Product Marketing That Turns Features Into Revenue.
Positioning, messaging, launch playbooks and sales collateral for B2B products. We connect what you build to how buyers buy, then arm sales with the tools to close it.
What is Product Marketing?
Product marketing is the discipline that defines how a product is positioned in its market, how it is messaged to each buyer segment and how sales teams use that messaging to win deals. It sits at the intersection of product, marketing and sales, translating what the product does into language that buyers use to evaluate and purchase. Without product marketing, technically superior products routinely lose to better-positioned competitors because buyers cannot understand why they should choose one solution over another, and sales teams describe the same product in five different ways.
Signs You Need Product Marketing
- Sales reps describe your product differently in every demo and no one can agree on a single answer to "what makes you different from X".
- You are launching a new product or feature and do not have a documented go-to-market plan, channel strategy or measurement framework.
- Your win rate is declining and you suspect competitors are out-messaging you despite your product being technically comparable or stronger.
- Your website, sales deck and one-pager all say something slightly different and new hires take 3 months to understand how to talk about the product.
- You have raised a new round or entered a new market and the existing messaging was built for a different buyer profile at an earlier stage of the business.
Who This Is For
B2B SaaS Companies Pre or Post-Launch
SaaS businesses at seed through Series C that need their positioning to be sharp before they scale spend. Pre-launch companies get their messaging right before they burn budget on campaigns. Post-launch companies fix the positioning that is limiting their conversion rate.
Companies Entering a New Segment or Vertical
Businesses expanding their ICP from SMB to mid-market, from one vertical to another, or from one geography to another. Existing messaging rarely transfers cleanly and a fresh positioning exercise prevents wasted campaign spend on the wrong story for the new buyer.
Sales-Led Companies with Inconsistent Deal Narratives
Businesses with strong sales teams but no centralised messaging framework. Every rep has their own pitch and no one can identify which version is winning deals. Product marketing creates the single source of truth that makes the whole team more effective.
Product Teams Preparing a Major Release
Engineering and product teams that have built something significant and need a launch strategy, customer-facing narrative and sales enablement package before the release date. Product marketing ensures the launch has commercial impact, not just internal excitement.
What You Get
- Positioning Statement A structured positioning document defining your market, target customer, frame of reference, key differentiators and proof points in the standard format used across product, sales and marketing.
- Messaging Hierarchy A layered messaging document covering your overarching value proposition, persona-level messages and feature-level proof points so every team member knows exactly what to say to which buyer.
- ICP Profiles and Buyer Personas Research-backed profiles covering job title, goals, pain points, evaluation criteria and buying triggers for each target segment, built from primary customer interviews rather than assumptions.
- Competitive Battle Cards One-page comparison documents for each key competitor covering their strengths, weaknesses, how they message against you and the specific responses sales should use in comparison conversations.
- Launch Playbook A channel-by-channel launch plan covering timing, channel strategy, asset requirements, launch day checklist and the measurement framework for tracking launch success across pipeline and awareness metrics.
- Sales Deck and One-Pagers A revised sales presentation and supporting leave-behind documents built on the approved positioning, designed so reps can adapt them to individual prospects without losing the core narrative.
- Objection Handling Guide A documented library of the most common sales objections with the specific language, reframing techniques and proof points that convert each objection into a buying signal.
- Demo Script Framework A structured demo narrative that leads with customer pain rather than features, sequenced to land the aha moment as early as possible and closes with a clear next-step prompt.
What Product Marketing Covers
Positioning & Messaging
Define your market position, develop your messaging hierarchy by buyer segment and create the core narrative that sales and marketing both use.
Launch Planning
End-to-end launch playbooks covering channel strategy, launch timing, PR coordination, sales enablement and post-launch measurement.
Sales Enablement Assets
Battle cards, one-pagers, product decks, objection handling guides and demo scripts that help sales teams close faster.
Competitive Intelligence
Ongoing monitoring of competitor messaging, positioning and product changes so your team always knows how to win comparisons.
