Wednesday, June 24, 2026

A Competitive Intelligence Program That Drives Sales

By David Ronald  

Competitive intelligence has long been one of the core responsibilities of product marketing. 

Yet, despite significant investments in tools, analysts, and research, many competitive intelligence programs fail to achieve their primary objective: helping sales teams win more deals. 

The problem, as we all know, isn't a lack of information because many organizations have access to an overwhelming amount of competitor data – product marketers collect feature comparisons, monitor competitor websites, subscribe to analyst reports, and gather feedback from customers and prospects. 

A successful competitive intelligence program is measured by whether sales teams use it and whether it helps them close business, not by the volume of data it produces. 

Too often in my experience competitive intelligence becomes an academic exercise.  

In this blog post I present a program that uses a different approach, a program that sales teams actually use.

Why Most Competitive Intelligence Programs Fail

The biggest mistake companies make is focusing on competitors instead of customers.  

Competitive intelligence teams frequently become obsessed with tracking every product update, feature release, executive hire, funding announcement, and pricing change. 

While this information can be useful, it rarely helps a sales representative navigate a live conversation with a prospect. Buyers are purchasing outcomes, not a feature list. 

So, when sales teams engage with prospects, the real challenge is understanding why a buyer may choose one vendor over another and how to position their solution against competing alternatives. 

Another common problem is information overload. Product marketing teams often create comprehensive documents that contain dozens of pages of research. While thoroughness may be appreciated internally, sales representatives rarely have time to consume lengthy reports before a customer call.  

The reality is that sellers need concise, actionable guidance. They want to know how competitors are positioning themselves, where they are vulnerable, what objections they commonly raise, and how successful customers evaluate alternatives. 

Without this practical focus, even the most detailed competitive intelligence program will struggle to gain adoption.

Start With the Questions Sales Teams Actually Ask

The most effective competitive intelligence programs begin by understanding the needs of the sales organization. 

Instead of asking, "What do we know about our competitors?" product marketers should ask, "What information would help our sales team win more deals?" 

The answers are often surprisingly consistent. Sellers want to understand why prospects choose competitors, which objections arise most frequently, and how successful sales representatives position the company's strengths during competitive evaluations. 

Listening to sales calls can provide invaluable insight, as can interviewing account executives, sales engineers, customer success managers, and solution consultants. 

These frontline teams interact with buyers every day and often have a clearer understanding of competitive dynamics than any report could provide.  

By grounding competitive intelligence in real-world selling situations, organizations create content that directly addresses the challenges sales teams face.

Creating Battlecards That People Actually Use

Battlecards remain one of the most popular competitive intelligence tools, but many organizations overcomplicate them. 

A battlecard should not attempt to capture everything known about a competitor. It should, instead, function as a quick-reference guide that helps sellers prepare for conversations and respond to objections. 

The most effective battlecards focus on buyer concerns rather than product features. They explain how competitors position themselves in the market, what strengths prospects perceive, where weaknesses exist, and how to reframe competitive discussions around customer outcomes. 

Clarity matters more than completeness. A concise two-page battlecard that sales representatives consult regularly creates significantly more value than a twenty-page document that remains unread. 

And the best battlecards also evolve continuously. Competitive markets change quickly, and static content becomes outdated. Consequently, product marketing teams should establish processes for regularly collecting feedback from sales teams and updating materials based on actual field experience. 

When sellers see their input reflected in competitive content, adoption naturally increases.

Building a Continuous Intelligence Network

Competitive intelligence should never be the responsibility of a single individual or team. 

Organizations that excel in this area create networks of contributors across the business.

  • Sales representatives provide feedback from active opportunities.
  • Customer success teams identify competitor activity during renewals.
  • Product managers track market trends.
  • Executives share insights gathered from customers, analysts, and industry events.

When competitive intelligence becomes a company-wide discipline, the quality and timeliness of information improve dramatically.  

Technology can support this process, but culture matters more. Employees should feel encouraged to share competitive insights whenever they encounter them.

A simple mechanism for capturing information often proves more effective than a sophisticated platform that nobody uses.  

The goal is to create a continuous flow of intelligence that helps the organization respond quickly to changing market conditions.

Monitoring Competitors Without Expensive Tools

Many organizations assume they need costly software platforms to build an effective competitive intelligence program. 

While specialized tools can be valuable, they are not prerequisites for success, especially as a surprising amount of competitive insight is publicly available.

  • Competitor websites reveal positioning changes, product launches, and messaging priorities.
  • Earnings calls provide information about strategic direction and business performance.
  • Customer reviews on software review sites often highlight strengths and weaknesses that prospects are discussing internally.

Additionally, industry events, webinars, podcasts, and social media channels can also provide valuable signals.  

Frankly it’s amazing how many companies share their priorities openly if organizations take the time to listen carefully.  

The key is consistency. Rather than attempting to monitor everything, establish a structured process for reviewing key sources and sharing relevant findings with stakeholders. 

