Owning Your Position: How to Dominate a Market Category as a Service Business
Positioning is the single most important strategic decision. Dunford's 10-step framework, Baker's pre-tests, Brunson's Big Domino, and Priestley's Oversubscription — combined into one actionable guide for service businesses.
Most service businesses fail at positioning before they ever fail at delivery. They can do the work. They can get results. What they can't do is explain — clearly, memorably, and consistently — why a specific buyer should choose them over every alternative, including doing nothing at all.
Positioning isn't a tagline. It isn't a mission statement. It isn't a "brand voice" exercise. It's the single most consequential strategic decision a service business will make, because it determines who you compete against, what buyers compare you to, and whether you win on value or lose on price.
April Dunford, in Obviously Awesome, provides the most rigorous positioning framework in the market. David C. Baker, drawing on 900+ advisory engagements with expertise firms, provides the validation tests. Russell Brunson, in Expert Secrets, adds the belief-engineering dimension. And Daniel Priestley, in Oversubscribed, shows how to engineer demand once the positioning is right.
Separately, each of these frameworks is valuable. Combined, they form a complete positioning architecture for service businesses.
Here's how to combine all four into a single positioning architecture — from finding your position to validating it, to engineering demand that exceeds your capacity to deliver.
01 — The 10-Step Positioning Exercise
Dunford's Framework, Adapted for Services
Dunford's framework is the gold standard for positioning work. Most service professionals try to start with a tagline or an elevator pitch. Dunford starts somewhere far more fundamental: understanding what you are actually competing against.
Step 1: Identify your competitive alternatives.
Not your competitors — your alternatives. What would your ideal client actually do if your firm did not exist? The list typically includes: do nothing, hire a large consultancy like McKinsey or Accenture, adopt a generic framework, hire a boutique specialist, or attempt to build internal capacity. Each alternative has different strengths and weaknesses, and your positioning must address the specific one your ideal buyer is most likely to choose.
Step 2: List your unique attributes.
What do you have that none of your alternatives offer? A proprietary diagnostic tool? A certified partner network? A specific methodology? Deep expertise in a narrow domain? These must be genuinely unique — not "better service" or "more experience," but structural differentiators that alternatives can't easily replicate.
Step 3: Map attributes to value themes.
Translate features into outcomes. "30-question assessment" becomes "board-ready maturity score in 90 minutes." "Certified partner network" becomes "local expert, global methodology." Buyers don't care about your attributes. They care about what those attributes mean for their situation.
Step 4: Identify your target customers.
Who cares most about the value you deliver? Not "everyone who needs help" — the specific buyer profile that finds your unique attributes most compelling. The more specific, the more powerful.
Step 5: Define your market category.
This is the single most important positioning decision you will make. Your category determines what buyers compare you to, and comparison determines whether you win. Dunford's most actionable principle: dominate a subsegment where your value is obvious before expanding to broader markets.
Steps 6 through 10 involve testing, refining, and deploying your positioning with real buyers — creating positioning artifacts, training everyone who represents your brand, and iterating based on market feedback.
"How do you beat Bobby Fischer? You play him at any game but chess." — April Dunford. Choose a category where you are the obvious winner, not one where you are fighting incumbents on their home turf.
The positioning statement that emerges should follow this structure: "We help [specific target customer] achieve [specific outcome] through [unique methodology/approach] — unlike [competitive alternatives] who [limitation of alternatives]."
The more specific each element, the more powerful the positioning. Vague positioning is no positioning at all.
02 — Validating Your Position
Baker's Five Pre-Tests That Separate Real Positioning from Wishful Thinking
Many service professionals craft a positioning that sounds compelling in a conference room but collapses on contact with reality. Baker's five pre-tests exist to prevent that. Before committing to a position, validate it rigorously.
1. The Competitor Count Test.
Can you identify 10-200 firms competing in this space? Fewer than 10 means the market may be too small to sustain your business. More than 200 means you are not differentiated enough — you are in a crowded generalist space where price becomes the only differentiator.
2. The "Drop and Give Me 20" Test.
Can you immediately rattle off 20 specific insights, patterns, or recommendations for this niche? Not generic advice that applies to any industry — specific, hard-won knowledge that comes from deep experience. If you can't, you don't have enough expertise to claim this position credibly.
3. The Geographic Reach Test.
Can you serve this niche nationally or internationally, or are you limited to a local market? Geographic constraints limit scalability and reduce the total addressable market for your positioning.
4. The Specialist Hiring Test.
Could you hire or train practitioners who specialize in this niche? If the talent pool doesn't exist, scaling through a team or certification program will be difficult or impossible.
5. The Purchasable Lists Test.
Can you identify and reach your target buyers through existing databases, industry events, or publications? If you can't find them, you can't market to them — no matter how compelling your positioning.
A positioning that fails any of these tests should be reconsidered before you invest time and money building around it.
Baker also draws a critical distinction between two types of positioning. Vertical positioning is industry-specific — "We help healthcare organizations measure and improve their operational maturity." Prospect discovery is easier because industry events, associations, and publications are well-defined. Baker's data shows that 85% of successful expertise firms position vertically. Horizontal positioning is discipline-specific — "We help organizations of any size build and optimize their data infrastructure." It offers greater variety and economic resilience across industry cycles.
Both work. The critical rule is: pick one. Trying to be both "the healthcare specialist" and "the data infrastructure expert for all industries" means doing neither well. Each type requires a different marketing strategy, a different content calendar, a different conference schedule, and a different referral network.
03 — The Big Domino
The One Belief That Makes Everything Else Irrelevant
Brunson introduces a concept that most service business positioning frameworks miss entirely: the Big Domino — the one belief that, if your prospect accepts it, makes all other objections irrelevant.
For a diagnostic-driven service business, the Big Domino is typically: "If you believe that [your area of expertise] can be accurately measured on a structured scale, then everything else follows." If a prospect believes the diagnostic works, the ROI argument becomes self-evident. The need for expert guidance becomes obvious. The pricing becomes justified by the value revealed.
Build every presentation, every case study, and every marketing asset around proving this one belief.
Brunson is direct about the danger of dilution: "Pick ONE belief and hammer it." Trying to prove ten things at once proves nothing. Most service businesses scatter their messaging across dozens of value propositions, benefits, and features. The result is that no single message lands with enough force to create conviction.
This connects to a deeper insight that Brunson layers on top of traditional positioning: people don't buy services — they join movements. Every successful methodology business creates an identity for its participants. EOS practitioners are "EOS Implementers." That's their professional identity. Certified coaches in any discipline don't just use a methodology; they become part of a community with shared language, shared values, and shared purpose.
The Big Domino is also the distinction between what Brunson calls an Improvement Offer and a New Opportunity. "Better consulting" is an Improvement Offer — it positions you in direct comparison with alternatives and invites price competition. "A certified methodology with a proprietary diagnostic and a global network of specialist practitioners" is a New Opportunity — it positions you outside the comparison set entirely.
"'Better consulting' is an Improvement Offer. It invites direct comparison and price competition. A 'new vehicle for achieving your goals' is a New Opportunity. It eliminates the comparison entirely."
When you position as an improvement, buyers evaluate you against incumbents and choose based on features and price. When you position as a new opportunity, buyers evaluate you on the merit of the new approach itself. You are playing a different game entirely.
Examine your current positioning materials. Are you selling "better consulting" or "a new way to achieve a specific outcome"? If the former, the Big Domino exercise isn't optional — it's the single highest-leverage repositioning move available to you.
04 — Owning Words
Claiming Mental Territory in Your Market
Harnish, in Scaling Up, introduces a concept that turns positioning from a strategic exercise into an operational discipline: "Words You Own" — the mental territory you claim in your market.
Volvo owns "safety." FedEx owns "overnight." When a buyer thinks of your category, your name should be the first that comes to mind. For service businesses, this means choosing a specific phrase and associating it relentlessly with your brand:
- An organizational health consultancy might own "team alignment"
- A cybersecurity advisory firm might own "breach readiness"
- A leadership coaching practice might own "executive presence"
- A data consultancy might own "data maturity"
The phrase must be narrow enough to be ownable — you can't own "consulting" or "strategy" — and broad enough to be valuable. Harnish recommends the Google Autocomplete method: if your target phrase auto-completes with competitors' names, the territory is contested. Find a phrase where you can be first.
Once you choose your words, use them everywhere. In every piece of content. In every presentation. In every conversation. In the name of your diagnostic. In the title of your methodology.
Beckwith calls this the Cocktail Party Principle: "Communicate one thing memorably. Multiple messages communicate nothing." If someone at a cocktail party asks what you do, you need an answer that is clear, memorable, and conversation-starting. Not "I'm a consultant." Not "I help companies with their strategy." Something specific enough to be interesting: "We measure organizations' readiness for AI and show them exactly what to do next."
If every practitioner in your network delivers a different version of that sentence, your brand fragments and your pricing power evaporates. Consistency isn't optional. It's the foundation of positioning.
"Repetition isn't boring — it's branding. Communicate one thing memorably. Multiple messages communicate nothing." — Beckwith's Cocktail Party Principle
The words you own become the organizing principle for everything — your content strategy, your sales conversations, your website, your diagnostic name, your methodology title. Get them right, and everything else aligns. Get them wrong, and every marketing dollar is wasted trying to communicate too many things to too many people.
05 — Engineering Oversubscription
Priestley's Framework for Demand That Exceeds Supply
Once your positioning is clear and validated, the next question is: how do you engineer enough demand that you are choosing your clients — not the other way around? Priestley, in Oversubscribed, inverts the conventional sales wisdom. Instead of building capacity and then finding clients to fill it, he prescribes building demand first and then selectively opening capacity.
The framework operates in five phases:
1. Declare your capacity.
How many clients, certifications, or engagements can you deliver at a level of quality that would make you proud? Declare that number publicly. "We accept 25 partners per cohort." "We work with 12 organizations per quarter." The number must be real and you must hold it.
2. Signal before release.
Before opening availability, accumulate demand signals. Priestley recommends 100x capacity in soft signals — email subscribers, assessment completions, content engagement — and 5x capacity in hard signals: applications, discovery calls, deposits. If you are opening 25 seats, you want 2,500 soft signals and 125 hard signals before you announce availability.
3. Select, don't accept.
When demand exceeds capacity, you choose your clients — they don't choose you. The act of selection is itself a market signal: "This firm is so sought-after that qualified people are turned away." That signal compounds with every cohort.
4. Never stretch capacity.
When demand exceeds supply, the temptation is to add more spots. Resist. Oversubscription isn't a problem to solve — it's the strategy. It eliminates price negotiation, creates urgency, and compounds brand value with every cycle.
5. Celebrate and document.
After each capacity release, celebrate publicly. Share results. Publish testimonials. Create case studies. The celebration of one campaign IS the marketing for the next one. Every cohort of satisfied clients becomes the demand engine for the following cohort.
"You will only make a profit if you are oversubscribed on your capacity to deliver. When supply exceeds demand, the buyer's frame shifts from 'can I get in?' to 'is this worth it?' — and that is a conversation you never want to have." — Daniel Priestley
Priestley organizes the entire business around repeating five-phase campaigns: Plan, Build, Release, Deliver, Celebrate. This isn't a one-time launch strategy. It's an operating rhythm. Certification cohorts, diagnostic releases, and partnership rounds are campaigns with a beginning, middle, and end — and each one fuels the next.
The key insight is that oversubscription isn't something that happens to you. It's something you engineer — through declared capacity, accumulated demand signals, and the discipline to say no when stretching would be easier.
06 — Winning Against Every Competitor Type
Four Opponents, Four Different Strategies
Strong positioning doesn't just differentiate you in the abstract. It arms you with specific strategies for the four competitive opponents every service business faces.
Against bigger firms (McKinsey, Accenture, the large consultancies):
You can't compete on brand prestige or global reach. Compete on depth, specialization, and accessibility. Your proprietary diagnostic provides structured, measurable output that large firms' bespoke approaches can't replicate at the same price point. Position as "specialist depth, not generalist breadth."
Against cheaper firms (freelancers, offshore providers):
Never compete on price. Compete on outcomes. Your diagnostic, methodology, and certification create a quality floor that price competitors can't match. Baker's data is clear: if a prospect chooses the cheaper option, they were never your client.
Against "do nothing" (the most common competitor):
Beckwith identifies this as the opponent most service professionals underestimate: "Your first competitor is indifference, not another company." A diagnostic tool is your best weapon against indifference because it makes the invisible visible — it quantifies the gap, reveals the cost of inaction, and creates urgency where none existed.
Against "do it internally":
Many organizations believe they can build internal capability instead of engaging externally. Don't be defensive. Acknowledge that internal capability is the goal — and position your methodology as the fastest, most structured path to building it. Frame your engagement as "building your internal muscles," not "doing the work for you." This positions you as an accelerator, not a replacement.
Track your win rate against each competitor type separately. If you are losing consistently to one category, your positioning or sales process needs adjustment for that specific opponent. A single pitch for all situations is a sign of underdeveloped positioning.
Different competitors require different responses. The strongest positioning anticipates all four and prepares a specific, practiced answer for each.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.