The Koldconvert Positioning-to-Pipeline Method
Most product marketing engagements start with a workshop and end with a positioning document that sits in a folder. Koldconvert's Positioning-to-Pipeline Method is structured to ensure every output has a direct commercial use. We begin with primary research: real customer interviews and structured win/loss calls that surface the exact language buyers use when they evaluate your category, rather than relying on internal assumptions about what matters. From that research we build the positioning and messaging hierarchy in a single integrated document rather than separate artefacts, which means every sales asset, landing page and campaign brief starts from the same source. The final phase deploys the messaging directly into the sales process through a structured handoff session with the revenue team, measuring messaging adoption in deals rather than just delivery of documents.
How Product Marketing Works
Discovery
Customer interviews, win/loss analysis and market research to understand how buyers evaluate your category and where your product wins.
Positioning
Develop your positioning statement, messaging hierarchy and value propositions for each ICP segment.
Assets
Build the sales and marketing assets that operationalise the messaging: decks, battle cards, launch kits, landing page copy.
Launch and Iterate
Execute the launch plan, measure adoption of messaging and refine based on deal outcomes and customer feedback.
Tools & Technology
Notion and Miro anchor the research and positioning work, keeping all source material, ICP profiles and messaging documents in a single accessible system. Typeform captures structured customer and win/loss interview data, HubSpot tracks messaging adoption across the sales pipeline, and Hotjar provides the on-site behaviour signals that validate whether positioning changes are landing with buyers.
How We Work Together
Positioning Diagnostic Sprint
A focused 2-week engagement covering a rapid audit of your current positioning, competitor messaging and sales process. Ends with a written diagnosis and prioritised recommendations for fixing the most damaging messaging gaps. Ideal before committing to a full engagement.
Full Positioning and Launch Package
A 6-10 week fixed-scope project delivering the complete positioning document, messaging hierarchy, sales assets and launch playbook. Suitable for companies preparing a new product launch or refreshing positioning before a major growth push.
Ongoing Product Marketing Retainer
A monthly retainer covering competitive intelligence updates, new feature launches, persona refinement and sales asset creation. Designed for companies that need continuous product marketing output without the cost of a full-time senior hire.
What Clients Achieve
Benchmark Results
Product Marketing for Your Industry
SaaS & B2B Software
SaaS markets are saturated with similar feature claims. We build positioning that moves beyond "easy to use" and "powerful" to identify the specific outcome your product delivers that competitors cannot credibly claim, then wire that into every sales and marketing touchpoint.
FinTech & Payments
FinTech buyers evaluate products on compliance, reliability and switching cost alongside features. We build messaging that addresses risk and trust concerns first, positioning the commercial advantage second in a sequence that mirrors how FinTech procurement actually works.
Professional Services & Consulting
Services firms need positioning that creates a clear category of one rather than competing on credentials. We identify the specific problem framing and methodology that distinguishes the firm and build the case study and thought leadership architecture to prove it at scale.
E-commerce & Retail
B2B e-commerce and wholesale platforms face buyers who compare dozens of vendors on a features-and-price matrix. We build the value narrative that shifts the conversation from price per unit to total cost of partnership and long-term supplier value.
HealthTech & MedTech
HealthTech messaging must satisfy clinical, operational and procurement stakeholders with different information needs. We build a multi-stakeholder messaging map that gives each buyer the specific proof points they need to champion the product through a complex committee decision.
EdTech & Learning Platforms
EdTech buyers at institutions need evidence of learning outcomes, not just feature lists. We build the ROI narrative and case study framework that translates engagement metrics into the attainment and retention improvements budget holders need to justify the spend.
Marketing & Creative Agencies
Agencies struggle to differentiate on capability alone because every agency claims to be strategic, creative and data-driven. We identify the specific niche, proof-point combination and client result that creates genuine distinctiveness rather than interchangeable positioning.
Manufacturing & Industrial
Industrial products are often commoditised in the buyer's mind before the sales conversation starts. We build product marketing that quantifies the operational and total-cost-of-ownership advantages in the language procurement and engineering teams use to evaluate vendor decisions.
Logistics & Supply Chain
Logistics buyers make decisions on reliability data and switching risk, not marketing language. We build the evidence-based messaging framework that translates operational performance metrics into buyer confidence and positions switching cost as a solvable problem rather than a barrier.
Legal Services
Legal and LegalTech products need positioning that earns trust with risk-averse buyers before making any commercial claim. We build the thought leadership and proof architecture that positions the firm as the expert choice and makes fee comparisons secondary to expertise confidence.
