| name | biz-dev-positioning |
| description | Define the strategic market position for a client or for the consultancy itself — covering USP development, niche definition, the 15-second pitch, mission and vision statements, and preeminence strategy. Use when a client (or the consultancy) needs to articulate what makes them different, who they serve, and why prospects should choose them over alternatives. |
Business Development — Positioning
Use when
- Define the strategic market position for a client or for the consultancy itself — covering USP development, niche definition, the 15-second pitch, mission and vision statements, and preeminence strategy. Use when a client (or the consultancy) needs to articulate what makes them different, who they serve, and why prospects should choose them over alternatives.
- Use this skill when it is the closest match to the requested deliverable or workflow.
Do not use when
- Do not use this skill for graphic design, video production, software development, or legal advice beyond the repository's stated scope.
- Do not use it when another skill in this repository is clearly more specific to the requested deliverable.
Workflow
- Collect the required inputs or source material before drafting, unless this skill explicitly generates the intake itself.
- Follow the section order and decision rules in this
SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.
- Review the draft against the quality criteria, then deliver the final output in markdown unless the skill specifies another format.
Anti-Patterns
- Do not invent client facts, performance data, budgets, or approvals that were not provided or clearly inferred from evidence.
- Do not skip required inputs, mandatory sections, or quality checks just to make the output shorter.
- Do not drift into out-of-scope work such as code implementation, design production, or unsupported legal conclusions.
Outputs
- A structured markdown document, plan, playbook, or strategy ready for client-facing or internal use.
References
- Use the inline instructions in this skill now. If a
references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.
Required Input
Before generating any deliverable, ask for:
- Business name
- Industry / sector
- Country or city (default: Uganda / East Africa)
- Current positioning (how they currently describe themselves, if at all)
- Primary competitor(s) — named or described
- Primary client type they want to attract
- What they most want to be known for
Part 1 — The USP (Unique Selling Proposition)
The USP is the one specific thing that distinguishes a business, product, or personal brand from every alternative available to the target client.
Original concept: Rosser Reeves (1950s). Applied here via Pinskey (1997).
The USP development process:
- List every service or product the business offers
- For each service, list the specific, tangible outcomes it delivers to clients
- Identify the one outcome that is both the most valuable to the target client AND the most differentiated from competitors
- Express it in the language the ideal client would use — not internal jargon
- Apply the test: Could a direct competitor say this exact sentence? If yes, it is not a USP. Refine.
The USP formula:
"We [specific action] for [specific client type] so that [specific outcome] — without [key obstacle or pain the competition imposes]."
Examples:
- Weak: "We provide social media management services."
- Strong: "We manage social media for Ugandan food and beverage brands so that their Facebook and WhatsApp communities generate walk-in customers — without the owner spending a single hour on content."
Part 2 — The 15-Second Pitch
The spoken version of the USP — used at networking events, in introductions, and in discovery calls.
Structure:
"[What I/we do] + [for whom] + [the specific result they get] + [why us, not someone else]"
Length: 2–3 sentences. Delivered in under 15 seconds.
Preparation process:
- Draft the pitch using the USP formula above
- Say it aloud — does it sound natural, or like a brochure?
- Revise until it sounds like something you would say in a casual conversation
- Test it: deliver it at one networking event and note what follow-up questions it triggers
Common mistakes:
- Starting with a job title ("I'm a social media manager") — labels, not value
- Describing inputs ("We post three times a week") — outputs are what clients want
- Being too broad ("We help businesses grow") — no differentiation
- Being too long — if it takes more than 20 seconds, it is a sales pitch, not a pitch
Part 3 — Niche Definition
"For the self-employed individual, finding a niche is somewhat like establishing job security." — Edwards, Edwards and Douglas (1991)
The most successful independent service businesses are highly specialised. A niche must be:
- Small enough to avoid heavy competition and be reachable within the business's time and budget
- Large enough to sustain the revenue the business requires
Niche definition exercise:
Answer these four questions:
- Which type of client produces the most revenue per engagement?
- Which type of client produces the most referrals?
- Which type of work do you do best and find most interesting?
- Where is competition least intense?
The intersection of all four answers is the natural niche.
