| name | product-strategy |
| version | 2.0.0 |
| description | Master product strategy, market analysis, competitive positioning, and long-term product vision. Define business models and craft go-to-market strategies that drive success. |
| sasmp_version | 1.3.0 |
| bonded_agent | 01-strategy-vision |
| bond_type | PRIMARY_BOND |
| parameters | [object Object], [object Object] |
| retry_logic | [object Object] |
| logging | [object Object] |
Product Strategy & Vision Skill
Master the art of strategic product thinking. Define winning market positions, identify opportunities, and create compelling visions that guide your entire organization.
Part 1: Market Analysis Framework
Market Definition
TAM (Total Addressable Market)
- Total revenue opportunity in your market
- Definition: All potential customers who need your solution
- Calculation: (Target customer base) × (avg. contract value)
- Example: B2B SaaS for small business = 5M SMBs × $5K = $25B TAM
SAM (Serviceable Available Market)
- Market you can realistically capture
- Definition: Segments you can reach with your go-to-market
- Usually 5-20% of TAM
- More useful for planning
SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market)
- Realistic market share in first 3-5 years
- Definition: What you can actually win with realistic execution
- Usually 1-5% of SAM
- Use for revenue projections
Competitive Landscape
Direct Competitors
- Products serving same customer with same use case
- Examples: Slack vs Teams, Figma vs Adobe XD
Indirect Competitors
- Solutions to same problem, different approach
- Examples: Slack vs email, Google Forms vs Typeform
Alternative Solutions
- Build in-house, spreadsheets, manual processes
- Often biggest competitor for new categories
Analyze Each:
- Product capabilities matrix
- Pricing and positioning
- Target customer segment
- Go-to-market approach
- Strengths and weaknesses
- Market share and growth
- Recent funding/momentum
Market Trends & Timing
Questions to Answer:
- Is the market growing or shrinking?
- What's driving growth?
- Are there macroeconomic tailwinds?
- What regulatory changes are coming?
- Is technology making solutions possible now?
- Are buyers ready to adopt?
Market Readiness
- Have customers already tried solutions?
- Are there early adopters?
- Is there pent-up demand?
- Are budget allocations available?
Part 2: Positioning Strategy
Value Proposition
Define what you offer that's different and better:
Template:
For [target customer]
Who [customer need/problem]
The [product name]
Is [product category]
That [key benefit]
Unlike [alternative]
Our product [unique differentiator]
Example (Slack):
For teams that need communication
Who struggle with fragmented tools (email, Skype, etc)
Slack is a messaging platform
That brings all communication into one place
Unlike email (which is async and scattered)
Our product is focused on searchable history and integrations
Positioning Pillars
3-5 core pillars that define your position:
- Speed - Faster than alternatives
- Ease of Use - Simpler than competitors
- Integration - Connects to tools they already use
- Security - Enterprise-grade security
- Cost - Better ROI than alternatives
Rate yourself vs competitors on each pillar.
Target Customer Profile
Ideal Customer (ICP):
- Company size (employees, revenue)
- Industry vertical
- Job titles of decision makers
- Annual spend budget
- Current tech stack
- Growth stage (startup, growth, enterprise)
Why they'll buy:
- Main pain point you solve
- Secondary pain points
- How success is measured
- What failure looks like
Part 3: Business Model Design
Revenue Model Options
SaaS (Software as a Service)
- Monthly/annual recurring revenue
- Per user, per seat, per feature tier
- High gross margin (70-80%)
- Pros: Predictable, high LTV
- Cons: Long sales cycle
Freemium
- Free tier with limited features
- Paid upgrades for power users
- Good for user acquisition
- Challenge: Converting free to paid
One-Time Purchase
- Perpetual license
- Lower LTV than SaaS
- Better for enterprise deals
- Outdated for most categories
Usage-Based
- Pay for what you use (GB, API calls, etc)
- Good for variable workloads
- Challenge: Revenue unpredictability
Marketplace/Commission
- Take percentage of transactions
- Examples: Stripe, Uber, Airbnb
- High volume, lower margins
- Network effects critical
Hybrid Models
- Combine multiple (e.g., SaaS base + usage overage)
- More complex but often optimal
Pricing Strategy
Value-Based Pricing
- Price based on value delivered, not cost
- Most profitable approach
- Requires understanding ROI for customer
Tiered Pricing
- Starter, Professional, Enterprise
- Good for catering to different segments
- Prevent feature parity issues
Per-Seat Pricing
- Charge per user
- Easy to understand
- Can limit adoption (too expensive for large teams)
Usage-Based Pricing
- Charge per API call, GB storage, etc.
- Scales with customer growth
- Harder to predict revenue
Freemium Conversion Rate
- Typical: 2-5% free to paid
- Higher for B2B (5-10%)
- Lower for consumer (0.5-2%)
Part 4: Go-To-Market Strategy
GTM Channel Selection
Direct Sales
- Your team sells to customers
- Best for: High ACV (>$10K), complex product
- Typical sales cycle: 3-6 months
- Cost: High ($200K+/rep + quota)
Self-Service / Freemium
- Customers discover and sign up themselves
- Best for: Low ACV (<$1K), self-explanatory
- Typical sales cycle: Minutes to days
- Cost: Low (marketing focused)
Sales Development (SMB)
- SDR/AE team for SMB segment
- Typical ACV: $2K-$20K
- Sales cycle: 1-3 months
- More efficient than enterprise
Channels & Partnerships
- Resellers, integrations, platforms
- Example: App store, Zapier, AWS Marketplace
- Lower customer acquisition cost
- Channel partnership challenges
Customer Acquisition Strategy
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)
- Total sales & marketing spend / new customers
- Target: CAC payback in 12-18 months
LTV (Lifetime Value)
- Average revenue × average customer lifetime
- Target: LTV > 3x CAC
Metrics Formula:
Monthly Revenue Per Customer × Gross Margin %
÷ Monthly Churn Rate
= LTV
Example:
$1000 MRR × 80% / 5% churn = $16,000 LTV
If CAC = $5,000: LTV/CAC = 3.2x ✓
Launch Strategy Timeline
Option 1: Stealth Launch
- Build in secret, launch with big bang
- Risk: Misaligned with market needs
- Reward: Surprise, buzz, no competitive pressure
Option 2: Open Beta
- Limited availability, lots of transparency
- Risk: Slower growth initially
- Reward: Feedback, hype building, press coverage
Option 3: Enterprise Sales
- Deep relationships with early customers
- Risk: Takes longer to scale
- Reward: Higher validation, valuable feedback
Part 5: Pitching Your Strategy
Executive Pitch Template (30 minutes)
1. The Opportunity (5 min)
- Market size (TAM/SAM/SOM)
- Market growth rate
- Why now (timing)
2. The Problem (5 min)
- Customer pain point(s)
- How it's solved today
- Why current solutions are inadequate
3. Your Solution (5 min)
- What you're building
- Why you're different
- Key competitive advantages
4. The Business (5 min)
- Target customer segment
- Go-to-market strategy
- Revenue model and pricing
- Unit economics projection
5. The Team (3 min)
- Why are you uniquely capable
- Relevant background
- Advisors and supporters
6. The Ask (2 min)
- How much you're raising
- How you'll use it
- 18-month milestones
Elevator Pitch (2 minutes)
"[Product] helps [target customer] [solve problem/achieve goal]. Unlike [alternative], we [unique differentiator], which results in [customer benefit]. We're focused on [market segment] and building [key capability]."
Part 6: Strategy Decisions & Trade-offs
Key Strategic Questions
Horizontal vs Vertical?
- Horizontal: Serve many industries
- Vertical: Dominate one industry deeply
- Decision factors: Market size, competition, expertise
High-Touch vs Self-Service?
- Impacts CAC, LTV, scaling ability
- Decision: Customer value + ACV
Niche vs Broad?
- Start narrow, expand over time
- Better to dominate niche than lose in broad market
Premium vs Budget?
- Premium: Higher margin, slower growth
- Budget: Lower margin, faster growth
- Rarely can do both
First Mover vs Fast Follower?
- First mover: Build market, education, but risk
- Fast follower: Learn from others, better execution
- Category size matters
Part 7: Strategy Refinement
Strategy Review Cadence
Quarterly:
- Progress vs. plan
- Competitive changes
- Customer feedback
- Market evolution
- Tactical adjustments
Annually:
- Full strategy refresh
- Market assumptions review
- Competitive repositioning
- Long-term vision update
When to Pivot
Signs you need a strategic pivot:
- Low customer demand for current strategy
- Major competitive threat
- Market conditions changed significantly
- Better opportunity emerged
- Team capabilities misaligned
- Unit economics don't work
Troubleshooting
Yaygın Hatalar & Çözümler
| Hata | Olası Sebep | Çözüm |
|---|---|---|
| TAM/SAM hesaplama hatası | Yanlış multiplier | Assumptions'ları document et |
| Positioning belirsiz | Çok fazla segment | Single ICP focus |
| Business model sürdürülebilir değil | Unit economics negatif | LTV/CAC analizi |
| GTM channel ineffective | Yanlış channel seçimi | A/B test channels |
Debug Checklist
[ ] TAM/SAM/SOM varsayımları documented mı?
[ ] Competitive matrix güncel mi?
[ ] Value proposition tested mi?
[ ] Pricing sensitivity analyzed mı?
[ ] GTM channel hypothesis validated mı?
Recovery Procedures
- Market Size Uncertainty → Scenario analysis (3 cases)
- Positioning Confusion → Customer interviews for validation
- Business Model Issues → Unit economics deep dive
Master strategy thinking and position your product for long-term success!