Abhishek Rungta

1️ Your product’s capabilities stand out MOST when you compare them directly to the weaknesses of your customer’s alternatives

→ This is the core of “differentiated value” as April Dunford calls it

→ It also takes a page out of Good Strategy/Bad Strategy by Richard Rumelt

→ As you can seen, the “alternatives” aren’t always other products

2️ Your product’s benefits MUST remove the blockers to progress related to the specific use cases of your customers

→ This takes influence from Jobs thinkers like Alan Klement

(re-reading “When Coffee and Kale Compete”)

3️ As silly as it sounds, doing Product Marketing requires talking about the PRODUCT

→  Each capability MUST be tied to specific feature(s) in order to make sure you’re ACTUALLY sharing a capability — and not something fluffy

→ for example, “operationalize your critical data” is not a helpful capability to share
(quoting Airtable)

4️ When articulating use cases, you must do so in a way that your CUSTOMERS would actually say

→ “increase revenue” is NOT a use case, it’s an OUTCOME of a use case

→ in other words, use cases should be “lead measures” not “lag measures”

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