Effective marketing involves positioning against competitors. Identify an incumbent's core value proposition (like Brex's rewards points) and frame it as a negative. Ramp successfully did this by arguing points are wasteful, repositioning their own lack of points as a focus on software and savings.
Instead of positioning against direct competitors in a saturated category, frame your message against what your customer is *actually* using today. A DAM tool resonated better when it shifted messaging from being a "better DAM" to helping users "move on from Dropbox and Drive."
Instead of copying what top competitors do well, analyze what they do poorly or neglect. Excelling in those specific areas creates a powerful differentiator. This is how Eleven Madison Park focused on rivals' bad coffee service to become the world's #1 restaurant.
Bizzabo created a campaign personifying the frustrations of its main competitor's customers. By directly addressing specific pain points heard in sales calls, the campaign resonated deeply with prospects and highlighted Bizzabo's superior solutions in a memorable, targeted way.
A perceived product flaw can be a primary value proposition for a different type of customer. For example, a diffuse global audience, useless to local venues, becomes a powerful asset for organizations aiming for international reach, unlocking a new market.
GoProposal used a four-part framework for all content: address customer Pain, clarify Aspirations, highlight the Traps of other solutions, and explain How to truly solve the problem. This structure guides prospects to conclude your product is the only viable option without directly attacking competitors.
When competing against a large incumbent, reframe the comparison away from company vs. company. Instead, frame it as you—the dedicated founder—versus their salaried, indifferent employee. This shifts the focus from resources to personal commitment, turning your small size into an advantage.
Instead of matching rivals' strengths, identify their weaknesses or overlooked details, like a poor coffee program. Focusing on these neglected areas allows you to create a unique, best-in-class experience and gain a competitive foothold. Guidara's team calls this 'reverse benchmarking.'
A competitor may have a "better" product on paper, but buyers' demand is nuanced. A founder can win a deal against a well-funded rival by discovering the buyer's primary need is industry expertise, not more features. By aligning with this deeper "pull," the competitor's strengths become irrelevant.
A powerful way to create a flagship message is to define a "villain." This isn't a competitor, but the root cause of the buyer's problem. For Loom, the villain is "time-sucking meetings." For Cloud Zero, it's "unpredictable cloud billing." This frames your product as the clear solution to a tangible enemy.
Feed AI your detailed persona research and data on your top competitors. Then, ask it to identify key persona pain points and values that competitors' positioning fails to address. This process systematically uncovers arbitrage opportunities for differentiated messaging.