how are we different", "unique value proposition", or any request to define, sharpen, or rethink positioning. Works standalone — no prior startup-design or startup-competitors session needed, but leverages their output if available.
Position a product using April Dunford's Obviously Awesome framework. Use when asked to define positioning, articulate differentiation, write a value proposition, or figure out how to position a product in the market. Follows the five-step competitive alternatives approach.