Competitor Teardowns the Right Way — Pro Tips #2

Competitor Teardowns the Right Way — Pro Tips #2. If your brand feels fuzzy to you, it’s fog to your audience. Let’s make it obvious and repeatable.

Content that works trades novelty for usefulness repeated consistently.

Steps

  1. State the promise in plain words — Avoid poetry; say the outcome a buyer can point to later.
  2. Define the audience and their stakes — Name who loses what if nothing changes; real stakes sharpen choices.
  3. Document decisions in one page — People use what they can read in two minutes.
  4. List three proof points — Social, data, demos. Proof turns belief into trust.
  5. Design constraints before concepts — Constraints produce coherence; they are not creative jail.

Why this matters: Avoid poetry; say the outcome a buyer can point to later. In branding, consistency is a function of decisions captured and reused.

Why this matters: Name who loses what if nothing changes; real stakes sharpen choices. In branding, consistency is a function of decisions captured and reused.

Why this matters: People use what they can read in two minutes. In branding, consistency is a function of decisions captured and reused.

Why this matters: Social, data, demos. Proof turns belief into trust. In branding, consistency is a function of decisions captured and reused.

Why this matters: Constraints produce coherence; they are not creative jail. In branding, consistency is a function of decisions captured and reused.

Toolkit

How to use it: Headline • subhead • bullets • CTA mapped to page sections. Save the final in a shared doc; link from tickets so execution matches intent.

How to use it: CSS variables / design tokens for color and spacing across apps. Save the final in a shared doc; link from tickets so execution matches intent.

How to use it: From formal to playful with examples for each channel. Save the final in a shared doc; link from tickets so execution matches intent.

Example

A fintech tightened palette tokens and shipping velocity rose because designers stopped re‑deciding shades.


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