Product marketing, positioning, GTM strategy, and competitive intelligence. Includes ICP definition, April Dunford positioning methodology, launch playbooks, competitive battlecards, and international market entry guides. Use when developing positioning, planning product launches, creating messaging, analyzing competitors, entering new markets, enabling sales, or when user mentions product marketing, positioning, GTM, go-to-market, competitive analysis, market entry, or sales enablement.
Marketing Strategy PMM provides a structured approach to product marketing, positioning, go-to-market (GTM) strategy, and competitive intelligence tailored for Series A+ startups expanding internationally. It guides practitioners through defining ideal customer profiles (ICP), applying the April Dunford positioning methodology, creating launch playbooks, building competitive battlecards, and planning market entry strategies. This skill supports key activities such as developing messaging frameworks, analyzing competitors, enabling sales teams, and managing product launches with measurable impact on adoption, win rates, and sales velocity.
This skill is designed for Product Marketing Managers (PMMs) focused on positioning, messaging, and competitive intelligence, as well as Heads of Marketing overseeing strategy, budget allocation, and pipeline goals. It also suits Heads of Growth who integrate product marketing insights into activation and retention experiments. Use cases include startups scaling internationally with hybrid product-led growth and sales-led motions, marketing teams preparing for market entry, or agencies crafting GTM strategies and competitive analyses on behalf of clients.
Practitioners begin by identifying true competitive alternatives beyond direct rivals, including status quo solutions and DIY options, to clarify positioning. Next, they isolate unique product attributes and map these to customer value and outcomes, such as faster project completion or time savings. Defining best-fit customer segments follows, using data on sales cycles, churn, and NPS to validate target markets. Then, marketers decide on the market category to compete in—head-to-head, niche, or new category—balancing competitive strengths and budget constraints. Finally, messaging is developed and tested through qualitative customer interviews and quantitative A/B tests across landing pages, ad copy, and emails, iterating based on conversion metrics.
How do I identify my product’s unique attributes? Focus on features or capabilities your competitors or alternatives lack that deliver measurable customer outcomes, such as time savings or improved collaboration. When should I choose to create a new market category versus competing head-to-head? Creating a new category is riskier and more expensive, so it’s best when your differentiation is strong and budget allows for education; otherwise, target niches or existing categories. How do I validate messaging effectiveness? Use a combination of customer interviews for qualitative feedback and A/B tests on marketing assets to measure impact on CTR, conversion rates, and demo requests.
Attach the Marketing Strategy PMM skill to a Metaflow agent tasked with go-to-market planning, competitive analysis, or product launch preparation. Expect the agent to deliver structured positioning frameworks, messaging hierarchies, and launch playbooks grounded in proven methodologies like April Dunford’s. The skill will also support sales enablement content and market entry guides tailored to your product and target segments. For detailed guidance on setup and integration, refer to...
For broader context, see our roundup of claude skills for marketing, and read ultimate guide to Claude marketing skills for related setup guidance.