A value proposition is the one sentence that tells someone why they should choose you over every alternative, including doing nothing. Most value propositions fail at this completely. They describe the company, not the customer’s outcome. They use industry jargon nobody outside the office uses. Or they’re so generic they could apply to literally any competitor in the space.
Getting this right is one of the highest-leverage things a founder can do. It sharpens your pitch, your homepage headline, your sales calls, and your ads all at once.
The Formula That Works
Your value proposition needs to answer three things: what you do, who it’s for, and what outcome they get. “We build high-converting websites for e-commerce founders who are tired of losing sales to slow, confusing checkout flows” is a value proposition. “We are a full-service digital agency committed to your success” is a waste of space.
The more specific you are about who it’s for, the more it resonates with exactly those people. Yes, it excludes others. That’s not a problem. Trying to appeal to everyone is what makes most value propositions useless.
Focus on the Outcome, Not the Process
Your customers don’t want what you sell. They want what comes after they buy it. A customer doesn’t want a website. They want more leads. They don’t want SEO services. They want to rank higher than their competitors and stop paying for every single click. Write your value proposition from the destination, not the method of getting there.
Make It Credible
A big claim without evidence is just noise. If you say you deliver results faster than anyone else, that claim needs backing. A number, a case study, a guarantee, a testimonial. The stronger your value proposition, the more proof it requires to land. Don’t make claims you can’t support.
Test It on Real People
Write three versions of your value proposition. Not one. Three. Show each one to ten people who match your ideal customer and ask them to rank which one makes them most want to learn more. Don’t explain or defend any of them. Just watch and listen. The one that generates the most curiosity is your winner, regardless of which one you personally like best.
Put It Everywhere
Once you have a value proposition that works, use it everywhere consistently. Homepage headline, email signature, LinkedIn bio, pitch decks, one-liners when someone asks what you do at a networking event. Consistency builds recognition. Every time someone encounters the same clear message, it reinforces the association.
If you’re struggling to nail your positioning and want help articulating what makes your business worth choosing, see how we approach brand strategy for founders.