HR Technology
HR tech buyers are presented with nearly identical value propositions from dozens of vendors. We identify the specific workflow problem your product solves better than anyone else and build the demonstration and messaging strategy that makes that advantage obvious in a 30-minute evaluation.
PropTech & Real Estate
PropTech products need to overcome institutional conservatism and build the case for workflow change alongside the product case. We build the change management narrative into the positioning so buyers see adoption as manageable rather than disruptive.
InsurTech
InsurTech positioning must work for both broker and end-customer channels, which often require different value framings of the same product. We build dual-channel messaging architectures that maintain brand consistency while addressing the distinct priorities of each audience.
Venture-Backed Scale-Ups
Scale-ups need positioning that works both for customers and for the next fundraise narrative. We build the market framing that positions the company as a category leader rather than a feature vendor, which drives both sales efficiency and investor conviction simultaneously.
Private Equity Portfolio Companies
PE-backed businesses often need to reposition after an acquisition to address a broader market or higher price point. We build the repositioning strategy and messaging framework that supports revenue expansion targets without alienating the existing customer base.
Koldconvert vs an In-House Product Marketer
| Factor | Koldconvert | In-House Product Marketer |
|---|---|---|
| Speed to value | Positioning delivered in 4-6 weeks from kick-off | 3-month hiring cycle plus 30-60 day ramp before output |
| Expertise depth | Cross-sector positioning experience across 20+ B2B categories | Deep in one or two sectors; pattern matching is limited |
| Cost structure | Fixed project fee with no ongoing overhead | GBP 60-90k base salary plus NI, benefits, tools and management time |
| Cross-functional coverage | Positioning, sales enablement, launch and competitive intelligence in one scope | Depends on seniority; junior hires often need management to cover gaps |
| Accountability | Contracted deliverables with defined success criteria | Performance management is slower and output is harder to measure |
| Tech stack | Operates natively in Notion, HubSpot, Figma and Airtable | Tool preferences vary; standardisation takes time |
| Scalability | Scope adjusts per project; no fixed overhead between launches | Fixed cost regardless of launch frequency or workload |
"The most common product marketing mistake we see is building positioning from the inside out: starting with what the product does and then looking for language to describe it. This produces messaging that is accurate but not persuasive, because buyers do not organise their decisions around your feature set. They organise them around their own pain and the risk of getting the decision wrong. The companies that win on positioning start with the buyer's mental model of the category and then map their product into it, using the language buyers already use to describe the problem rather than the vocabulary that makes sense internally. The second mistake is treating positioning as a one-off document rather than a living system. Markets shift, competitors reposition and new buyer segments emerge. The businesses we see compound on their positioning investment are the ones that have a quarterly process for testing and updating messaging against deal data, not the ones with the most polished launch deck."
Koldconvert Strategy Team
Questions to Ask Any Product Marketing Agency
- How do you conduct customer research, and how many interviews are included? Positioning built without primary customer research is positioning built on internal assumptions. A good answer describes a structured interview methodology, minimum interview count and how verbatim language from those interviews is incorporated into the final deliverables. A weak answer describes desk research and review-site analysis only.
- Can you show us a positioning document or messaging hierarchy you have delivered before? The format and specificity of prior work tells you more than any pitch. Strong positioning documents are precise, opinionated and contain language that only applies to that specific company. Generic-feeling examples with placeholder-style copy suggest templated rather than researched work.
- How do you measure whether the positioning is working after delivery? This is the question most agencies cannot answer well. A strong response names specific metrics: win rate change by ICP segment, sales cycle length, messaging adoption in call recordings, conversion rate on the updated landing page. A weak answer describes post-delivery check-ins without measurement criteria.
- How do you handle competitive positioning without copying competitor claims? Effective competitive positioning avoids the trap of directly attacking competitors in language that amplifies their brand. A good answer describes a framing-based approach that redefines the category around your strengths rather than making head-to-head comparisons that buyers find off-putting.
- What happens if the sales team does not adopt the new messaging? Sales adoption is the hardest part of product marketing and the part most agencies ignore. A strong answer describes a sales enablement handoff process, manager training, call review cadence and a plan for iterating the messaging when adoption is low. A weak answer treats delivery of the document as the end of the engagement.
