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neobank-positioning-engine-skill

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Neobank Positioning Engine

Scrapes a crypto neobank's website and its competitors, extracts positioning claims, maps the competitive messaging landscape, identifies white space, and generates a complete messaging framework with actual copy.

Not a generic "brand strategy" template. Every output is grounded in what competitors actually say on their websites, what users actually complain about in reviews, and what positioning territory is genuinely unclaimed.

Trigger

  • position [neobank name]
  • positioning audit for [neobank name]
  • how should [neobank name] differentiate?
  • competitive positioning: [neobank A] vs [neobank B] vs [neobank C]

Workflow

Phase 1: Scrape Positioning Data

python scripts/scrape_positioning.py "[Company Name]" "[website URL]"

Run for the target company and 3-5 competitors. The script:

  • Loads the homepage + key pages (about, pricing, features)
  • Extracts: headlines, subheadlines, value propositions, CTAs, proof points, feature claims, social proof, brand voice signals
  • Saves structured output to output/{slug}-positioning.json

For a full competitive analysis:

python scripts/scrape_positioning.py "KAST" "https://kast.com"
python scripts/scrape_positioning.py "Revolut" "https://revolut.com"
python scripts/scrape_positioning.py "Crypto.com" "https://crypto.com"

If scraping fails or returns thin data, fall back to:

  • Web search: "[company]" neobank (mission OR "we help" OR "built for")
  • Cached positioning data in references/neobank-messaging-map.md
  • App store descriptions (often contain concentrated positioning language)

Phase 2: Extract Positioning Elements

Read scraped JSON and extract these elements for each company:

ElementWhat to findWhere to look
Positioning claimThe single sentence that says "we are X for Y"Homepage hero, About page first paragraph
CategoryHow they define their market categoryMeta description, PR headlines, About page
Target audienceWho they explicitly or implicitly addressHomepage copy, feature pages, pricing tiers
Claimed benefitsTop 3-5 benefits they lead withHomepage sections below hero, feature cards
Proof pointsNumbers, logos, testimonials, certificationsTrust bars, case studies, footer badges
Differentiation claimWhat they say makes them different"Why us" sections, comparison pages
Brand voiceTone: corporate/casual/technical/rebelliousOverall copy style, CTA language, error pages
CTA languageWhat action they push users towardPrimary buttons, hero CTA, sticky nav CTA
OmissionsWhat they DON'T mention (often more revealing)Absence of: fees, security details, regulatory info, team

Use references/positioning-frameworks.md for the analytical lens.

Phase 3: Map Positioning Territories

Plot all companies on these four positioning dimensions:

Dimension 1: Audience Spectrum

Crypto Native ←————————————→ Mainstream Consumer
(speaks DeFi)                (speaks "easy money app")

Dimension 2: Trust Model

Self-Custody ←————————————→ Full Custodial
("your keys")               ("we handle everything")

Dimension 3: Value Proposition Core

Yield/Returns ←————————————→ Utility/Spending
("earn 8% APY")              ("spend crypto anywhere")

Dimension 4: Brand Personality

Technical/Builder ←————————————→ Lifestyle/Consumer
("built on ZK proofs")         ("money, simplified")

For each company, assign a position (1-10) on each dimension. Build a 2x2 matrix using the two most relevant dimensions for this specific competitive set.

Phase 4: White Space Analysis

Identify gaps by asking:

  1. Unclaimed territories: Which quadrants of the positioning map have no strong player?
  2. Unspoken benefits: What do users want (from review data) that no competitor claims?
  3. Credibility gaps: Who claims things without proof points? (Opportunity to own with evidence.)
  4. Messaging fatigue: Which claims are so overused they've become invisible? (Avoid these.)
  5. Audience orphans: Which user segments are underserved by current positioning?

Consult references/neobank-messaging-map.md for pre-mapped positioning of major players.

Cross-reference with app store review data if available. User language in reviews often reveals positioning opportunities that competitor websites miss.

Phase 5: Generate Messaging Framework

Produce a complete messaging framework:

1. Positioning Statement (Geoffrey Moore format)

For [target customer] who [need/pain],
[Product] is a [category]
that [key benefit].
Unlike [primary alternative],
[product] [key differentiator].

Provide 2-3 variants. Each takes a different strategic angle.

2. One-Liner Options (5-7 words max) Generate 5 options. Rules:

  • No buzzwords ("revolutionary," "next-gen," "seamless")
  • Must pass the "could a competitor say this?" test. If yes, it's not differentiated.
  • Must connect to a real proof point or capability
  • Should feel inevitable in hindsight, not clever

3. Value Propositions (3 pillars) For each pillar:

  • Headline (under 8 words)
  • Supporting sentence (one sentence, specific)
  • Proof point (number, case study, or verifiable claim)

4. Messaging by Audience For each identified target segment:

  • Their language (how they describe the problem)
  • Hook (what gets their attention)
  • Proof (what convinces them)
  • CTA (what action to push)

5. What NOT to Say List 5-10 specific phrases, claims, or angles to avoid. For each:

  • The phrase
  • Why it fails (overused / unsubstantiated / wrong audience / competitor-owned)

6. Competitive Response Matrix For each major competitor:

  • Their strongest claim
  • Their weakest point
  • How to position against them without naming them

Phase 6: Render and Deliver

Save the structured brief as JSON to output/{slug}-brief.json, then render as PDF:

python scripts/render_positioning.py "output/{slug}-brief.json"

Rules

  1. Evidence over opinion. Every positioning recommendation must trace back to: competitor website copy, user review language, market data, or structural advantage. "I think you should position as X" is worthless. "No competitor in your segment claims X, users ask for it in 23% of reviews, and you have the technical capability" is useful.

