Comprehensive brand messaging, positioning, and value proposition development using proven frameworks including Peep Laja Message Layers, Osterwalder Value Proposition Canvas, Geoffrey Moore positioning, April Dunford's Five Components, StoryBrand SB7, Andy Raskin Strategic Narrative, and Messaging House. Use when developing brand identity, brand messaging architecture, positioning statements, value propositions, messaging hierarchies, brand pillars, taglines, one-liners, elevator pitches, brand guidelines, visual identity systems, or creating Positioning & Messaging Packs. Triggers include: messaging framework, brand positioning, value prop, messaging architecture, brand pillars, brand identity, StoryBrand, positioning statement, brand guidelines, design system, messaging house, corporate identity, brand voice, visual standards.
Brand Messaging and Positioning
Workspace Context
Read bootstrap context before asking questions: strategy/brand.md for brand, audience, offer, channels, tools, constraints, and metrics; about/me.md for personal voice; content/ideas.md and content/calendar.md for content planning. Use legacy product-marketing context files only as fallback. Save generated drafts to content/<platform>/drafts/YYYY-MM-DD_short-topic-slug.md, and route durable learnings back to strategy/brand.md, about/me.md, or content/ideas.md.
Operating Contract
This skill is self-contained for its frontmatter scope: use its local instructions, references, scripts, and assets as the playbook; ask only for missing task-specific inputs; hand off to adjacent skills instead of expanding scope; and return an actionable artifact, decision, plan, draft, or diagnostic.
Develop comprehensive brand messaging, positioning, and identity systems using established frameworks from leading strategists.
"A brand is not what you say it is. It's what THEY say it is." — Marty Neumeier
Start with Customer Profile — deeply understand jobs, pains, gains
Map your offering to show how you address each
Identify where pain relievers and gain creators align most strongly
This intersection IS your value proposition
Geoffrey Moore Positioning Statement
For (target customer) who (need/opportunity), the (product name) is a (category) that (key benefit). Unlike (competitive alternative), our product (primary differentiation).
Example:
For growth-stage SaaS companies who struggle to understand customer churn, ChurnPredict is a customer analytics platform that identifies at-risk accounts before they leave. Unlike generic analytics tools, ChurnPredict uses AI trained specifically on subscription business patterns to predict churn with 94% accuracy.
April Dunford's Five Components
Competitive Alternatives: What would customers use if your solution didn't exist?
Unique Attributes: What features/capabilities do you have that alternatives lack?
Value: What benefit do those unique attributes enable?
Target Customer: Who cares most about that value?
Market Category: What context makes your unique value obvious?
StoryBrand Framework (SB7)
The customer is the hero, not your brand. Your brand is the guide (like Yoda, not Luke).
The 7-Part Framework:
A Character (the customer) has...
A Problem (villain, external, internal, philosophical)...
And Meets a Guide (your brand)...
Who Gives Them a Plan...
And Calls Them to Action...
That Helps Them Avoid Failure...
And Ends in Success
The Problem (Three Levels)
Level
Definition
Example (financial advisor)
External
Tangible problem
"My investments are scattered"
Internal
How it makes them feel
"I feel confused and overwhelmed"
Philosophical
Why it's wrong/unjust
"People shouldn't need to be experts to retire well"
The Guide (Two Qualities)
Quality
What it means
How to demonstrate
Empathy
"I understand your pain"
Use "we understand" language, describe their frustration
Structure:
"We help [CHARACTER] who struggle with [PROBLEM] to [SOLUTION] so they can [RESULT]."
Example:
"We help busy parents who struggle to cook healthy meals get fresh ingredients delivered weekly so they can feed their family nutritious food without the stress."
Andy Raskin's Strategic Narrative
Traditional Approach ("Arrogant Doctor"):
"You have a problem. We have the solution. Let me tell you why ours is best."
Strategic Narrative ("Humble Awakener"):
"The world has changed in a way that creates both opportunity and risk. Let me show you how to navigate this new world."
The 5 Elements:
Name a Big, Relevant Change — Something prospects sense but haven't articulated
Show Winners and Losers — Urgency to act
Tease the Promised Land — What success looks like for those who adapt
Introduce Features as "Magic Gifts" — Capabilities that help reach promised land
Name the Enemy — An old mindset that became a road to ruin
The 5 Ps Brand Pillar Framework
Pillar
What It Defines
Key Questions
Purpose
Why you exist beyond profit
Why did you start? What would be lost?
Positioning
Where you stand in market
Who do you serve? How are you different?
Personality
Your voice, tone, character
If your brand were a person, how would they speak?