Over time, these small efforts compound into a rich understanding of the competitive landscape.

Turning Insights Into Messaging

Collecting intelligence is the first step – the real value comes from translating insights into messaging that influences buyer decisions. 

This is where product marketing can have the greatest impact. Competitive insights should inform positioning, differentiation, sales enablement, and content strategy.

If competitors consistently emphasize a particular strength, organizations should evaluate whether they need to address that narrative directly or shift buyer attention toward a different set of priorities. 

The objective is not to attack competitors, especially as direct comparisons can sometimes strengthen a competitor's position by reinforcing their relevance.  

Instead, effective messaging helps buyers understand why your solution is uniquely suited to their needs – this shifts conversations away from feature comparisons and toward business outcomes, strategic priorities, and long-term value. 

When competitive intelligence informs messaging, the entire go-to-market organization benefits.

Measuring Competitive Intelligence Success

One of the biggest challenges facing competitive intelligence programs in my experience is demonstrating value. 

Traditional metrics often focus on outputs such as the number of battlecards created, competitors tracked, or reports distributed. 

While these measurements may indicate activity, they do not necessarily indicate impact.  

A stronger approach is to focus on business outcomes. 

  • Are sales teams using competitive content?
  • Are competitive win rates improving?
  • Are sellers reporting greater confidence during evaluations?
  • Are objection handling conversations becoming more effective?

Organizations should also monitor engagement with competitive resources and gather qualitative feedback from the field. Understanding what sales teams find useful can guide future investments and improvements. 

Ultimately, the purpose of competitive intelligence is not to create information. It is to influence decisions and improve business performance. 

The Future of Competitive Intelligence

The rise of artificial intelligence is changing how organizations collect, analyze, and distribute competitive information.

AI tools can monitor websites, summarize content, identify emerging trends, and accelerate research activities – tasks that once required hours of manual effort can now be completed in minutes.  

Technology, however, does not eliminate the need for strategic thinking. 

Competitive intelligence remains fundamentally about understanding buyers, markets, and positioning. AI can help organizations process information faster, but human judgment is still required to determine which insights matter and how they should influence go-to-market strategy. 

In my opinion, and tell me if you think I’m wrong, the companies that succeed will combine the speed of AI with the expertise of product marketers, sales leaders, and customer-facing teams. 

Conclusion

Competitive intelligence is most effective when it is viewed as a revenue-driving function rather than a research project, and its primary goal is to help sales teams win more business.

Organizations that focus on practical insights, create usable content, encourage company-wide participation, and connect intelligence directly to messaging and sales execution will build programs that generate measurable impact.

The winners will not necessarily be the companies with the most information. They will be the companies that turn information into action.

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in discussing how to build a competitive intelligence program your sales teams actually use? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.







Wednesday, June 17, 2026

How AI is Changing Branding Strategy

By Sharon Lee  

Branding has always been about shaping perception.  

Branding is about how customers feel about a company, what they believe it stands for, and why they choose it over alternatives.  

Traditionally, this work relied heavily on creative intuition, market research, and long campaign cycles. 

Today, artificial intelligence is reshaping that foundation, turning branding from a largely episodic discipline into a continuous, data-driven system. 

Deeper Audience Understanding

One of the most significant shifts AI enables is in audience understanding.  

Instead of relying on periodic surveys or focus groups, brands can now analyze real-time behavioral data across digital touchpoints.  

AI systems can detect patterns in how customers interact with content, products, and competitors, surfacing micro-segments that were previously invisible.  

This allows branding strategies to move beyond broad demographics and toward highly personalized audience definitions.

Scaled Brand Messaging

AI is transforming brand messaging and content creation.  

Generative AI tools can produce copy, visuals, and even video concepts at scale, dramatically accelerating the creative process.  

While human oversight remains essential for maintaining authenticity and emotional resonance, AI allows marketing teams to test more variations of messaging than ever before.  

This leads to faster iteration cycles and more precise alignment between brand voice and audience preference.

Real-Time Optimization

Another major change is in real-time brand optimization.  

In the past, brand strategy was reviewed quarterly or annually, often after campaigns had already run their course.  

Now, AI can monitor engagement metrics continuously and recommend adjustments on the fly.  

If a message is underperforming with a specific segment, AI can flag it, suggest alternatives, or even dynamically adjust content delivery. Branding becomes less static and more adaptive.

Sharper Market Positioning

AI is also redefining competitive positioning.

Advanced tools can analyze competitors’ messaging, content strategies, and customer sentiment across channels.

This gives brands a clearer view of where they stand in the market and where whitespace opportunities exist. 

Instead of relying on manual audits or anecdotal insights, strategists can ground positioning decisions in large-scale, structured intelligence. 

Brand Positioning Consistency

Perhaps most importantly, AI is influencing brand consistency at scale.

As organizations grow and expand across channels, regions, and teams, maintaining a unified voice becomes increasingly difficult.

