Total 43,773 skills, Marketing & Growth has 2088 skills
Showing 12 of 2088 skills
Calculate and analyze Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) to evaluate unit economics and marketing efficiency. Use this skill when the user needs to assess whether their customer acquisition is profitable, optimize marketing spend allocation, or evaluate business model viability — even if they say 'are we spending too much on ads', 'what's each customer worth', or 'is our growth sustainable'.
Develop brand positioning strategy including positioning statements, perceptual maps, and brand personality/archetype analysis. Use this skill when the user needs to define or refine how their brand is perceived relative to competitors, craft a positioning statement, build a brand identity framework, or map competitive positions — even if they say 'what makes us different', 'our brand feels generic', or 'how do customers see us vs competitors'.
Apply Service-Dominant Logic (Vargo and Lusch, 2004) and value co-creation principles to reframe exchange and value creation. Use this skill when the user needs to redesign value propositions around service exchange, analyze co-creation dynamics between firms and customers, shift from goods-dominant to service-dominant thinking, or when they ask 'how is value created with customers', 'what is our service logic', or 'how do we enable co-creation'.
Design and execute marketing A/B tests for landing pages, email campaigns, ad creatives, and pricing with proper test design and result analysis. Use this skill when the user needs to test marketing variations, improve conversion rates through experimentation, or decide between two campaign approaches — even if they say 'which version performs better', 'test this landing page', 'A/B test our email subject line', or 'should we change our CTA'.
Optimize advertising budget allocation across campaigns using marginal returns analysis. Use this skill when the user needs to distribute budget across multiple campaigns, optimize spend pacing, or maximize overall ROAS under budget constraints — even if they say 'how to split my ad budget', 'campaign budget optimization', or 'diminishing returns on ad spend'.
Apply framing theory to analyze how selection, emphasis, and exclusion shape interpretation of issues. Use this skill when the user needs to deconstruct media or organizational frames, evaluate how different frames affect audience perception and decision-making, or design strategic communication frames — even if they say 'how is this issue being portrayed', 'why do people see this differently', or 'how should we frame this message'.
Apply STP (Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning) framework for market strategy. Use this skill when the user needs to define target customer segments, select which segments to pursue, or craft a positioning statement — even if they say 'who is our customer', 'which market should we focus on', or 'how should we position ourselves'.
A/B test design and experiment planning for paid advertising. Structured hypothesis framework, statistical significance calculator, test duration estimator, sample size calculator, and platform-specific experiment setup guides (Meta Experiments, Google Experiments, LinkedIn A/B). Use when user says A/B test, split test, experiment design, test hypothesis, statistical significance, sample size, or test duration.
Use when handling customer inquiries, complaints, after-sales issues, or needing to build customer loyalty through exceptional service experiences
Causal digital twin for marketing simulation — predict campaign ROI, run counterfactual KOL swaps, and audit causal graphs before spending a dollar.
Applies Neil Rackham's SPIN methodology (Situation/Problem/Implication/Need-payoff questions) to major B2B sales. Use for complex multi-call sales cycles, enterprise deals where the customer must justify the decision to others, when objections are mounting, when calls end in vague continuations instead of advances, when traditional closing techniques are backfiring on large deals, or when designing discovery-call structure. Triggers include 'my deal isn't closing', 'too many objections', 'B2B sales coaching', 'discovery call structure', 'stuck in the middle of the sale'. Not for transactional sub-$50 sales, pure consumer impulse, or PLG self-serve products.
Applies the StoryBrand SB7 Framework from Building a StoryBrand by Donald Miller. Use when writing website copy, crafting brand messaging, creating marketing materials, building sales funnels, or designing email campaigns. The SB7 Framework positions the customer as the hero and the brand as the guide across 7 story elements. Triggers include 'how should we write our website', 'our messaging is confusing', 'customers don't understand what we do', 'how do I write a tagline', 'what should our homepage say', 'nobody reads our emails', 'how do I create a lead generator', 'our marketing isn't working but our product is good'. NOT for growth channel selection (use Traction), not for product positioning against competitors (use Obviously Awesome), not for pricing (use Monetizing Innovation).