Niche levels (from broad to specific):
| Level | Example |
|---|
| Sector | Healthcare |
| Sub-sector | Private hospitals and clinics |
| Role within sub-sector | Marketing teams in private hospitals |
| Geography | Kampala and Nairobi |
| Specific outcome | Patient acquisition through Facebook and WhatsApp |
The more specific, the more powerful the positioning.
Part 4 — Mission and Vision Statements
Mission Statement — what the business does, for whom, and the value it delivers. Present tense. Action-oriented.
Formula: "We [verb] [specific service or output] for [specific client type] so that [specific outcome]."
Example: "We design and manage social media strategies for East African SMEs so that their online presence converts audiences into paying customers."
Vision Statement — where the business is heading. Future-tense. Aspirational but specific.
Formula: "To be [specific position] in [specific market] by [specific timeframe]."
Example: "To be the leading social media consultancy for the food and beverage sector across East Africa by 2028."
Rules:
- Mission and vision must be internally consistent — the vision is where the mission leads
- Both must be specific enough that you could describe what achieving them looks like
- Both should be written in plain English — not corporate jargon
- Both must be short enough to be memorised by every person in the business
Part 5 — The Five Lessons of Successful Independents
(Edwards, Edwards and Douglas, 1991 — synthesised from research into $100,000+ independent businesses)
These five principles distinguish the most successful independent service businesses from the rest:
Lesson 1 — Get people to beat a path to your door
Build such a strong reputation for delivering a specific result that clients come to you, rather than you chasing them. Requires: a clearly defined offer, consistent visibility, and exceptional delivery.
Lesson 2 — Establish a niche
Specialise to the point where you are the obvious expert for a specific type of client with a specific problem. Generalists struggle; specialists dominate.
Lesson 3 — Gain entrance through gatekeepers
Identify the professionals and institutions that already have trusted relationships with your ideal clients — and build deliberate relationships with those gatekeepers. See playbook-networking for the gatekeeper cultivation process.
Lesson 4 — Position yourself as preeminent in your field
Three routes to preeminence:
- Further the knowledge in your field (publish, research, speak, teach)
- Assume a leadership role (association president, conference chair, award creator)
- Pioneer a new approach or methodology (be first, name it, own it)
Lesson 5 — Become a premier marketeer
Do not take out run-of-the-mill ads. Do not send customary mailings. Premier marketeers use the same tools as everyone else — but more creatively, more consistently, and with more understanding of what their specific audience responds to.
Part 6 — Preeminence Strategy
For clients or the consultancy who want to be seen as the leading expert in their category:
| Route | Specific Actions |
|---|
| Publish | Monthly newsletter, LinkedIn articles, trade press column, annual industry report |
| Speak | Industry conferences, Chamber of Commerce events, university guest lectures |
| Research | Annual survey of your sector's clients or practitioners; publish the data |
| Lead | Volunteer for a leadership role in a trade or professional association |
| Award | Create a sector award (e.g., "Best Customer Service in Ugandan Banking") — judge and publish |
| First | Be the first to name a new problem, trend, or methodology in your category |
Preeminence is built over 12–36 months. It is an investment, not a campaign.
Part 7 — Deliverables This Skill Can Generate
- USP statement — one or two sentences, tested against the competitor test
- 15-second pitch — natural, spoken version of the USP
- Niche definition — sector, sub-sector, role, geography, and specific outcome
- Mission statement — 1–2 sentences
- Vision statement — 1–2 sentences
- Positioning brief — 1-page document combining all of the above for use in proposals and credentials
- Preeminence action plan — 12-month visibility building programme
Quality Criteria
Good output from this skill:
- The USP fails the "competitor test" — a direct competitor could NOT say the same sentence
- The 15-second pitch sounds natural when spoken aloud — not like marketing copy
- The niche is specific enough to describe what it excludes, not just what it includes
- The mission statement contains a subject, a verb, a client type, and an outcome
- The vision statement names a specific position in a specific market with a specific timeframe
- The preeminence plan names specific publications, events, and organisations — not generic categories
- All content reflects the East African market context where relevant
References
- Edwards, P., Edwards, S. and Douglas, L.C. (1991) Getting Business to Come to You. Los Angeles: Tarcher.
- Pinskey, R. (1997) 101 Ways to Promote Yourself. New York: Avon Books.