AI-powered governance tools can help enforce tone, style, and messaging guidelines across all content outputs, ensuring that every touchpoint reflects the intended brand identity. 

This reduces fragmentation and strengthens overall brand equity. 

Achieving Human-AI Balance

These advantages, however, come with important challenges. 

Over-reliance on AI can lead to homogenized messaging if brands lean too heavily on model-generated outputs trained on similar datasets. 

There is also a risk of losing the human intuition and cultural sensitivity that often define truly iconic brands. 

The most effective branding strategies will therefore combine AI-driven insight with strong human creative direction. 

Final Thoughts

AI is redefining how branding is practiced.

It shifts branding from a periodic exercise in storytelling to a continuous system of learning, testing, and refinement.

The brands that succeed in this new environment will be those that use AI not just to move faster, but to think more deeply about what they stand for and how that meaning evolves over time.

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in discussing how to leverage AI in your branding? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is shamikodesign@gmail.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The New Playbook for Marketing Campaigns

By David Ronald  

Marketing has changed dramatically in recent years.  

The traditional campaign model was built around broadcasting a message to the largest audience possible. 

Brands invested heavily in television, radio, print, and digital advertising, hoping that repetition and reach would drive awareness and ultimately influence purchasing decisions.  

While those tactics still have their place, the most effective marketing campaigns today operate differently. 

Modern audiences are overwhelmed with content. 

They are exposed to thousands of messages every day across social media feeds, streaming platforms, websites, podcasts, email inboxes, and mobile apps. In this environment, simply increasing media spend is no longer enough to guarantee attention.  

The campaigns generating the biggest impact today seem to share a different set of characteristics. They are designed around how people discover, consume, trust, and share information in a digital-first world. 

Based on what I’ve observed in my career to date, the most successful modern campaigns consistently incorporate five key elements. In this blog post I examine each of them in turn.

1. Algorithm and Community Strategy

The best marketers understand that every platform operates according to its own rules. 

Success on TikTok looks very different from success on LinkedIn. What performs well on YouTube may fail completely on Instagram. The content, format, timing, and engagement patterns that drive visibility vary significantly across channels.  

Modern marketers recognize that distribution is no longer just about publishing content. It is about understanding how algorithms surface content and how communities amplify it.  

Short-form video platforms reward engagement velocity. Professional networks reward expertise and conversation. Niche forums and private communities reward authenticity and participation.  

The most effective campaigns are built with these dynamics in mind from the beginning.  

Rather than creating content and hoping people discover it, marketers design campaigns that align with platform behaviors. They understand where audiences gather, what conversations are already happening, and how content can naturally become part of those discussions. 

In many cases, this approach generates significantly greater reach than paid advertising alone.  

When content aligns with both platform mechanics and community interests, it can spread organically through network effects that no media budget can easily replicate. 

2. Influencer and Creator Ecosystems

Trust has become one of the most valuable assets in marketing.  

Consumers have grown increasingly skeptical of traditional advertising. They are more likely to trust recommendations from people they follow and respect than messages coming directly from brands.  

This shift has elevated creators, influencers, industry experts, and niche thought leaders into critical components of modern marketing strategies.  

The most successful campaigns, however, are not simply paying influencers to promote products.  

They are building relationships with creators who already have credibility within specific communities.  

The difference is important.  

Audiences can quickly identify promotional content that feels forced or transactional. On the other hand, when a trusted creator genuinely incorporates a product, idea, or solution into their existing content, the message feels natural and believable.  

The strongest marketing programs today view creators as strategic partners rather than distribution channels.  

These partnerships help brands access established audiences while benefiting from the trust and authenticity that creators have spent years building. 

As a result, creator ecosystems are becoming one of the most powerful mechanisms for accelerating awareness, credibility, and customer engagement. 

3. Language Engineering

One of the biggest mistakes marketers continue to make is assuming that a single message can work everywhere.  

In reality, every platform has its own language, culture, and expectations.  

A message that performs exceptionally well on LinkedIn may feel overly formal on TikTok. A highly polished corporate video may underperform compared to a casual smartphone recording. A long-form thought leadership article may resonate with executives while failing to capture attention on Instagram. 

Modern marketing requires what could be called language engineering – the ability to adapt messaging to fit the context of each channel without losing the core story. 

The best brands are no longer creating one campaign and distributing it everywhere.

Instead, they develop a central narrative and then translate that narrative into multiple platform-specific expressions.  

On LinkedIn, the story may focus on business outcomes and strategic insights. On TikTok, the same story may become an entertaining short-form video. On podcasts, it may evolve into a deeper conversation. On YouTube, it may become a detailed educational resource. 

The underlying message remains consistent, but the delivery adapts to the audience and environment.

Brands that master this skill often outperform competitors because their content feels native rather than repurposed. 

Audiences reward content that fits naturally within the platform experience.

4. AI-Powered Micro-Targeting

Artificial intelligence is reshaping how marketers identify, understand, and engage audiences.  

Historically, targeting relied on broad demographic categories such as age, location, income level, or job title.  

Today's tools allow marketers to move far beyond those traditional approaches.  

AI can analyze engagement patterns, content preferences, browsing behaviors, purchase signals, and audience interactions at a much deeper level.  

This enables a more precise form of micro-targeting.  

Instead of delivering one message to a large audience, marketers can tailor creative assets, messaging, offers, and timing for specific audience segments.  

The result is greater relevance.  

And relevance is often the deciding factor between engagement and indifference.  

For example, two individuals may share similar demographic characteristics but respond to completely different messages based on their interests, behaviors, or stage in the buying journey.  

AI helps marketers identify these distinctions and personalize experiences accordingly.  

Perhaps more importantly, it enables campaigns to evolve in real time.  

As engagement signals emerge, messaging can be refined, audiences can be adjusted, and creative can be optimized continuously. 

This creates a feedback loop that improves campaign performance over time rather than relying solely on pre-launch assumptions. 

5. Multi-Channel Content Distribution

Great content rarely succeeds because it appears once.  

It succeeds because people encounter it repeatedly across multiple touchpoints.  

Modern marketers understand that content is no longer a one-time asset. It is a source material that can be transformed, repackaged, and redistributed across channels.

  • A podcast interview can generate social clips, blog articles, newsletters, quote graphics, video snippets, and discussion topics.
  • A webinar can become a series of short videos, educational posts, and downloadable resources.
  • A customer interview can fuel case studies, testimonials, social content, and sales enablement materials.

This approach significantly increases the return on content investments while creating multiple opportunities for audiences to engage.  

Equally important, modern distribution strategies combine polished and unpolished content.  

Highly produced videos still have value, but audiences increasingly respond to content that feels authentic and human.  

Behind-the-scenes moments, livestreams, founder updates, employee perspectives, and unscripted conversations often generate stronger engagement than heavily edited brand content.  

People connect with people.  

The most effective brands recognize this reality and balance professionalism with authenticity.

The Common Ingredient

Looking across these trends, a common theme emerges.  

Modern marketing is becoming less about broadcasting and more about building momentum.  

Traditional campaigns often relied on interruption. Brands pushed messages outward and hoped audiences would pay attention.  

Today's campaigns work differently.  

They gain traction by aligning with audience interests, platform behaviors, community dynamics, and trusted voices.

  • They spread because they are relevant.
  • They earn engagement because they feel authentic.
  • They scale because networks amplify them.

The goal is no longer simply to reach people. The goal is to create conditions where people choose to engage, share, discuss, and participate.  

That is where network effects begin to emerge.  

And when network effects take hold, marketing becomes far more powerful than advertising alone.

Conclusion

The brands winning today are not necessarily the ones spending the most money. 

They are the ones creating the most momentum.  

In an increasingly crowded digital landscape, that may be the single most important competitive advantage a marketer can build.  

Thanks for reading.  

Are you interested in discussing how to modernize your marketing campaigns? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

How Analyst Relations Drives B2B Growth

By David Ronald  

Great products alone are not enough.  

Buyers are overwhelmed with choices, sales cycles are longer, and trust has become one of the most valuable currencies in enterprise purchasing decisions.  

That’s why analyst relations has evolved from a niche communications function into a strategic growth driver for modern B2B companies. 

Industry analysts influence how markets are defined, which vendors are considered credible, and how buyers evaluate solutions. Firms such as Forrester, Gartner, and IDC shape conversations that directly impact pipeline generation, brand perception, and revenue growth. 

When executed effectively, analyst relations becomes a force multiplier across marketing, sales, and product strategy, and in this blog post, I explore how. 

Building Market Credibility

One of the most important ways analyst relations drives growth is by building market credibility. 

Enterprise buyers often rely on analysts as trusted third parties to validate vendor claims and reduce purchasing risk. A positive mention in a research report, strong positioning in a market guide, or inclusion in a competitive evaluation can dramatically increase buyer confidence.  

For emerging companies especially, analyst recognition can help level the playing field against larger competitors with significantly bigger marketing budgets.  

In many cases, strong analyst validation gives buyers the confidence to include newer vendors in shortlists they may have otherwise overlooked.

Strengthening Demand Generation

Analyst relations also enhances demand generation efforts. 

Analyst reports, quotes, and insights provide valuable third-party validation that marketing teams can incorporate into campaigns, webinars, sales presentations, and thought leadership content.  

This kind of external credibility often performs better than traditional promotional messaging because buyers perceive it as more objective and trustworthy. 

Analyst-backed content can improve engagement rates, strengthen conversion performance, and increase the effectiveness of nurture campaigns.  

Strong analyst relationships can also increase media visibility. Journalists frequently rely on analysts for industry commentary and vendor recommendations, creating additional opportunities for brand exposure and thought leadership.

