Provides brand messaging architecture, value proposition, and brand pillar development frameworks including Peep Laja's Message Layers, Osterwalder's Value Proposition Canvas, Geoffrey Moore positioning template, April Dunford's Five Components, StoryBrand SB7, Andy Raskin's Strategic Narrative, the Messaging House, and MECLABS quality tests. Auto-activates during messaging framework development, value proposition creation, and brand pillar definition. Use when discussing messaging architecture, value proposition, brand pillars, message layers, messaging house, messaging hierarchy, elevator pitch, Peep Laja, Geoffrey Moore, April Dunford, StoryBrand, Andy Raskin, or MECLABS.
Inherits all available tools
Additional assets for this skill
This skill inherits all available tools. When active, it can use any tool Claude has access to.
reference/templates.mdQuick reference for developing brand messaging, value propositions, and brand pillars using established methodologies from leading strategists.
"A brand is not what you say it is. It's what THEY say it is." — Marty Neumeier
| Element | Definition | Answers | Audience |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positioning | Strategic foundation for perception | "Why choose us?" | Internal |
| Messaging | Content and narratives communicating positioning | "What do we say?" | External |
| Value Proposition | Promise of value delivered to customers | "What do I get?" | External |
How They Work Together:
The most popular visual framework for organizing messages hierarchically:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ THE ROOF │
│ [Core Message / Value Proposition] │
│ The single most important thing you │
│ want audiences to remember │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┘
│
┌────────────────────┼────────────────────┐
│ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼
┌─────────┐ ┌─────────┐ ┌─────────┐
│ PILLAR 1│ │ PILLAR 2│ │ PILLAR 3│
│ [Theme] │ │ [Theme] │ │ [Theme] │
│ WHY to │ │ WHY to │ │ WHY to │
│ believe │ │ believe │ │ believe │
└────┬────┘ └────┬────┘ └────┬────┘
│ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼
[Proof Points] [Proof Points] [Proof Points]
Evidence Evidence Evidence
│
┌────────────────┴────────────────────┐
│ THE FOUNDATION │
│ [Purpose, Vision, Values] │
│ The deeper WHY behind │
│ everything │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Based on thousands of B2B message tests. Each layer must be addressed in order:
| Layer | Question | What to Do | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Clarity | "What is it?" | Lead with category; simple language | "Marketing automation software" NOT "Next-gen growth enablement platform" |
| 2. Relevance | "Is it for me?" | Address specific pain points | "For marketing teams drowning in manual campaign work" |
| 3. Value | "What do I get?" | Core benefits and outcomes | "Automate 80% of repetitive tasks and launch campaigns 3x faster" |
| 4. Differentiation | "Why you over alternatives?" | What makes you uniquely better | "The only platform built specifically for Shopify merchants" |
Critical Insight: You must clear each layer before the next one matters. Brilliant differentiation means nothing if prospects don't first understand what you are.
The most widely used framework for developing value propositions:
┌─────────────────────────────────┐ ┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ VALUE MAP │ │ CUSTOMER PROFILE │
│ (Your Offering) │ │ (Their Reality) │
│ │ │ │
│ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │ │ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ Products & Services │ │◄───┼───│ JOBS │ │
│ │ (What you offer) │ │ │ │ (Tasks to accomplish) │ │
│ └─────────────────────────┘ │ │ └─────────────────────────┘ │
│ │ │ │
│ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │ │ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ Pain Relievers │ │◄───┼───│ PAINS │ │
│ │ (How you help) │ │ │ │ (Frustrations) │ │
│ └─────────────────────────┘ │ │ └─────────────────────────┘ │
│ │ │ │
│ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │ │ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ Gain Creators │ │◄───┼───│ GAINS │ │
│ │ (How you delight) │ │ │ │ (Desired outcomes) │ │
│ └─────────────────────────┘ │ │ └─────────────────────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────────────┘ └─────────────────────────────────┘
How to use it:
"Customers don't buy products. They 'hire' products to do a job for them."
| Job Type | What It Is | Example Question |
|---|---|---|
| Functional Job | The core task to accomplish | "What task are they trying to get done?" |
| Social Job | How they want to be perceived | "What does using this say about them?" |
| Emotional Job | How they want to feel | "What feeling are they seeking?" |
The Drill Example:
The most widely used positioning template (from Crossing the Chasm):
For (target customer) who (statement of need or opportunity), the (product name) is a (product category) that (statement of key benefit). Unlike (primary competitive alternative), our product (statement of 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.
