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.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

10 AEO Mistakes Every Marketing Team is Making

By David Ronald  

Buyers have fundamentally changed how they research and make decisions.  

AI-powered engines and large language models now shape shortlists, influence outcomes, and pull directly from your content, or your competitors’. 

As a result, fewer buyers are relying on traditional Google searches or review sites. 

The rules of SEO haven’t disappeared, but they’ve evolved. 

Answer engine optimization (AEO) is the practice of structuring content so AI systems can easily find, interpret, and cite it in their responses. 

This shift matters because discovery is moving from ranked search results to AI-generated answers.  

Brands that aren’t optimized for these systems risk becoming invisible at the exact moment decisions are made. 

In this blog post, I break down ten common mistakes that are undermining your visibility, and how to fix them.

1. Not Tracking Branded Search

Nearly half of Google searches today are branded. 

That means people are already curious about your product – but if you’re not tracking branded queries, you’re missing signals that represent warm leads.  

Every AI mention that drives a branded query is an opportunity.

2. Weak Comparisons in “Top X Tools” Content

When buyers ask ChatGPT or another large language model to “compare tools,” the answers it generates often pull from structured comparisons. 

If your “Top 10” posts just describe each product in isolation without side-by-side tables, you’re invisible.

3. No Clear Product Comparisons

If you don’t create content explaining “Basic vs Pro vs Enterprise,” AI will default to third-party review sites to explain your tiers.  

That means prospects are hearing about your product from someone else, not you.

4. Skipping Support and Onboarding Content

A common buyer question is: “Is this easy to implement?”.  

If your site doesn’t address onboarding, time-to-value, and customer success support, you’re handing wins to competitors who do.

5. Forgetting TL;DRs and Takeaways

Both buyers and LLMs crave clarity. 

Summaries and TL;DRs aren’t just reader-friendly – they’re often the exact snippets AI engines lift into answers.

6. Neglecting Integration Content

Enterprise buyers almost always ask: “Does this work with Salesforce? HubSpot? Slack?”. 

If you don’t provide robust integration content, your competitor’s documentation will be cited instead of yours.

7. No Persona-Based Pages

Different buyers care about different things. AI loves pulling from “best tools for [role]” pages. 

Without dedicated content for Finance, RevOps, or IT leaders, you’ll be invisible in those role-specific queries.

8. Lack of Use Case Content

Features don’t win deals, use cases do. 

If you’re not publishing content that explains how your product helps specific roles or solves real workflows, you’re leaving gaps for others to fill.

9. Overlooking Security & Compliance

Enterprise deals often hinge on compliance. “Is it SOC 2? GDPR compliant?”. 

If that proof isn’t clear and accessible, AI can’t reference it – and risk-averse buyers won’t gamble on you.

10. Burying the Answer

No one wants to scroll past a 400-word intro to find the point – least of all an AI. 

Lead with a crisp, clear solution. Both buyers and machines reward directness.

Final Thoughts

The fundamentals haven’t changed: buyers want clarity, trust, and proof.  

The difference today is that AI engines enforce it.  

If your content isn’t optimized for human decision-making, it won’t be optimized for machine learning either. 

SaaS companies that recognize this shift are already becoming the default answers in AI-driven shortlists. 

The question is: will you? 

Thanks for reading. 

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

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

How to Create a Category and Shape a Market

By David Ronald  

Most companies think they’re competing in a market.  

The best companies realize they’re competing to define it...  

And that distinction is everything. 

If you enter an established category, the rules are already written. Buyers have expectations, analysts have frameworks, and competitors have carved out positions. 

You’re playing a game that someone else designed, where differentiation is incremental and price pressure is inevitable. 

But, when you create a category, you shift the conversation entirely. You redefine the problem, not just offering a better solution. And in doing so, you give yourself permission to lead. 

In this blog post I explore how to create a new category and share a market.

The Difference Between Positioning and Category Creation

Positioning is about standing out within a category.  

Category creation is about redefining the category itself.  

Most marketing teams are comfortable with positioning – they refine messaging, sharpen value propositions, and highlight differentiation. It’s necessary work, but inherently reactive - you’re responding to an existing frame.  

Category creation, on the other hand, is proactive.  

It asks a more fundamental question: Are we solving a problem that the market fully understands – or are we seeing something others don’t yet see clearly?  

If it’s the former, positioning will suffice. If it’s the latter, you have an opportunity, and a responsibility, to shape the narrative.

The Mechanics of Category Creation

Category creation is a coordinated effort across product, marketing, sales, and leadership. 

At its core, it involves these three interlocking moves:

1. Reframe the Problem

Every category is built on a shared understanding of a problem. To create a new category, you need to challenge that understanding, which often means surfacing a hidden cost, risk, or opportunity that the market has overlooked.

For example:

  • Moving from “file storage” to “content collaboration”.
  • From “customer support” to “customer experience”.
  • From “data tools” to “data platforms”.

The shift is conceptual, not just semantic. It expands the scope of what buyers should care about.

2. Introduce a New Lens

Once you’ve reframed the problem, you need to give the market a new way to evaluate solutions. This is where frameworks come in. And, in my experience, great category creators simplify complexity into clear, memorable constructs:

  • Maturity models.
  • Capability maps.
  • New metrics or KPIs.

These tools do two things:

  1. They educate the market
  2. They position your approach as the logical answer

If buyers start using your language to describe their challenges, you’re shaping how they think.

3. Anchor Your Solution as the Standard

The final step is to connect your product to the new category in a way that feels inevitable. This is where many companies stumble because they either:

  • Stay too abstract and fail to tie the category to their offering, or
  • Get too product-centric and lose the broader narrative

The goal is balance – your product should feel like the natural embodiment of the category you’ve defined, and not just one option among many.

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

Category creation is powerful, but it’s also easy to get wrong. Here are some common pitfalls to avoid:

  1. Overcomplicating the Message – if your category requires a 20-slide deck to explain, it won’t stick. Simplicity wins.
  2. Ignoring the Customer’s Starting Point – buyers don’t wake up thinking in your new category. You need to meet them where they are and guide them step by step.
  3. Declaring a Category Without Earning It – you can’t just name a category and expect the market to follow. It requires sustained effort, credibility, and proof.
  4. Misalignment Across the Organization – if marketing is pushing a category narrative but sales is selling features, the strategy falls apart. Alignment is critical.

A Practical Way to Think About It

If “category creation” feels too abstract, I recommend simplifying it. It’s about answering three questions better than anyone else:

  1. What’s the real problem?
  2. Why does it matter now?
  3. What’s the right way to solve it?

If you can answer those questions clearly, and consistently, you’re already shaping the market.

Conclusion

Most companies wait for the market to tell them who they are, but category creators do the opposite. They define the problem, name the solution, and invite the market to see things their way.  

It’s not the easier path. It requires conviction, patience, and alignment across the business. But, if you get it right, you’re no longer competing for attention within a crowded space… 

Because you’re building the space itself.  

Thanks for reading. 

Are you interested in discussing how to create a category and shape a market? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.


Wednesday, April 22, 2026

AI Tools that Unlock Customer and Market Insights

By David Ronald  

Understanding your customers and market is essential.  

Yet, traditional research methods like surveys, focus groups, and manual data analysis often fall short, especially as data volumes grow exponentially.  

This is where AI-powered tools come into play, enabling organizations to uncover insights faster, more accurately, and with deeper context.  

In this blog post I examine AI tools that can be used to surface customer and market insights. 

AI for Customer Behavior Analysis

One key area where AI shines is customer behavior analysis.  

Platforms like Gong and Grain leverage natural language processing to analyze customer conversations across calls, emails, and chat interactions.  

By detecting recurring themes, sentiment shifts, and emerging pain points, these tools surface insights that would take human analysts weeks to uncover.  

Sales teams, for example, can quickly identify patterns in objections or frequently requested features, allowing product and marketing teams to respond with more targeted messaging or roadmap adjustments.

Quantitative Data Analysis with AI

Another powerful application of AI is in quantitative data analysis.  

Business intelligence platforms like Looker, PowerBI, and Tableau increasingly integrate AI features that automatically detect trends, anomalies, and correlations in datasets.  

AI, for instance, can highlight an unexpected drop in engagement for a particular customer segment or reveal a new purchasing pattern among a previously overlooked demographic. 

These insights can guide decisions ranging from marketing campaigns to product enhancements, ensuring that strategies are grounded in real, data-driven evidence. 

AI for Market Intelligence and Competitive Analysis

Market intelligence and competitive analysis also benefit from AI.  

Tools like Crayon, Klue, and Kompyte automate the collection and summarization of competitor activity, tracking product launches, pricing changes, and messaging shifts across websites, social media, and news sources.  

AI algorithms can distill this information into digestible insights, enabling businesses to spot market trends early, benchmark performance, and adapt positioning in near real-time.  

Similarly, AI-driven social listening platforms like Brandwatch, Sprinklr, and Talkwalker analyze vast amounts of online conversations, identifying emerging trends, sentiment shifts, and unmet customer needs. 

This allows brands to proactively adjust strategies or innovate in ways that resonate with their audience.

Generative AI for Insight Synthesis

In addition, generative AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini can synthesize complex datasets and research into actionable narratives.

For example, after feeding AI a mix of survey results, sales notes, and social listening reports, it can summarize key insights, suggest strategic recommendations, or even draft go-to-market messaging.

This accelerates decision-making while maintaining clarity and precision. 

Conclusion

The real power of AI lies not just in data collection, but in turning data into actionable insights.

By combining natural language processing, predictive analytics, and automation, organizations can move from reactive decision-making to proactive strategy.

Teams can identify new opportunities, understand customer pain points more deeply, and respond to market shifts faster than ever before. 

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in testing AI tools that can be used to surface customer and market insights? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Your Product-Market Fit Isn’t Static

By David Ronald

Product-market fit is often treated as the holy grail.

The belief is that, when fit occurs, everything clicks. The product resonates, customers convert, and growth accelerates. Founders celebrate it, investors look for it, and teams rally around the idea of reaching it.

But there’s a fundamental flaw in how product-market fit is often understood.

Product-market fit isn’t fixed…

It’s dynamic. 

Product-market fit is a state of alignment that must be continuously earned and re-earned as your product, your customers, and your market evolve. 

Ultimately, the companies that win are the ones that adapt to maintain PMF in the long term. 

In this blog post I explain why product-market fit isn’t static and what founders can do to maintain it. 

Why Product-Market Fit Doesn’t Stay Still

At its core, product-market fit (PMF) is about alignment – your product solves a meaningful problem for a specific audience in a way that drives sustained demand.

But neither side of that equation is static.

After all, markets shift, customer expectations evolve, and competitors emerge. Even your own product changes as you scale.

And any one of these forces can disrupt the alignment you once had.

Consider how quickly customer expectations can change – what once felt like a “nice-to-have” feature can become table stakes in a matter of months – features that were once differentiators can quickly become baseline expectations.

If your product doesn’t keep up, the fit begins to erode.

At the same time, your target customer may change. Early adopters are not the same as mainstream buyers. The scrappy startup willing to tolerate rough edges is very different from the enterprise customer demanding reliability, compliance, and support. As you move upmarket or expand into new segments, the definition of value shifts, and so must your product.

Then there’s competition. Even if you’ve nailed PMF, others are watching. New entrants can replicate features, undercut pricing, or reposition the problem entirely. What felt like strong differentiation can quickly become commoditized.  

And finally, your own success can introduce risk. As you add features, expand your roadmap, and serve broader audiences, you can unintentionally dilute your value proposition. The product that once solved a clear, urgent problem can become bloated or unfocused, weakening the very fit that drove your growth. 

The Illusion of “Having” PMF

One of the most dangerous mindsets for founders is believing that PMF is something you “have.” This creates a false sense of security. 

You might see strong growth, high engagement, and positive customer feedback and conclude that you’ve achieved PMF. And you may have, for that brief moment in time. 

But those signals are snapshots, not guarantees. 

History is full of companies that once had strong PMF but failed to maintain it. They stopped listening closely to customers, underestimated shifts in the market, or assumed their early success would carry them forward. Over time, the gap between what they offered and what customers needed widened, often gradually, and then suddenly.

The lesson is simple: PMF is not a binary state. It’s a spectrum, and it can strengthen or weaken over time. 

How PMF Slips Away

PMF erosion rarely happens overnight.

It’s typically subtle at first, showing up in signals that are easy to dismiss.

Retention starts to dip slightly. Churn increases at the margins. New customer acquisition becomes more expensive. Sales cycles lengthen. What used to feel like pull from the market begins to feel more like push.

Customer conversations shift as well. Instead of excitement and urgency, you hear more hesitation. Instead of “we need this now,” you hear “this is interesting, but…” Feature requests become more scattered, and the core value proposition becomes harder to articulate.

Internally, teams may respond by adding more features, increasing marketing spend, or pushing harder on sales. But these are often symptoms of a deeper issue: the underlying alignment between product and market is weakening. 

Recognizing these signals early is critical. The longer they go unaddressed, the harder it becomes to regain strong PMF. 

Treating PMF as a Continuous Process

If PMF is dynamic, then the way you approach it must also change.

Instead of treating it as a milestone, founders should treat PMF as an ongoing discipline.

This starts with maintaining a deep, continuous connection to your customers. Customer discovery shouldn’t stop after the early stages. Regular conversations, interviews, and feedback loops are essential, not just to validate ideas, but to understand how needs are evolving.

It also requires focusing on the right metrics.

Vanity metrics like signups or top-line growth can mask underlying issues. The real indicators of PMF are deeper: retention, engagement, expansion revenue, and customer satisfaction. These metrics tell you whether your product continues to deliver value over time.

Iteration is another critical component. Maintaining PMF requires constant refinement, not just of the product itself, but of your positioning, messaging, and go-to-market strategy. As your audience evolves, the way you communicate value must evolve with it.

This is where many companies fall short. They continue to market the product the same way, even as the product and audience change.  

Over time, this creates a disconnect that weakens perceived value, even if the underlying product is improving. 

Aligning Product, Market, and Go-to-Market

One of the most overlooked aspects of PMF is the role of go-to-market alignment. 

PMF isn’t just about building the right product – it’s about ensuring that your positioning, messaging, and distribution reinforce that fit. 

You can have a strong product that solves a real problem, but if your messaging doesn’t clearly communicate that value, PMF will appear weaker than it actually is. 

Conversely, strong positioning can amplify PMF by making the value more obvious and compelling. 

As markets evolve, your go-to-market strategy must evolve as well. This might mean refining your target audience, repositioning your product, or exploring new channels. 

The goal is to ensure that every aspect of your business reinforces the same core value proposition. 

Anticipating Change Instead of Reacting to It

The best founders anticipate changes in PMF.

This requires a forward-looking mindset. Instead of asking, “Do we have PMF?” the better question is, “What could break our PMF in the next 6-12 months?”

This might include emerging competitors, shifts in customer behavior, new technologies, or changes in the broader market. By identifying these risks early, you can proactively adapt your product and strategy before the fit begins to erode. 

It also means being willing to challenge your own assumptions. The problem you set out to solve may evolve. The customer you initially targeted may no longer be the best fit. 

The willingness to revisit and refine these foundational decisions is what allows companies to sustain PMF over time. 

The Role of Focus

Maintaining PMF doesn’t mean chasing every opportunity. In fact, one of the biggest threats to PMF is a lack of focus. 

As companies grow, there’s a natural tendency to expand into new features, new markets, and new use cases. While this can drive growth, it can also dilute the core value proposition that created PMF in the first place. 

Strong founders are disciplined about focus – they understand what their product does exceptionally well and prioritize maintaining that strength, even as they explore new opportunities. Expansion is intentional, not reactive. 

PMF as a Strategic Advantage

When approached correctly, the dynamic nature of PMF becomes a strategic advantage rather than a liability. 

Companies that continuously invest in understanding their customers, refining their product, and adapting to change are better positioned to stay ahead of the market. 

They share shifts instead of responding to them. 

This creates a compounding effect – strong PMF leads to better retention, stronger word-of-mouth, and more efficient growth. In turn, this provides the resources and insights needed to further strengthen PMF. 

A New Mental Model for Founders

So, in my opinion, it’s time to move beyond the idea of PMF as a one-time achievement. 

Instead, think of PMF as a living system, one that requires constant attention, measurement, and adaptation. It’s not something you find; it’s something you maintain. 

This shift in mindset has practical implications. It changes how you prioritize customer feedback, how you measure success, and how you make strategic decisions. It encourages humility, because it acknowledges that today’s success doesn’t guarantee tomorrow’s. 

And it fosters resilience, because it frames challenges as opportunities to realign and improve. 

Conclusion

Product-market fit is often described as the moment when a startup “clicks” – but the truth is, that click is just the beginning. 

The real challenge, and the real opportunity, is staying in sync as everything around you changes. 

The startups that endure aren’t the ones that reached PMF once and moved on – they’re the ones that treat it as an ongoing pursuit, continuously aligning their product with the needs of a shifting market. 

PMF isn’t a trophy you put on the shelf. It’s a moving target and hitting it, again and again, is what separates lasting companies from the rest. 

Thanks for reading.

Are you interested in discussing how to maintain product-market fit as the world around you changes? If so, feel free to get in touch. My email address is david@alphabetworks.com – I look forward to hearing from you.