Accelerating Sales Cycles

Another major benefit of analyst relations is its impact on sales effectiveness. 

Sales teams regularly encounter skeptical buyers who want reassurance that they are making the right investment. Analyst recognition gives sales representatives a powerful proof point during competitive evaluations.  

Whether it’s a mention in a market report or favorable feedback from an industry expert, analyst validation can help accelerate deals and reduce friction in the buying process. 

It also provides sales teams with stronger messaging and competitive positioning when facing established market leaders. 

In enterprise sales environments where multiple stakeholders are involved, analyst credibility can be especially valuable in helping internal champions build consensus and justify purchasing decisions.

Delivering Strategic Market Intelligence

Beyond marketing and sales, analyst relations provides valuable strategic intelligence.  

Analysts spend significant time evaluating market trends, customer pain points, and competitive dynamics across industries. Their perspectives can help companies refine positioning, identify whitespace opportunities, and better understand how the market perceives their strengths and weaknesses.  

In many organizations, analyst feedback directly influences product roadmap decisions, pricing strategies, and go-to-market planning. 

Companies that actively engage analysts often gain earlier visibility into emerging trends and changing buyer expectations.

Analyst Relations Is a Long-Term Investment

Effective analyst relations requires more than occasional briefings or product demos. 

The strongest programs focus on building long-term relationships based on transparency, consistency, and meaningful insights. 

Analysts want to understand not only what a company sells, but also its vision, differentiation, customer success stories, and ability to execute.  

Organizations that treat analyst engagement as an ongoing strategic initiative, rather than a one-time publicity effort, typically see the greatest business impact.

Final Thoughts

Analyst relations helps bridge that gap by shaping market perception and reinforcing credibility throughout the buyer journey. 

For B2B companies looking to accelerate growth, analyst relations is no longer optional.  

It is a strategic investment that can strengthen brand authority, improve sales outcomes, and position a company as a leader in its market. 

Thanks for reading.  

Are you interested in discussing how to leverage analyst relations to drive the growth of your business? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is dronald@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Brand Positioning Mistakes that Kill Growth

By Sharon Lee

Companies rarely fail because they lack a strong product.

More often, they struggle because customers don’t clearly understand what makes the company different or why its solution matters.

That’s a brand positioning problem.

Brand positioning is the perception a company owns in the minds of customers relative to competitors. It shapes how people think about your business, what they remember about your brand, and whether they consider you when it’s time to buy.

When positioning is clear and differentiated, growth becomes easier: marketing campaigns perform better; sales conversations become more productive: and customers develop stronger trust and loyalty.

But when positioning is vague, inconsistent, or disconnected from customer needs, growth can stall, even when the product itself is excellent.  

In this blog post I'm going to examine some of the most common positioning mistakes that quietly undermine growth and prevent companies from reaching their full potential. 

Trying to Appeal to Everyone

One of the biggest mistakes companies make is assuming broader messaging will attract more customers.

In reality, the opposite is usually true.

When brands try to speak to everyone, they often end up sounding generic. Messaging becomes filled with vague claims like “innovative,” “customer-centric,” or “industry-leading.”

And, while those phrases may sound impressive internally, they rarely create distinction in the market because nearly every competitor says the same thing.

Strong positioning requires focus.

The most successful brands understand exactly who they serve, what problem they solve, and why their approach is meaningfully different. Rather than trying to dominate every category, they intentionally own a specific narrative.

Some become known for simplicity, others for premium quality, affordability, speed, reliability, or innovation.

Specificity creates memorability.

Customers are far more likely to remember a brand that communicates a clear and focused identity than one attempting to be everything to everyone. Ironically, narrowing a company’s positioning often expands its growth potential because customers immediately recognize the brand’s relevance to their needs. 

Confusing Features With Positioning

Another common mistake is assuming that product features alone are enough to differentiate a company.

Features matter, but customers rarely buy features in isolation: they buy outcomes, confidence, convenience, trust, and emotional value.

For example, a software company may emphasize AI-powered automation, real-time analytics, or advanced integrations. Those are capabilities, not positioning.

Positioning explains why those capabilities matter in a way customers emotionally and strategically understand. 

The real value might be helping overstretched teams work more efficiently, reducing operational risk, improving decision-making, or simplifying complex processes. Those outcomes are what customers ultimately care about. 

This problem appears across nearly every industry. Companies often overload their websites, presentations, and campaigns with technical details while failing to articulate a larger, more compelling story. 

Strong positioning transforms complexity into clarity. It connects product functionality to meaningful business or personal outcomes and answers the most important customer question: “Why should I care?” 

Sounding Exactly Like Competitors

Many companies unintentionally become invisible because they sound exactly like everyone else in their industry.

Phrases such as “next-generation platform”, “digital transformation leader,” and “AI-driven innovation” appear constantly in modern marketing. The issue is not that these phrases are inaccurate: the issue is that they are interchangeable. 

If customers could replace your company logo with a competitor’s logo and the message would still make sense, your positioning lacks distinction.

Differentiation requires courage.

Memorable brands are willing to communicate with a unique voice and emphasize a clear perspective, even if it means not sounding like the rest of the industry.  

Some of the world’s strongest brands succeeded not because they used more complicated messaging, but because they communicated simple ideas consistently and emotionally: 

  • Apple became associated with simplicity and creativity.
  • Nike built its identity around inspiration and achievement.
  • Southwest Airlines emphasized friendliness and affordability.

Their messaging worked because it created emotional recognition and immediate clarity.

Companies that rely too heavily on buzzwords and industry jargon often fade into the background because customers struggle to identify what truly makes them different. 

Ignoring Customer Perception

One of the most dangerous positioning mistakes companies make is believing they control how customers perceive the brand.

They don’t.

Positioning exists in the minds of customers, not in internal strategy documents or executive presentations. Companies can shape perception, but ultimately customers decide what the brand represents based on their experiences and interactions.

This creates problems when internal messaging does not match external reality. 

A company may position itself as premium while customers perceive it as overly complicated.  

Another may emphasize innovation while buyers primarily value its reliability and customer service. 

The only way to develop effective positioning is by listening carefully to the market: customer interviews, sales conversations, support interactions, reviews, and win/loss analysis often reveal insights that internal teams overlook. 

In many cases, customers naturally describe a company’s value more effectively than marketers do. 

Strong positioning amplifies authentic strengths rather than manufacturing artificial narratives. It reflects how customers genuinely experience the brand and aligns messaging with reality. 

Constantly Changing the Message

Consistency is one of the most overlooked drivers of brand growth.

Yet many companies continuously revise their messaging, introducing new taglines, shifting narratives, redesigning websites, or repositioning themselves every year. While these changes are often intended to keep the brand fresh, they can create confusion both internally and externally.  

Customers need repeated exposure to a message before it truly becomes associated with a brand. If the narrative changes too frequently, the market never develops a stable understanding of what the company stands for. 

That does not mean brands should never evolve. Markets change, customer expectations shift, and positioning sometimes needs refinement. However, successful brands usually maintain a consistent core identity even as they modernize their messaging over time. 

Consistency builds familiarity, and familiarity builds trust. 

The brands that achieve long-term recognition are typically the ones that reinforce the same central ideas repeatedly across marketing, sales, customer experience, and executive communication. 

Prioritizing Internal Preferences Over Market Reality

Many positioning problems originate inside the company itself. 

Leadership teams sometimes create messaging based on what sounds impressive internally rather than what resonates with actual customers. Technical language, complex terminology, and internally focused narratives may satisfy executives or product teams, but they often fail to connect with buyers. 

This is especially common in technology companies, where internal discussions frequently revolve around architecture, functionality, and engineering sophistication. Customers, however, usually care more about outcomes, simplicity, efficiency, and business value. 

Strong positioning requires objectivity and discipline. The market, not internal stakeholders, ultimately determines whether messaging works. 

That’s why successful companies continuously test and refine their positioning using customer feedback, campaign performance, sales insights, and competitive analysis. 

Positioning should function as a strategic growth tool rather than an internal branding exercise. 

Failing to Align the Entire Organization

Brand positioning is not just a marketing responsibility. It should influence every customer-facing aspect of the business.

Problems arise when departments communicate conflicting narratives. Marketing may emphasize simplicity while sales focuses on customization. Product teams may introduce unnecessary complexity while customer success teams promise ease of use. 

The result is inconsistency, confusion, and weakened trust.

Strong brands align the entire organization around a shared understanding of who the company serves, what differentiates it, and why customers choose it over competitors. This alignment creates a more cohesive customer experience and reinforces the same message at every touchpoint.  

When positioning is deeply integrated across the organization, customers experience the brand consistently rather than hearing disconnected stories from different teams. 

Why Strong Positioning Drives Growth

Effective brand positioning creates significant business advantages. 

It improves marketing efficiency because messaging becomes clearer and more targeted. It strengthens sales conversations because customers immediately understand the value proposition. It can also improve customer retention, strengthen pricing power, and reduce acquisition costs. 

Most importantly, strong positioning creates clarity in a noisy market. 

Customers are overwhelmed with information and choices. Brands that communicate a simple, differentiated, and emotionally compelling message are far more likely to earn attention and trust. 

Even exceptional products can struggle when positioning is weak. 

Meanwhile, companies with strong positioning often outperform competitors with similar capabilities because they communicate their value more effectively and memorably. 

Final Thoughts

The companies that win in competitive markets are rarely the ones with the loudest messaging.

They are the ones with the clearest message.

They understand their audience deeply. They communicate differentiated value consistently. They connect product capabilities to meaningful outcomes. And they build identities customers can quickly recognize and remember.

In a world where attention is limited and competition is constant, clarity has become one of the most valuable advantages a company can possess.

Because when customers instantly understand who you are, what you stand for, and why you matter, growth becomes far easier to achieve.

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in discussing how to develop brand positioning that delivers? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is shamikodesign@gmail.com – I look forward to hearing from you. 

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

5 AI Tools That Product Marketers Cannot Live Without

By David Ronald  

Product marketing has always sat at the intersection of storytelling, strategy, and data. 

But with the rise of AI, that intersection has become a high-speed highway. 

The best product marketers today aren’t just great communicators – they’re power users of AI tools that accelerate insight, sharpen positioning, and scale execution.  

The difference between keeping up and pulling ahead often comes down to the tools you choose. 

Here are five AI tools that have quickly become indispensable.

1. LLMs

At its core, product marketing is about translating complexity into clarity.  

Large language models like ChatGPT and Claude excel at this. 

Whether you’re drafting messaging frameworks, refining positioning, or generating first-pass content for blogs, emails, or sales enablement, these tools act as an always-on strategic partner. 

More importantly, they help you think – you can pressure-test ideas, simulate customer personas, and iterate faster than ever before. 

The key here is the ability to explore more angles in less time.

2. Gong (AI-powered conversation intelligence)

Great product marketing starts with the voice of the customer.  

Gong uses AI to analyze sales calls, surfacing patterns in objections, competitor mentions, and buying signals.  

Instead of relying on anecdotal feedback, product marketers can tap into hundreds of real conversations to understand what resonates and what falls flat.  

This turns qualitative feedback into something far more actionable, helping refine messaging, pricing strategies, and competitive positioning with confidence.

3. Jasper (AI content generation)

While general-purpose AI tools are powerful, platforms like Jasper are purpose-built for marketing teams. 

Jasper helps scale content creation across channels, such as ad copy, landing pages, and product launches, while maintaining brand voice and consistency. 

For product marketers juggling multiple launches and campaigns, this kind of leverage is invaluable.  

Jasper amplifies creativity by removing the friction of the blank page. 

4. Crayon (AI competitive intelligence)

Understanding the competitive landscape is a core pillar of product marketing.  

Crayon uses AI to track competitors across websites, messaging changes, pricing updates, and more. 

Instead of manually monitoring dozens of sources, product marketers get curated, real-time insights into how competitors are positioning themselves.  

This enables faster responses, sharper differentiation, and more informed battlecards for sales teams.

5. Notion AI (AI-powered knowledge management)

Product marketing generates a massive amount of information that includes personas, messaging docs, launch plans, research insights.  

Notion AI helps organize and synthesize this knowledge. It can summarize long documents, generate briefs, and even help structure complex projects.  

The real value lies in turning scattered information into accessible, actionable knowledge that teams can actually use.

Final Thoughts

AI isn’t replacing product marketers – it’s redefining what great looks like.  

The role is shifting from manual execution to strategic orchestration, where the ability to leverage AI tools becomes a core competency.  

The marketers who thrive will be those who learn how to combine human insight with machine intelligence, using tools like these not just to move faster, but to think better.  

Thanks for reading.  

Are you interested in discussing how to leverage AI to accomplish more with your product marketing? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you. 

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

A Brief Guide to Creating a Successful Podcast

By David Ronald  

Creating a great podcast may look deceptively simple from the outside.  

But anyone who has tried knows the gap between a mediocre show and a compelling, binge-worthy podcast is wide and often misunderstood.  

The best podcasts don’t succeed because of expensive equipment or celebrity guests alone – they succeed because of clarity of purpose, thoughtful structure, authentic delivery, and consistent execution.  

In this blog post I examine how to build a podcast that people want to listen to and want to come back.

Start with a Clear Point of View

The most common mistake in podcasting is trying to appeal to everyone. That approach usually leads to a vague, unfocused show that doesn’t resonate with anyone in particular.  

Great podcasts are built around a strong, specific point of view.  

That doesn’t mean being polarizing for the sake of it, but it does mean knowing exactly who your audience is and what they should get from your show that they can’t easily get elsewhere.

Ask yourself questions like these:

  • Who is this for?
  • What problem, curiosity, or interest does it serve?
  • Why should someone choose this over the thousands of other podcasts available?

For example, a podcast about “marketing” is too broad. A podcast about “How B2B SaaS companies scale product marketing from Series A to IPO” is specific, and more compelling to the right audience.  

Clarity here becomes your foundation – everything else becomes harder without it. 

Design the Format Intentionally

A great podcast doesn’t just “happen.”  

Structure is what keeps episodes focused, pacing sharp, and audiences emotionally invested. Structure gives listeners a reason to stay through the entire episode and, more importantly, a reason to come back for the next one.  

In an increasingly crowded podcast landscape, consistency and clarity are often what separate forgettable shows from podcasts that build loyal audiences over time. 

Here are some common formats:

  • Solo commentary – thought leadership, storytelling.
  • Co-hosted conversations – chemistry-driven dialogue.
  • Interviews – expert insights, diverse perspectives.

