If you can’t explain your value clearly, your customers won’t either.
In a noisy, competitive market, your value proposition is your anchor. It’s the reason people choose you over someone else. It’s what turns attention into action — and action into trust.
But the difficult reality is this: most businesses get it wrong.
Most businesses focus on features, not benefits. They talk about themselves, not their customers. Or worse – they assume their value is obvious when it isn’t.
And the result? Great ideas fail to land. Innovation stalls. Teams drift. Customers leave.
That’s why we created Disruptors Handbook #18: How to Develop a Value Proposition – a practical guide to help founders, marketers, and product teams get this critical step right.
So … what is a value proposition, really?
A value proposition is not a slogan. It’s a strategic promise — one that clearly answers:
“Why should a customer choose you instead of anyone else?”
At Disruptors Co, we define it as:
The unique combination of benefits you offer that solve a real customer problem — in a way that is better, clearer, or more relevant than alternatives.
It’s the through-line that should shape your product, inform your messaging, guide your growth strategy, and align your team.
Where most businesses go wrong
We’ve supported hundreds of startups, scaleups, and government-backed ventures through innovation programs – and we consistently see the same issues:
- Vagueness: “We’re a platform that helps you connect and grow.” But how? For whom? Why now?
- Feature-overload: Long lists of tools, no clear outcome.
- Lack of differentiation: If your competitor can copy-paste your pitch, it’s not a value proposition.
- No proof: Unsubstantiated claims like “we’re the easiest” or “the smartest” erode trust.
And I know what you are thinking – it is hard work. And you are right.
I know what else you are thinking – can’t I get AI to do it? And the answer is “yes, if you want to sound like everybody else”.
What good looks like: A practical example
In one of our accelerator programs, a startup founder came in with this line:
“We help small businesses manage compliance and admin with our AI assistant.”
After value proposition refinement — including direct customer conversations and competitor mapping — they shifted to:
“Compliance without the chaos. The smart assistant that saves small business owners 5+ hours a week on paperwork — no legal degree required.”
The result? More sign-ups. Clearer differentiation. And a message that stuck.
How to build a strong value proposition (the right way)
Here’s a preview of the five-step process inside our DH18 handbook:
- Define your target customer segment Avoid the trap of “everyone.” Get specific on who you’re talking to and why they matter.
- Identify the customer problem Focus on the real-world pains your audience faces — backed by evidence, not assumptions.
- Articulate the benefits you deliver Translate features into outcomes. Show what changes for the customer, not just what your product does.
- Differentiate from the competition Don’t be the “also-ran.” Make your value clear, credible, and unique.
- Test and refine with real customers (yes, go and talk to them) If your customers can’t repeat your value proposition back — or don’t believe it — it’s not landing. Iterate until it resonates.
Download the handbook
We’ve captured this full process in our latest resource – DH18 – How to Develop a Value Proposition.
You’ll get:
- Worksheets and frameworks
- Service-based and impact-led value proposition templates
- Tips for aligning product, marketing and customer teams
- Real examples and integration strategies
Why it matters right now
With markets shifting, AI changing how people work, and buyer expectations evolving fast – a clear value proposition is your best competitive edge.
It’s not enough to be different. You have to be different in a way that matters.
And that starts with understanding what your customer really values.
Need help applying it?
We support founders, intrapreneurs and innovation leaders through accelerator programs, growth sprints, and positioning workshops. Talk to us here at Disruptors Co.