--- id: ins_positioning-is-the-answer-not-the-work operator: Emily Kramer operator_role: Founder MKT1; ex-VP Marketing Asana and Carta source_url: https://www.mkt1.co/ source_type: essay source_title: "The MKT1 Guide to Positioning" source_date: 2026-03-03 captured_date: 2026-05-02 domain: [pmm, marketing, strategy] lifecycle: [positioning, messaging-narrative] maturity: applied artifact_class: framework score: { originality: 4, specificity: 5, evidence: 3, transferability: 5, source: 4 } tier: A related: [] raw_ref: raw/expert-content/experts/emily-kramer.md --- # Positioning is the right answer (one statement), not the work (the 30-slide deck) ## Claim Most positioning exercises take companies too deep into research and never produce a clear, usable answer. Like long division: the research is the work, but positioning is the answer. The biggest leverage is the "product type and comparator" choice, Kramer's four product types (10x better, vertical solution, new way, buy vs. build) each map to a specific comparator. Picking the wrong comparator for the wrong audience is what causes the most downstream damage. ## Mechanism Four phases must be kept separate: (1) product-marketing research, (2) product-type and comparator selection, (3) positioning statement (three blanks: who is it for, what is it, why is it better), (4) messaging (positioning adapted to audiences, funnel stages, channels). Step 2 is the most-skipped and most-damaging. Bonus: "new way" positioning is the hardest of the four. Early competitors in an emerging category *help* you grow; the real challenge is making the audience problem-aware and solution-aware. Position "new way" products against "nothing" or the "old way," not against fellow new entrants. ## Conditions Holds when: - Marketing has authority to commit to a single comparator and audience. - Leadership accepts that positioning is downstream of brand story, not the same thing. Fails when: - Multi-product portfolios where one positioning statement can't credibly cover all SKUs. - Pre-product-market-fit startups where the comparator is still being discovered. ## Evidence > "Companies focus too much on showing the work (detailed research decks, 30-slide positioning documents) instead of producing the right answer." > "If you position against the wrong comparator to the wrong audience, nothing else works." ยท Emily Kramer, *The MKT1 Guide to Positioning* ## Signals - Positioning artifact is one statement, not a deck. - Product type (one of the four) is named explicitly before any positioning workshop. - Sales decks lead with the same comparator marketing chose; no drift. ## Counter-evidence April Dunford's positioning framework (her ten-step model) explicitly does require a deeper deck-style synthesis to land enterprise positioning; the "answer over work" framing can over-simplify when the company spans multiple ICPs. New-entrant positioning is also context-dependent; some categories require head-to-head comparator work earlier. ## Cross-references - (none in current corpus)