Her 10-Step Method:
Traditional Approach ("The Arrogant Doctor"): "You have a problem. We have the solution. Let me tell you why ours is best." This is bragging, and prospects are skeptical.
Strategic Narrative Approach ("The Humble Awakener"): "The world has changed in a way that creates both great opportunity and great risk. Let me show you how to navigate this new world." This is empathy, and prospects trust empathy.
The 5 Elements:
The customer is the hero, not your brand. Your brand is the guide (like Yoda, not Luke).
The 7-Part Framework:
Why it works: Story is how humans communicate. When you structure messaging with the customer as the hero, they see themselves in it.
| Benefit Type | What It Is | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Functional Benefit | What the product DOES | "Cleans clothes in 30 minutes" |
| Emotional Benefit | How it makes customers FEEL | "Feel confident and put-together" |
| Self-Expressive Benefit | What it SAYS about the customer | "I'm someone who values my time" |
Combined Value Statement: Merge all three for a complete value proposition.
The most widely accepted framework uses 5 brand pillars:
| Pillar | What It Defines | Key Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Why your brand exists beyond making money | Why did you start? What would be lost? |
| Positioning | Where you stand in the market | Who do you serve? How are you different? |
| Personality | Your brand's voice, tone, character | If your brand were a person, how would they speak? |
| Perception | How you're viewed internally and externally | What do people say about you? |
| Promotion/Product | How you market and what you deliver | What experience do you create? |
Why 3-5 pillars?: Too many pillars dilute focus. If everything is a pillar, nothing is.
Brand Pillars (Strategic Foundation)
↓
Messaging Pillars (Communication Themes)
↓
Proof Points (Evidence)
For each messaging pillar, aim for 3+ proof points combining:
| Criterion | Question | How to Improve |
|---|---|---|
| Appeal | Is the benefit desirable to your target customer? | Ground in real customer research |
| Exclusivity | Can only YOU claim this, or could competitors say the same? | Find what makes you genuinely unique |
| Clarity | Can customers understand it quickly and easily? | Simplify language, remove jargon |
| Credibility | Is there evidence to support the claim? | Add proof points, testimonials, data |
The "So What?" Test: After each statement, ask "so what?" If you can't explain why customers should care, revise.
The "Only" Test (Marty Neumeier):
Our [offering] is the only [category] that [benefit].
If you can complete this statement credibly, you have strong differentiation.
The Clarity Test: Can someone understand what you do within 5 seconds of reading your homepage?
| Mistake | Problem | Better Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Features over benefits | Describes what it does, not what customers gain | "Spend time on leads most likely to buy" > "AI-powered lead scoring" |
| Vague language | Jargon obscures meaning | If a stranger can't understand it, simplify |
| No differentiation | Competitors can say the same thing | Find what makes you genuinely unique |
| Unsubstantiated claims | "Best-in-class" means nothing without proof | Back every claim with evidence |
| Wrong audience | Doesn't match customer needs | Research before writing |
| One-size-fits-all | Ignores segment differences | Create segment-specific propositions |
| No validation | Untested messaging often fails | Test with real customers first |
| Method | Best For | Key Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Customer Interviews | Deep qualitative insight | Aim for 10-15 minimum |
| Landing Page Tests | Message performance | A/B test different value propositions |
| A/B Testing | Controlled experiments | Test one variable at a time |
| Fake Door Tests | Gauging interest | Present entry point, measure clicks |
| Surveys | Quantitative validation | Complement with qualitative data |
| Sales Team Feedback | Real-world objections | What questions do prospects ask? |
What people SAY they'll pay and what they ACTUALLY pay are often very different. Test willingness to pay through BEHAVIOR, not stated intent.
| Expert | Insight |
|---|---|
| Marty Neumeier | "A brand is not what you say it is. It's what THEY say it is." |
| April Dunford | "Positioning is a fundamental precursor to messaging. You can't write your homepage until you understand the value for whom." |
| Andy Raskin | "Differentiation is based on prospects seeing you make sense of their world—your empathy—and they trust you more." |
| Simon Sinek | "People don't buy what you do, they buy why you do it." |
| Peep Laja | "If you leave it to the visitor to figure out how one company is different, you're going to lose." |
| Donald Miller | "The customer is the hero, not your brand." |
See reference/templates.md for: