2026-03-10 12:05:34 +07:00

1.7 KiB

Messaging Framework

Framework Structure

Mission (Why we exist)
    ↓
Vision (Where we're going)
    ↓
Value Proposition (What we offer)
    ↓
Positioning Statement (How we're different)
    ↓
Key Messages (What we say)
    ↓
Proof Points (Why to believe)

Core Statements

Mission Statement

We [action] for [audience] by [method] so they can [outcome].

Vision Statement

A world where [aspiration/change we want to see].

Value Proposition

For [target customer] who [need/problem],
[Product/Brand] is a [category]
that [key benefit].
Unlike [competitors],
we [unique differentiator].

Positioning Statement

[Brand] is the [category] for [audience]
who want [desired outcome]
because [reason to believe].

Message Architecture

Primary Message

One sentence that captures your core value.

Supporting Messages (3-5)

Each addresses a different benefit or audience need.

Message Audience Need Proof Point
[Message 1] [Need] [Evidence]
[Message 2] [Need] [Evidence]
[Message 3] [Need] [Evidence]

Elevator Pitches

10-second: [One sentence that sparks interest]

30-second: [Problem + solution + differentiation]

60-second: [Full pitch with proof points]

Message by Audience

Audience Pain Point Key Message CTA
[Segment 1] [Pain] [Message] [Action]
[Segment 2] [Pain] [Message] [Action]

Message Testing

  1. Is it clear? (No jargon)
  2. Is it differentiated? (Competitors can't say it)
  3. Is it credible? (Can we prove it)
  4. Is it compelling? (Does audience care)
  5. Is it consistent? (Aligns with brand)