Glossary
- Positioning Statement
- A positioning statement is a structured internal document that defines for whom a product is built, what category it belongs to, what unique benefit it delivers and why buyers should believe that claim. It is the foundational reference document that all customer-facing messaging is derived from.
- Messaging Hierarchy
- A messaging hierarchy is the layered structure that organises what a company communicates at each level: overarching company value proposition, product-level claims, persona-specific messages and feature-level proof points. It ensures consistency across all sales and marketing touchpoints.
- Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)
- An ICP is the precise definition of the company type most likely to buy, derive value from and retain a product, defined by firmographic and behavioural attributes rather than generic demographic data. It is the filter against which all pipeline and marketing investment decisions are made.
- Battle Card
- A battle card is a one-page sales reference document that provides the specific responses, reframes and proof points a rep needs to win a comparison conversation against a named competitor. Battle cards are built from win/loss analysis and updated as competitor messaging evolves.
- Win/Loss Analysis
- Win/loss analysis is the structured process of interviewing customers who chose your product and prospects who chose a competitor to identify the real decision factors, rather than relying on internal sales team assessments that are often incomplete or rationalised after the fact.
- Launch Playbook
- A launch playbook is the complete operational plan for bringing a product or feature to market, covering channel strategy, timing, asset requirements, internal alignment steps, launch day checklist and the measurement framework used to evaluate whether the launch achieved its commercial objectives.
Product marketing, answered
Product marketing is the discipline that defines how a product is positioned, messaged and brought to market, covering research, narrative development, launch strategy and the sales tools that connect your product to buyers. It sits at the intersection of product, marketing and sales, translating what the product does into language that buyers use to evaluate and purchase.
Product marketing defines the core positioning and messaging that all content, sales and campaigns are built on, while content marketing creates ongoing assets that execute within that strategic framework. Product marketing sets the strategy once and thoroughly; content marketing produces continuous output against it.
Pre-launch is the best time for product marketing because it defines your positioning before budget is spent on campaigns with the wrong message. Most companies that struggle with early traction have a messaging problem rather than a product problem, and fixing positioning post-launch is significantly more expensive than getting it right before.
Yes, and sales involvement is built into our process. We interview your sales team during discovery, incorporate real-world objections into the messaging framework and deliver assets your reps actually reach for in deals. Adoption rates are significantly higher when sales has shaped the output.
A full positioning and messaging engagement takes 4-6 weeks. Adding a launch playbook extends the timeline by 2-4 weeks. Ongoing competitive intelligence and messaging updates are available as a monthly retainer once the foundation is built.
A positioning and messaging sprint typically ranges from GBP 8,000-18,000 depending on scope and number of ICP segments. A full launch playbook including sales assets adds to that. Ongoing retainers for competitive intelligence and messaging maintenance run from GBP 2,500-5,000 per month.
Koldconvert delivers the foundational positioning work faster and at lower cost than a senior in-house hire, particularly for companies that do not yet have the brief to recruit against. Many clients use our engagement to build the positioning foundation and then hire an in-house product marketer to maintain and extend it.
Koldconvert delivers product marketing across SaaS, FinTech, HealthTech, professional services, EdTech, HR technology, PropTech and other B2B sectors. Positioning methodology is consistent across industries but all market research, persona development and messaging is built from primary research specific to your buyers.
A messaging hierarchy is the structured framework that defines what your company says at each level: from the overarching value proposition down to feature-level proof points for each buyer persona. Without it, marketing, sales and product describe the same product in different ways, creating confusion in deals and inconsistency across touchpoints.
You own all outputs: positioning document, messaging hierarchy, ICP profiles, competitive battle cards, launch playbook, sales deck, one-pagers and objection handling guide. Everything is delivered in editable formats and briefed to your team so they can maintain and extend the work independently.
Competitive positioning is built on direct analysis of competitor messaging, sales decks, G2 reviews and customer win/loss interviews rather than surface-level website comparisons. We identify the specific claims competitors make and build your positioning to exploit their weaknesses and reinforce your genuine advantages.
Koldconvert builds positioning from buyer language, not internal product language. Every ICP profile, value proposition and battle card is grounded in verbatim phrases from customer interviews and win/loss analysis, which means the messaging resonates with buyers immediately rather than requiring months of iteration to find what works.
Ready to position your product to win?
Book a strategy call. We will assess your current positioning and outline a product marketing plan built to move your pipeline.