None of these is inherently better than the others, and each requires a different level of preparation and skill.

Invest in Audio Quality

Audio quality matters, but not in the way many beginners assume.  

The goal isn’t perfection – it’s creating an experience that feels clean, comfortable, and easy to listen to. A podcast with compelling ideas, authentic delivery, and valuable content will almost always outperform a technically flawless show that lacks substance.  

What will drive listeners away faster than anything is poor clarity such as echo, distortion, or distracting noise. A decent USB microphone, a quiet room, and basic editing software are enough to produce high-quality audio.  

That said, don’t let equipment become an excuse to delay – content and delivery matter far more than having the “perfect” setup.

Prepare Without Sounding Scripted

One of the defining traits of great podcasts is that they feel natural, conversational, and effortless. The best hosts create the impression of spontaneity while still guiding the episode with intention and clarity. 

Listeners want authentic conversations, not overly scripted performances, but authenticity doesn’t mean being unprepared.  

Indeed, preparation is often what allows a host to sound relaxed and confident rather than scattered or repetitive.

Focus on the First Five Minutes

Listener retention is won or lost early. If the beginning of your episode doesn’t capture attention, most people won’t stick around to hear your best insights.  

Strong openings often include:

  • A compelling question or statement.
  • A clear preview of what the listener will gain.
  • Immediate value or intrigue.

Avoid long, unfocused introductions – listeners don’t need your life story before you get to the point.

Edit for Clarity and Flow

Editing is where good podcasts become great. Even the most talented podcast hosts rarely produce a perfect episode in a single take – and editing is what creates flow, sharpens storytelling, and maintains momentum from beginning to end.  

A well-edited podcast feels intentional without sounding overly produced. Listeners may never consciously notice great editing, but they immediately notice when an episode drags, wanders, or becomes difficult to follow.  

Effective editing keeps the audience focused on the content rather than the imperfections surrounding it. The goal is to maintain a natural feel while improving clarity and pacing.

Engage Your Audience

Great podcast hosts create a sense of familiarity and relationship that keeps audiences returning episode after episode. Over time, loyal listeners begin to feel invested not just in the content, but in the personalities, perspectives, and community surrounding the show.  

This sense of connection is one of podcasting’s greatest strengths and one of the reasons the medium builds such deeply engaged audiences. Unlike traditional media, podcasts create an intimate listening experience, often accompanying people during commutes, workouts, walks, or daily routines.  

Encourage engagement by asking for listener questions, responding to comments or feedback, and featuring audience input in episodes. This builds community and gives you direct insight into what resonates.

Strive for Consistency

Consistency is one of the most underrated drivers of podcast success. Many podcasts fail not because the content was poor, the hosts lacked talent, or the ideas weren’t compelling – they fail because they simply stop publishing.  

Building a successful podcast audience takes time, repetition, and reliability. Listeners develop loyalty through familiarity and routine, and that only happens when a show appears consistently over an extended period. In the early stages especially, momentum matters far more than perfection.  

Even strong podcasts struggle to grow if episodes are released unpredictably or disappear for long stretches without explanation. Consistency signals professionalism, commitment, and respect for your audience. It also helps listeners integrate your podcast into their daily or weekly habits, which is one of the most powerful forms of audience retention.

Measure What Matters

The most successful podcasters focus not only on audience size, but also on audience behavior. Metrics such as retention, completion rates, repeat listeners, and long-term growth provide far deeper insight into the health of a podcast. 

These indicators reveal how effectively your episodes hold attention, whether your pacing works, and which topics genuinely resonate with your audience. In many cases, a smaller but highly engaged audience is far more valuable than a large audience that quickly tunes out.

Pay attention to:

  • Episode completion rates.
  • Growth in subscribers or followers over time.
  • Repeat listeners and returning audience percentage.
  • Engagement metrics such as comments, reviews, and shares.
  • Social media mentions and audience interaction.
  • Most popular episode topics or themes.
  • Audience demographics and geographic trends.

Also consider metrics such as email signups, community joins, or product purchases, along with platform-specific performance across Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and other channels.

Think About Discovery

A podcast can’t flourish in isolation.  

Discovery is one of the biggest challenges, and relying solely on podcast platforms is rarely enough.  

Extend your content as far and wide as possible:

  • Share clips on LinkedIn and other social media.
  • Turn episodes into blog posts or newsletters.
  • Highlight key quotes or insights everywhere you can.

This not only drives awareness but reinforces your message across multiple channels.  

Treat each episode as a content asset, not just a one-time recording.

Final Thoughts

Creating a great podcast isn’t about chasing trends or replicating what’s already popular.  

It’s about clarity, consistency, and connection.  

If you know who you’re speaking to, deliver real value, and show up consistently with a point of view that’s authentically yours, you’re already ahead of most.  

Thanks for reading.  

Are you interested in discussing how produce a successful podcast? If so, let’s have a conversation. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.