  2. Specificity over abstraction. "Differentiate on trust" is a waste of time. "Publish your reserve audit monthly, link it from the homepage hero, and use the line 'See exactly where your money is. Updated [date]'" is actionable.

  3. The competitor test. For every positioning claim: could a competitor say the exact same thing? If yes, it's not positioning. It's wallpaper. Push harder.

  4. Real language only. Pull actual phrases from websites and reviews. Don't invent marketing speak. The best positioning borrows the customer's own words.

  5. Omissions matter. What a company doesn't say is often more revealing than what they do. If nobody talks about fees, that's a territory. If nobody shows their team, that's a trust gap to exploit.

  6. No AI slop. No "in today's competitive landscape." No "it's worth noting." Direct. Compressed. CMO-ready.

  7. Positioning is a bet. Don't try to be everything. The framework should force a choice. "You can own X or Y. Here's the tradeoff. Here's our recommendation and why."

Examples

Input: "Position KAST against Revolut and Crypto.com"

Process:

  1. Scrape KAST, Revolut, Crypto.com websites
  2. Extract positioning elements for all three
  3. Map on dimensions: KAST is crypto-native + spending-focused, Revolut is mainstream + utility, Crypto.com is crypto-native + yield
  4. White space: no player owns "transparent crypto spending" (Revolut hides crypto fees, Crypto.com leads with earn/yield, KAST could own spending transparency)
  5. Generate framework: "The crypto card that shows you everything." Three pillars: transparent fees, multi-chain spending, no lock-ups.
  6. Render PDF, deliver

Input: "How should a new crypto neobank targeting LatAm differentiate?"

Process:

  1. Scrape top 5 LatAm-serving neobanks (Nubank, Mercado Pago, Ualá, dLocal, Lemon Cash)
  2. Extract positioning. All cluster around "financial inclusion" and "easy access"
  3. White space: nobody owns "USD stability" messaging specifically (they all talk features, not the core anxiety: peso depreciation)
  4. Framework: Position around the emotional need (protecting purchasing power) not the feature (crypto/USD access)
  5. Generate copy that speaks LatAm financial anxiety, not crypto jargon

Edge Cases

  • Pre-launch company (no website yet): Use pitch deck, app store description, social media bios. Positioning analysis becomes purely competitive: "here's the landscape, here's the gap, here's where to plant your flag."
  • Very crowded segment (10+ competitors): Don't map all of them. Pick the 3-4 that compete for the same user. Map the rest as "background noise" with one-line positioning summaries.
  • Company with no clear positioning: Flag it: "Your current messaging is [list of generic claims]. None pass the competitor test. You have no positioning. Here are three options."
  • B2B crypto infrastructure (not consumer neobank): Adjust dimensions. Replace Audience Spectrum with "Developer-focused vs Business-focused." Replace Trust Model with "Self-hosted vs Managed."

Files

PathPurpose
scripts/scrape_positioning.pyWebsite scraper for positioning elements
scripts/analyze_positioning.pyLLM-powered analysis: phases 2-5 automated via API
scripts/render_positioning.pyJSON brief to styled PDF
scripts/run_pipeline.pyChains scrape → analyze → render in one command
references/positioning-frameworks.mdMoore, Dunford, territory mapping, competitive patterns
references/neobank-messaging-map.mdPre-mapped positioning of 10+ neobanks and exchanges
output/Generated positioning data and briefs

Source

git clone https://github.com/growgami/Neobank-Positioning-Engine-Skill/blob/main/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

The Neobank Positioning Engine scrapes crypto neobanks and rivals to pull positioning claims, map the competitive landscape, and surface white space. It outputs a grounded messaging framework built on what competitors actually say, what users complain about, and genuinely unclaimed territory. This is not a generic template—outputs are anchored in real signals and ready for implementation.

How This Skill Works

Phase 1 scrapes the target neobank and 3-5 competitors, collecting headlines, value propositions, proofs, CTAs, and brand signals. Phase 2 analyzes the scraped data to extract positioning elements such as the positioning claim, category, target audience, claimed benefits, proof points, and differentiation. Phase 3 maps each company onto the four positioning dimensions and outputs a complete, copy-ready messaging framework with ready-to-use copy blocks.

When to Use It

  • When a neobank needs a defensible differentiation against competitors
  • During a positioning audit for a prospective client
  • When benchmarking multiple neobanks to identify white space
  • Before refreshing homepage hero, value proposition, or CTAs
  • During marketing, sales, or onboarding to align messaging with real-world signals

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Run the scraping script for the target neobank and 3–5 competitors
  2. Step 2: Review Phase 2 results to extract positioning elements and Phase 3 results to map territories
  3. Step 3: Implement the produced messaging framework into pages, ads, and sales decks

Best Practices

  • Anchor every claim in scraped data: headlines, subheads, benefits, proof points, and user reviews
  • Include 3-5 competitors to identify true white space and avoid copycat positioning
  • Validate claims against user reviews and app store descriptions for resonance
  • Use the four-dimension map to select the most relevant focus for your audience
  • Produce concrete copy blocks (hero, subhead, features, CTAs) rather than generic templates

Example Use Cases

  • Identified that competitors over-indexed on high-yield claims while neglecting onboarding simplicity, guiding a shift to a spend-friendly, easy-to-use narrative.
  • Surface concrete proof points (security certifications, audits) to anchor trust in copy and proof sections.
  • Placed the target neobank on a Trust Model vs Audience axis to decide whether to emphasize 'we handle everything' or 'your keys' signals.
  • Generated a ready-to-use hero, subhead, and three feature CTAs for rapid A/B testing.
  • Compared four wallets and produced a white-space territory around onboarding experience, enabling marketing to own that space.

Frequently Asked Questions

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