Insight

Why B2B brand positioning fails and what to do about it

Dave Hayward

Dave Hayward

Founder Europa Creative Partners
April 20, 2026
Why-B2B-brand-positioning-fails-and-what-to-do-about-it
Most B2B marketing doesn’t fail because of poor execution. It fails because the thinking underneath it was never clear in the first place.

The campaigns underperform. The messaging doesn’t land. The pipeline stays thin. And the response, almost universally, is to do more. But if your B2B brand positioning strategy is unclear, doing more just accelerates the problem.

What follows uses one of the most instructive brand decisions in history as a lens for why positioning fails, and what to do about it.

You can't read the label from inside the jar

In 1971, Phil Knight had to send a name to his shoe factory by telex. Production started Friday. Three options were on the table: Falcon, Nike, and his own personal favourite: Dimension Six.

His team had described Dimension Six (correctly) as “unspeakably bad.”

Knight couldn’t see it. This is one of those situations where it’s impossible to see the outside of the label because you’re inside the jar. He’s the boss. He’s come up with the name, the name he wanted to name his whole business over.

Inside-the-jar

It’s difficult to know your positioning from inside your business

A big moment in history happened in front of that telex. Knight found himself writing “Nike”, the name that came to his first employee, Jeff Johnson, in a dream. Four letters and word with the properties of a white dwarf sun: small, but densely packed. Named after the Greek goddess of victory.

The team’s response? “Maybe it’ll grow on us.”

Phil-Knight

Phil Knight, c. 1971, with his correctly named shoes

It’s difficult to know your positioning from inside your business. This applies as much to a tech, consultancy, or professional services firm as it does to a product company like Nike.

Nike was almost called Dimension Six. Here's why that matters

The Nike story has come to mind because it’s not about the company’s name. It’s about positioning. We’re in the planning season with customers whose financial year starts in April. And positioning is coming up a lot.

As Peter Drucker wrote in 1954, a business has only two functions: marketing and innovation. Underpinning this philosophy is the strategic infrastructure that sits upstream of both: understanding what the market actually needs and positioning your company to deliver it.

He wasn’t talking about marketing tactics, sales channels, or product development.

Peter-Drucker

It might not be the channels you’re using: it might be the message you’re sending

It’s the decision that sits upstream of everything else. The story you occupy in your current and future customers’ minds.

In plainer language: the product solves the problem. The story makes people choose you over everyone else, solving the same problem.

Enter: positioning.

The positioning problem isn’t a marketing problem. It’s a business problem, and it’s almost always invisible from inside.

Describing your capability is Dimension Six. Describing a problem is Nike

One way to position is to describe your capabilities. The other, more successful, way is describing a problem you’re solving and how you made the customer feel.

An example. “We help organisations digitally transform” is Dimension Six. It describes something real. But the person you’re trying to reach isn’t thinking about something as amorphous as digital transformation. They’re thinking about the board meeting where the numbers didn’t add up. About how, every month, it’s a nightmare to pull the figures together. About the way the competition’s new technology is making them significantly faster and more efficient.

“Saving your ass at board reporting time” is probably not quite Nike-type positioning. But it’s getting there.

As Dave Gerhardt and Katelyn Bourgoin explored in Episode 344 of the Exit Five podcast, the businesses that win in B2B develop an ownable idea, a position specific enough to mean something and distinct enough to be remembered. Most B2B messaging never gets there because the positioning work that precedes it was never done properly.

Positioning is not a tagline exercise. It's a commercial decision

Good B2B brand positioning determines which customers you pursue, which problems you solve, what you say to them, and how your sales and marketing connect. Get it right and everything downstream becomes easier. Get it wrong, and no amount of execution fixes it.

The clearest framework for this comes from April Dunford’s Obviously Awesome: for a specific audience, with a specific problem, your product delivers a specific outcome in a way that alternatives don’t.

Four components. Most B2B businesses struggle with all of them.

Three uncomfortable tests worth running right now

It’s planning season, so we’re doing a lot of this work. But it doesn’t mean downing tools or your LinkedIn feed going quiet. You can run and gun.

Here are three ideas, hand-selected from real life, Google, and Claude, to test your positioning, gather useful data, and pivot if needed.

1. Run the uncomfortable sentence test. Take whatever you’re currently saying about what you do and ask one question: does this describe a capability, or does it name a problem my customer is actually feeling? If it’s right, it should make you feel a little uncomfortable. An example: “Is your AI environment secure? Most businesses aren’t ready.”

2. Ask the people who didn’t convert. High engagement with no meetings is a specific signal: the market recognises your category but doesn’t feel the urgency. Five honest messages to five warm contacts will give you some of the most valuable data you can imagine.

A possible opening line: “I’m doing a bit of a listening tour. We’ve been putting stuff out there, and I want to make sure we’re actually talking about the right problems. You seem like someone who’d give me a straight answer.”

3. Don’t wait for a rebrand. Positioning work doesn’t require a pause. I recently did this for a client mid-campaign. The output was twelve slides and a few focused weeks. It suddenly became simple to stack-rank activities because they’re now expressions of an overall positioning and strategy.

You can run all three of these tests yourself, and you should. But if the exercise surfaces something uncomfortable, and it usually does, that’s the moment a good strategist earns their keep. Done well, this kind of work takes days or weeks rather than months. It costs a fraction of what you’re currently spending on campaigns that aren’t converting at the rate they should.

The upstream fix is almost always cheaper than the downstream symptom.

Just do it

Nike has been worth over $100 billion. Dimension Six would have been a footnote.

The difference wasn’t the product. It was the clarity of what the brand stood for, who it was for, and why it mattered. That clarity is available to any B2B business willing to do the upstream work, regardless of budget, headcount, or how long the problem has been sitting there.

If you’re in planning season and B2B brand positioning strategy is on the agenda, that’s a conversation worth having. Take a look at our strategy work to see how we approach it, or get in touch directly and let’s set something up.

And if you’re thinking about how AI fits into your marketing planning this season, this conversation with Laura Burkhauser is worth your time.

Frequently asked questions

What is B2B brand positioning?

B2B brand positioning is the strategic process of defining who your business is for, what problem you solve, and why a buyer should choose you over the alternatives. It sits upstream of all marketing and messaging decisions, and when it’s unclear, everything built on top of it underperforms.

Why does B2B marketing messaging fail?

B2B messaging most commonly fails because the positioning underneath it is unclear. Businesses describe their capabilities rather than the problems their customers are actually feeling. The result is messaging that makes sense internally but lands flat in the market.

How do you build a positioning strategy for a B2B company?

Start with the problem your best customers were trying to solve when they found you. Build your positioning around that, not around your capabilities or your internal language. April Dunford’s Obviously Awesome is the clearest framework for this process.

What should B2B marketers focus on during planning season?

Use planning season to answer the upstream questions before jumping to channels and campaigns. Run the uncomfortable sentence test, ask the people who didn’t convert, and fix the positioning before you build the plan. The upstream fix is almost always cheaper than the downstream symptom.

If you know your business is all steak and needs some sizzle….. we’d love to hear from you.

Dave Hayward

Dave Hayward

Founder Europa Creative Partners
Dave, the founder of Europa Creative Partners, has over twenty years of experience in sales and marketing. He reserves the right to shoehorn in his interests such as astronomy and sport into our company blog.
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