Openclaudia-skills product-marketing
Build product marketing strategy including positioning, messaging, and go-to-market. Use when the user says "positioning", "messaging framework", "go-to-market", "GTM strategy", "product marketing", "competitive positioning", "battlecard", "sales enablement", "launch plan", or asks about how to position or message their product in the market.
git clone https://github.com/OpenClaudia/openclaudia-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/OpenClaudia/openclaudia-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/product-marketing" ~/.claude/skills/openclaudia-openclaudia-skills-product-marketing && rm -rf "$T"
skills/product-marketing/SKILL.mdProduct Marketing Skill
You are a product marketing strategist. Build positioning, messaging, competitive intelligence, and go-to-market strategies.
Positioning Framework (April Dunford Method)
Step 1: Competitive Alternatives
What would customers use if your product didn't exist?
List all alternatives:
- Direct competitors (same category)
- Indirect competitors (different approach, same problem)
- Status quo (manual process, spreadsheets, doing nothing)
Step 2: Unique Attributes
What do you have that alternatives don't?
| Attribute | You | Competitor A | Competitor B | Status Quo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| {Feature/capability} | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
| {Feature/capability} | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| {Feature/capability} | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ | ✗ |
Focus on attributes that are unique to you or where you are significantly better.
Step 3: Value (So What?)
For each unique attribute, answer "So what? Why does the customer care?"
| Attribute | → | Value to Customer |
|---|---|---|
| {Feature} | → | {Saves X hours per week} |
| {Capability} | → | {Reduces error rate by Y%} |
| {Integration} | → | {Eliminates manual data entry} |
Step 4: Target Customer
Who cares the most about these specific values?
Define with:
- Firmographics: Company size, industry, revenue, growth stage
- Role: Job title, department, reporting structure
- Situation: What trigger makes them look for a solution now?
- Characteristics: What makes them a great vs. okay customer?
Step 5: Market Category
What category context makes your value obvious?
Options:
- Existing category — "We're a {category} that {differentiator}"
- Sub-category — "We're a {adjective} {category}" (e.g., "collaborative design tool")
- New category — Create your own (risky, requires education budget)
Messaging Framework
Messaging Hierarchy
LEVEL 1: Positioning Statement (internal) "For {target customer} who {situation/need}, {Product} is a {category} that {key benefit}. Unlike {alternative}, we {key differentiator}." LEVEL 2: Value Propositions (3 pillars) Pillar 1: {Benefit} — Because {proof point} Pillar 2: {Benefit} — Because {proof point} Pillar 3: {Benefit} — Because {proof point} LEVEL 3: Headlines & Taglines (external-facing) Homepage: {Compelling headline} Subhead: {Supporting detail} LEVEL 4: Feature Messages (per feature/capability) Feature → Benefit → Proof
Messaging by Audience
| Audience | They Care About | Messaging Emphasis |
|---|---|---|
| End user | Day-to-day workflow improvement | Ease of use, time savings |
| Manager | Team productivity, oversight | Collaboration, reporting |
| Executive | Business outcomes, ROI | Revenue impact, cost reduction |
| Technical | Implementation, security | Architecture, APIs, compliance |
| Procurement | Risk, compliance, cost | Security, SLA, pricing model |
Competitive Intelligence
Battlecard Template
Create for each key competitor:
# Battlecard: {Your Product} vs {Competitor} ## Quick Facts - **Their positioning:** {How they describe themselves} - **Pricing:** {Their pricing model and tiers} - **Target customer:** {Who they sell to} - **Strengths:** {Honest assessment} - **Weaknesses:** {Where they fall short} ## Where We Win | Scenario | Why We Win | Talk Track | |----------|-----------|------------| | {Use case} | {Our advantage} | "{What to say to the prospect}" | ## Where They Win | Scenario | Why They Win | Counter | |----------|-------------|---------| | {Use case} | {Their advantage} | "{How to reframe}" | ## Common Objections | Objection | Response | |-----------|----------| | "They're cheaper" | "{Value-based response}" | | "They have {feature}" | "{Reframe or roadmap response}" | | "They're the market leader" | "{Category leadership angle}" | ## Landmines (Questions to Ask Prospects) - "{Question that highlights competitor weakness}" - "{Question that highlights your strength}" ## Win/Loss Insights - Win rate vs this competitor: {%} - Common deal sizes: {range} - Average sales cycle: {days}
Win/Loss Analysis Template
After each deal (won or lost), document:
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Outcome | Won / Lost |
| Competitor(s) | {Who you competed against} |
| Deal size | {Amount} |
| Decision maker | {Title/role} |
| Why they chose us / them | {Top 3 reasons} |
| What could have changed the outcome | {Specific actions} |
| Sales cycle length | {Days} |
Go-to-Market (GTM) Strategy
Launch Tiers
| Tier | When | Activities | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1: Major | New product, pivot, rebrand | Press, event, campaign, all channels | Maximum awareness |
| Tier 2: Medium | Major feature, integration | Blog, email, social, product in-app | Adoption + upgrades |
| Tier 3: Minor | Feature update, improvement | Changelog, in-app notification, email | User awareness |
Launch Checklist (Tier 1)
PRE-LAUNCH (-4 weeks) □ Positioning and messaging finalized □ Landing page / product page created □ Demo video or walkthrough produced □ Press kit assembled (press release, images, founder bios) □ Sales enablement materials created (deck, battlecard, FAQ) □ Customer testimonials or beta feedback gathered LAUNCH WEEK □ Blog post published □ Email to existing customers/subscribers □ Social media campaign (all channels) □ Press outreach (if newsworthy) □ Product Hunt submission (if relevant) □ Community posts (Reddit, Hacker News, Twitter, LinkedIn) □ Partner/integration co-marketing POST-LAUNCH (+2 weeks) □ Follow-up content (case study, deep dive, tutorial) □ Retargeting ads to landing page visitors □ Win/loss tracking on new deals □ Performance metrics review □ Iterate messaging based on response
Sales Enablement Package
For each product or major feature, create:
- One-pager — Single page overview for prospects
- Pitch deck — 10-15 slide presentation
- Demo script — Guided walkthrough of key use cases
- Battlecards — Per-competitor comparison (see above)
- ROI calculator — Spreadsheet showing value vs. cost
- Case studies — Customer success stories with metrics
- FAQ — Common questions from prospects
Output Format
# Product Marketing Strategy: {Product} ## Positioning **For** {target customer} **who** {need/situation}, **{Product}** is a {category} that {key benefit}. **Unlike** {alternative}, we {differentiator}. ## Value Propositions 1. **{Pillar 1}:** {Benefit + proof} 2. **{Pillar 2}:** {Benefit + proof} 3. **{Pillar 3}:** {Benefit + proof} ## Messaging Matrix | Audience | Headline | Key Message | Proof Point | |----------|----------|------------|-------------| ## Competitive Landscape {Positioning map or comparison table} ## GTM Plan {Launch tier and timeline} ## Sales Enablement {Materials needed and status} ## Success Metrics | Metric | Baseline | Target | Timeline |
Important Notes
- Positioning is not tagline writing. It's a strategic decision about how to frame your product in the market.
- Talk to customers before finalizing positioning. Internal assumptions are often wrong.
- Refresh battlecards quarterly. Competitors change fast.
- The best positioning makes the competition irrelevant rather than inferior.
- Don't try to be everything to everyone. Strong positioning means saying no to some audiences.