How to build your Go-To-Market Positioning with AI

Positioning is the strategy underneath all your messaging. These prompts help you define what category you own, why customers should choose you, and how to make the status quo feel expensive.

Own a category or die trying. Positioning is the strategy underneath all your messaging.

Make sure to replace the BRACKETED INFORMATION before use.

April Dunford positioning sprint

For: Solo Founder Β· GTM Team

Help me build a rigorous positioning statement using April Dunford’s framework.

Context:

– Product: [PRODUCT NAME]

– What it does: [CORE FUNCTIONALITY]

– Best customers: [DESCRIBE]

– Why they chose us over alternatives: [REASONS]

– Outcomes delivered: [MEASURABLE RESULTS]

Walk me through:

1. Competitive alternatives β€” what would customers do if we didn’t exist?

2. Unique attributes β€” what do we have that alternatives don’t?

3. Value β€” what value do those attributes create?

4. Target customers β€” who cares most about that value?

5. Market frame of reference β€” what category do we compete in, and should we reframe it?

End with:

– A crisp positioning statement (internal, not marketing copy)

– 3 possible category names we could own

– The key “aha” insight that should anchor all our messaging

Messaging hierarchy builder

For: GTM Team Β· Growth

Based on this positioning: [PASTE YOUR POSITIONING STATEMENT]

Build a messaging hierarchy for [PRODUCT] targeting [ICP]:

1. Category claim β€” the market we’re defining or redefining (1 sentence)

2. Primary value proposition β€” the #1 outcome we deliver (1 sentence, benefit-led)

3. 3 message pillars β€” supporting proof points, each with:

   – Pillar headline

   – 2-sentence elaboration

   – 1 data point or proof

4. Tagline options β€” 5 options ranging from functional to emotive

5. Elevator pitch β€” a 30-second spoken version

6. One-liner β€” 10 words max that anyone on the team can repeat

Test each message against: Is it true? Is it different? Does it matter to the buyer?

Narrative framing for a new category

For: Solo Founder Β· GTM Team

I believe [PRODUCT] is creating a new category: [CATEGORY NAME HYPOTHESIS]. Help me build the narrative.

A category narrative needs:

1. The enemy β€” the old way of doing things and why it’s broken

2. The shift β€” a market/technology/behaviour change that makes the old way obsolete

3. The promised land β€” the new world your customers inhabit when they adopt the new way

4. Your product β€” how it enables the journey from old world to new

5. The proof β€” early evidence this shift is real (trends, data points, customer stories)

Structure this as a 5-slide narrative arc I can use for:

– A VC pitch

– A keynote opening

– A website manifesto section

Keep it bold. The best category narratives make people feel like they’re late to something important.

Differentiation against status quo

For: Solo Founder Β· Growth

My biggest competitor isn’t another SaaS tool β€” it’s [STATUS QUO: e.g. “spreadsheets”, “manual processes”, “doing nothing”, “internal build”].

Help me build positioning that makes the status quo feel expensive and risky.

1. Cost of inaction calculator β€” what is the real cost (time, money, risk) of the status quo?

2. Hidden costs β€” what does the customer NOT see when they say “we’re fine as we are”?

3. Before/after contrast β€” write a vivid before/after for a typical customer day

4. Risk reframe β€” flip “risk of buying new software” to “risk of NOT changing”

5. Proof points β€” what data or stories prove the status quo is unsustainable?

End with a one-paragraph “cost of inaction” narrative I can use in sales conversations and landing pages.

Scroll to Top