| name | brand-strategy |
| description | Brand strategy and campaign positioning expertise. Covers audience segmentation, competitive differentiation, value proposition frameworks, and campaign brief creation. Load this skill when setting up campaigns, selecting audience segments, or defining creative direction. |
Brand Strategy Skill
Campaign Positioning Frameworks
1. Category Leadership
Position the product as the best-in-class. Use superlatives backed by proof points.
- "The most advanced [category] ever made"
- Best for: premium products, market leaders, products with clear differentiators
2. Challenger Brand
Position against a dominant competitor. Be bold, specific, irreverent.
- "Unlike [competitor], we [key difference]"
- Best for: new entrants, disruptors, products with a unique angle
3. Emotional Connection
Connect the product to an emotion, identity, or aspiration rather than features.
- "For those who [identity/aspiration]"
- Best for: lifestyle products, fashion, food, experiences
4. Problem-Solution
Lead with a pain point the audience recognizes, then present the product as the answer.
- "Tired of [problem]? Meet [product]"
- Best for: utility products, B2B, health, home improvement
Audience Segmentation
When creating audience segments, define each with:
- Demographics: Age range, income level, location type (urban/suburban/rural)
- Psychographics: Values, interests, lifestyle, aspirations
- Behavioral: Purchase frequency, brand loyalty, media consumption
- Pain Points: What problems does this segment face that the product solves?
- Media Channels: Where does this segment spend attention?
Value Proposition Canvas
For each segment, map:
- Customer Job: What are they trying to accomplish?
- Pain: What frustrates them about current solutions?
- Gain: What would delight them beyond expectations?
- Product Fit: How does this product address job + relieve pain + create gain?
Campaign Brief Template
Every campaign should have:
- Objective: What is the campaign trying to achieve? (awareness, consideration, conversion)
- Target: Who are we talking to? (segment description)
- Insight: What human truth or tension does this campaign tap into?
- Proposition: What single message do we want them to take away?
- Tone: How should the campaign feel? (confident, playful, authoritative, warm)
- Mandatories: What must be included? (logo, product shot, legal disclaimers)
Competitive Differentiation
When analyzing the competitive landscape:
- Identify the top 3 competitors in the category
- Map each on a 2x2 matrix (e.g., Premium vs Value, Traditional vs Innovative)
- Find the white space — where no competitor is strongly positioned
- Position the campaign in that white space