The Positioning Trap
Most early-stage SaaS founders describe their product as '[Category leader] but better/cheaper/simpler.' The problem: you're defining yourself in terms of the competitor. Every time a prospect sees your product, they think of the competitor β who has more brand equity, more features, and more social proof.
You can't win that fight on the competitor's terms. You have to change the terms.
Find the Gap They Can't Fill
Established competitors have years of accumulated relationships, product complexity, and enterprise focus. These are strengths β but also weaknesses.
HubSpot is powerful but complex. That complexity serving enterprise alienates small businesses. Positioning opportunity: 'The CRM a 5-person team can be running in 30 minutes without a consultant.'
Salesforce ignores specific verticals. Positioning opportunity: 'The only CRM built for [specific industry] with [industry-specific features] Salesforce doesn't have.'
The question: What are established players systematically bad at for a specific customer segment? That gap is your position.
Specific Customer Frame
The most powerful positioning move is narrowing your target customer until it's uncomfortably specific.
'We help Indian real estate agencies manage their WhatsApp leads without missing a follow-up' beats 'CRM for sales teams' for the specific customer you're targeting.
When a real estate agency founder sees the first message, they think: 'That's exactly me.' Specific positioning gets intense attention from exactly the right people.
The 'Positioned Against' Framework
Write your positioning using this structure: