From pm-gtm
Generates go-to-market asset packs: positioning statements, messaging pillars, feature-benefit tables, and role-specific use cases for products or features. Useful for GTM plans, launches, or messaging.
npx claudepluginhub mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills --plugin pm-gtmThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
This skill produces a complete go-to-market asset pack for a product, feature, or initiative. It follows Geoffrey Moore's positioning framework and structures all outputs for use in sales decks, landing pages, launch emails, and internal alignment docs.
Builds product marketing strategies including positioning via April Dunford method, messaging hierarchies, competitive analysis, battlecards, and go-to-market plans.
Guides product positioning with April Dunford's Obviously Awesome five-step framework from competitive alternatives to market category. For value props, differentiation.
Applies April Dunford's framework for product positioning: competitive alternatives, unique value, target markets, category design. Use for launches, repositioning, strategy, messaging.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
This skill produces a complete go-to-market asset pack for a product, feature, or initiative. It follows Geoffrey Moore's positioning framework and structures all outputs for use in sales decks, landing pages, launch emails, and internal alignment docs.
Ask the user for these if not provided:
Always produce all four sections below in order.
Use the Geoffrey Moore format exactly:
For [target customer] who [has this problem or need], [Product Name] is a [product category] that [key benefit/outcome]. Unlike [primary alternative or competitor], our product [key differentiator].
Write one primary positioning statement, then offer a shorter tagline version (10 words or fewer) suitable for a hero headline.
Generate 3–5 messaging pillars. Each pillar must include:
Pillars should be distinct — avoid overlap. Each pillar should be defensible against the primary competitor.
Produce a two-column table:
| Feature / Functionality | Buyer Benefit (what it means for the user) |
|---|---|
| [Technical capability] | [Outcome in plain language — start with a verb: "Reduces...", "Enables...", "Eliminates..."] |
Rules:
Generate 3–5 role-specific use cases. Each use case must follow this format:
Use Case [N]: [Role] — [Scenario Title]
Use cases should cover different buyer personas if possible (e.g. end user, manager, admin).
Before delivering output, verify: