Startup Positioning
Market positioning strategy that produces a complete positioning document, Moore + Neumeier positioning statements, competitive alternatives map, and market category analysis. Built on April Dunford's framework, enriched with JTBD discovery and stress-tested with Neumeier's Onliness Test.
How It Works
INTAKE → RESEARCH (2 parallel waves) → POSITIONING SYNTHESIS
The process: understand the product and its customers, research competitive alternatives and market context, then build positioning through Dunford's 5+1 components. Typical runtime: 10-15 minutes in Claude Code (parallel agents), 20-30 minutes in Claude.ai (sequential).
Language
Default output language is English. If the user writes in another language or explicitly requests one, use that language for all outputs instead.
Phase 1: Intake
Short and focused — 1-2 rounds of questions. The goal is enough context to research alternatives and build positioning.
Check for Prior Work
Before asking questions, check if prior sessions have been completed. Look for these files in the working directory or subdirectories:
From startup-design:
00-intake/brief.md— product description and context01-discovery/competitor-landscape.md— competitor profiles01-discovery/target-audience.md— customer personas, pain points02-strategy/positioning.md— initial positioning work
From startup-competitors:
intake.md— product and market contextcompetitors-report.md— strategic competitive analysisbattle-cards/— per-competitor profilespricing-landscape.md— pricing analysis
If these files exist, read them and use the data as a head start:
- Extract the product description, known competitors, and customer pain points
- Use competitor profiles and battle cards to seed the competitive alternatives map
- Pull any existing positioning work as a starting hypothesis to test, not a conclusion to keep
- Use customer language and pain points to inform JTBD discovery
Tell the user: "I found data from a previous session. I'll use it as a starting point for positioning analysis."
Skip redundant intake questions. Go straight to research if prior data is sufficient.
What to Ask (if no prior data exists)
Round 1 — Core context:
- What's your product? (one sentence is fine)
- What problem does it solve and for whom?
- What do your customers do today instead of using you? (alternatives, workarounds, doing nothing)
- Who are your best existing customers? (if any — describe them, not demographics)
Round 2 — Sharpening (only if needed):
- How is your product different from the alternatives you mentioned?
- Have you tried positioning before? What didn't work?
- Are there competitors you're often compared to?
Don't over-interview. If the user gives a clear description upfront, move to research. The positioning process itself will surface what matters.
Output
Save to {project-name}/intake.md — a brief summary of the product, problem, alternatives, and customers. If built on prior session data, note the source files used. Project name: kebab-case (e.g., ai-email-assistant).
Create {project-name}/PROGRESS.md with: project name, skill name (startup-positioning), start date, language, research mode (Live / Knowledge-Based), and a phase checklist. Update it after each phase completes. If PROGRESS.md already exists from a previous session, resume from the last incomplete phase.
Phase 1.5: Research Depth Assessment
After intake, assess market complexity and present the Research Depth recommendation to the user.
Reference: Read
references/research-scaling.mdfor the complexity scoring matrix, tier definitions, wave configurations, and the user communication template.
Process
- Score three factors from the intake: market breadth (1-3), known competitors (1-3), geographic scope (1-3)
- Sum the scores (range 3-9) and map to a tier: Light (3-4), Standard (5-7), Deep (8-9)
- Present the Research Depth table to the user (see
research-scaling.mdfor the exact template) - Wait for user response: light, deep, or ok to accept the recommendation
- Record the selected tier in PROGRESS.md
The selected tier determines the number of agents per wave and search rounds per agent in Phase 2. See research-scaling.md for exact wave configurations per tier.
Phase 2: Research
Two parallel research waves exploring competitive alternatives and market context. Together they provide the raw material for Dunford's 5+1 positioning components.
Environment Detection
Check if the Agent tool is available:
- Agent tool available (Claude Code): Spawn all agents within each wave in parallel. This is faster.
- Agent tool NOT available (Claude.ai, web): Execute research sequentially, following the same templates. Same depth, just slower.
Web Search
This skill requires WebSearch for real data. If WebSearch is unavailable or denied, fall back to Knowledge-Based Mode: use training data, mark all findings with [Knowledge-Based — verify independently], and reduce confidence ratings by one level. Note the mode in PROGRESS.md.
Reference: Read
references/research-principles.mdbefore starting any wave. It defines source quality tiers, cross-referencing rules, and how to handle data gaps.
Wave 1: Competitive Alternatives & Customer Context
Reference: Read
references/research-wave-1-alternatives.mdfor agent templates.
Two agents (or two sequential blocks):
A1: Alternative Mapping (JTBD Lens) — Map ALL competitive alternatives, not just direct competitors. Include: direct competitors, adjacent tools competing for the same budget, manual processes, spreadsheets, hiring someone, doing nothing / status quo. For each: what job does the customer hire it for, where does it fall short, what triggers switching? The goal is the full set of things your product replaces.
A2: Customer Intelligence — Mine voice-of-customer data: reviews, forums, communities. Extract: pain points with current alternatives, exact language customers use, what "better" means to them, best-fit customer profile (who gets the most value fastest), switching triggers (what makes someone finally change). Build a language map — the words customers use to describe their problem and desired outcome.
Wave 2: Market Frame & Trends
Reference: Read
references/research-wave-2-market-frame.mdfor agent templates.
Two agents (or two sequential blocks):
B1: Market Category Analysis — Identify 3-5 candidate market categories. For each: what do buyers expect from this category, who are the leaders, what's the competitive dynamic, how mature is it? Apply Dunford's category types: head-to-head (existing category), big fish/small pond (subcategory), or category creation. Assess which frame makes your unique strengths matter most.
B2: Trend & Timing Analysis — Identify relevant trends: technology shifts, behavioral changes, regulatory moves. For each: is it real or hype, how does it affect buyer expectations, does it make your positioning stronger or weaker? Assess timing — are you early, on-time, or late to the trend? Only include trends that genuinely change how buyers evaluate solutions.
Post-Research Checkpoint
After both waves complete, before synthesis, briefly present what the research found to the user: the competitive alternative landscape (how many direct, adjacent, status quo), the strongest customer pains, and the most promising category candidates. Ask: "Does this align with your expectations? Anything to adjust before I synthesize the positioning?"
Keep it to one message — this is a quick alignment check, not a full report.
Phase 3: Positioning Synthesis
Reference: Read
references/research-synthesis.mdfor synthesis protocol and Dunford process details.
After the checkpoint, build positioning through Dunford's 5+1 comp