- Home
- Blog
- Product Management
- Product Positioning Framework: The Ultimate Guide from April Dunford
Product Positioning Framework: The Ultimate Guide from April Dunford
Product positioning is how you describe your product in a way that makes customers understand why it's different and why they should care.
5 min read
199 views

Steve Saper
Founder & CEO of PM33. Building the agentic-PM platform and writing about how product management is being remade in the AI era.
Product Positioning Framework: The Ultimate Guide from April Dunford
Product positioning is how you describe your product in a way that makes customers understand why it's different and why they should care.
Most companies get this wrong. They describe features instead of positioning. "Our tool has 50 integrations" sounds like every other SaaS product.
April Dunford, positioning expert and advisor to scaling companies, has developed a framework that actually works. Her insight: positioning isn't marketing fluff. It's how customers understand the value of what you're selling.
I agree, however, most product teams treat positioning as a marketing problem. It's not. It's a product problem. If your product isn't meaningfully different, no positioning framework will save you.
Here's what April has learned: The best positioning starts with understanding who your product is for, what outcomes they care about, and how you're different.
The Five Components of Positioning
April's framework has five essential components:
1. The Competitive Set
Who are you competing against?
This is more nuanced than you think. You might compete against different things depending on the customer:
- Against manual processes (they might do it in spreadsheets)
- Against competitor products (Asana, Notion, Monday.com)
- Against not solving the problem at all (they just accept the status quo)
Most positioning misses this. Define your competitive set from the customer's perspective, not yours.
2. Your Point of Differentiation
What's genuinely different about how you solve the problem?
Note: It must be something your customers care about. Being different at something they don't value is pointless.
Examples of real differentiation:
- We're the only one focused on this specific outcome
- We're the fastest at this particular workflow
- We integrate with the tools they already use
- We charge based on outcome, not seat count
3. The Customer Segment
Who benefits most from your differentiation?
Not "small teams." Specific: "marketing teams in B2B SaaS companies with 20-100 employees who measure ROI on every campaign."
The more specific, the stronger your positioning. Broad = weak positioning.
4. The Value Outcome
What specific outcome does your differentiation enable?
Not "productivity." Specific: "Spend 80% less time on manual campaign setup and optimization, so you can focus on strategic campaign creation."
Quantify the outcome when possible.
5. The Reason to Believe
Why should customers believe you can deliver this outcome?
This might be:
- Your team's background
- Specific features unique to you
- Your customer list (if impressive)
- Your approach/methodology
How to Develop Your Positioning
April's process:
Step 1: Analyze Your Competitive Set (1 hour)
- List 5-10 alternatives customers might choose
- For each: How are they positioned?
- What outcomes do they emphasize?
- Where are the gaps?
Step 2: Identify Your Differentiation (2 hours)
- What can you do that competitors can't?
- What do your best customers rave about?
- What do you do faster, cheaper, or better?
- Which of these do customers actually care about?
Step 3: Define Your Customer Segment (1 hour)
- Who benefits most from your differentiation?
- What's their biggest frustration with current solutions?
- What are they trying to accomplish?
- Be specific. Overly broad = weak positioning.
Step 4: Articulate Your Value Outcome (1 hour)
- What does your differentiation enable them to do?
- What can they do now that they couldn't before?
- What does that worth to them (business impact)?
Step 5: Build Your Reason to Believe (30 min)
- What makes you credible?
- What's your evidence you can deliver?
- Why should they trust you over alternatives?
Common Positioning Mistakes
Mistake 1: Confusing Features with Positioning
You say: "We have real-time collaboration, custom fields, and API access."
That's features. That's not positioning.
Positioning: "For technical teams, we're the only project management tool that treats code repositories as first-class citizens, so you can manage engineering workflows from within your development environment."
Fix: Don't list features. Describe the outcome and why you're uniquely suited to deliver it.
Mistake 2: Being Too Broad
"We're for all B2B SaaS companies."
Too broad. Competitors will always win in some vertical.
"We're for marketing-led growth SaaS companies with $1M+ ARR that measure CAC payback period."
Much better. Now you own a specific positioning.
Mistake 3: Copying Competitors
You see how Notion is positioned and copy their approach.
This guarantees you'll lose. They have all the advantages in their market.
Fix: Find a different competitive set. A different customer segment. A different value outcome. Own something unique.
How Positioning Evolves
Your positioning won't be perfect on day one. That's okay. Here's how it evolves:
Month 1: Initial positioning based on your hypothesis Month 2-3: Test with customers. What resonates? What falls flat? Month 4-6: Refine based on feedback. What outcomes do customers actually care about? Month 7-12: Lock in positioning once you see clear patterns
Based on my experience, don't change positioning too frequently. But do refine it as you learn.
Key Takeaways
Strong positioning answers five questions:
- Competitive Set: Who are you competing against?
- Differentiation: What's genuinely different about you?
- Customer: Who benefits most from your differentiation?
- Value Outcome: What specific outcome do they get?
- Reason to Believe: Why should they trust you?
When all five are clear and aligned, your positioning is strong. When any are fuzzy, your positioning is weak.
Work through this framework. Test with customers. Refine. That's how great positioning is built.