How to Position Your B2B Product for Outbound (Before You Send a Single Email)
Wrong positioning kills outbound before it starts. Here's how repositioning EvaWarm from a warmup tool to a deliverability consultant took us from zero to ₹1L MRR — and what it means for your outbound strategy.
How the wrong positioning killed our outbound for months
When I built an email warmup product under my previous business, I thought I understood the buyer problem clearly. People doing cold email had domain reputation issues. Poor deliverability meant emails going to spam. The solution was warmup. So the positioning was obvious: "Use our warmup to improve your open rates."
We built the product. We launched outbound. We ran webinars. We spoke to prospects. Nothing resonated. Not because the product was bad — the product worked. Not because the market was wrong — the problem was real. But because the positioning was built around the tool, not the outcome.
So I ran free webinars and spoke directly with prospects. I stopped pitching and started listening. What I heard changed everything.
Email warmup solution — another tool to manage
Email deliverability consultant — accountable for outcomes
We charged for warmup — the commodity. We included one hour per week of advisory — the differentiation — for free. We led with education, not features. The advisory calls became our retention engine. Customers stayed because they got outcomes, not because they had access to software.
The product did not change. The positioning did. And that single repositioning was worth more than every feature we could have built.
Why positioning is the first step in outbound — not the last
Most founders treat positioning as a marketing exercise — something you do after the product is built, when you are thinking about the website and the pitch deck. This is backwards.
Positioning determines everything that comes after it — your ICP, your messaging, your outreach sequences, your objection handling, your pricing. Getting positioning wrong means every subsequent investment in outbound is undermined by the foundation.
Struggling to get replies despite good outreach volume?
The problem is almost always positioning — not the sequence. We help B2B teams fix the foundation before scaling outbound.The four questions that define your positioning
Who is this for — specifically?
Not "B2B companies." The most powerful positioning is built for a specific person in a specific situation. Specificity narrows your apparent market but dramatically increases resonance.
What problem are you actually solving?
Not the technical problem — the felt problem. My warmup product solved poor sender reputation technically. But the felt problem was anxiety about whether outbound would even work. The felt problem is always more emotional and more urgent.
Why now — what makes this urgent?
Build urgency into your positioning by making the cost of the current state concrete and specific. What is the prospect losing every week they do not solve this?
Why you — what makes your approach different?
Find the one thing about your approach that genuinely cannot be replicated by your nearest competitor and make it the centre of your positioning. One thing. Not five.
The catchall example — positioning as a growth lever
I worked with a company in the email verification space. Crowded category. Similar pricing. Everyone claiming high accuracy. No differentiation.
The market reality: around 40 percent of domains use catchall servers — meaning standard verification tools return "catchall" as the result, giving buyers zero decision clarity. This company had built something nobody else offered: catchall verification that returned either "catchall valid" or "catchall invalid."
How to build positioning for outbound specifically
The positioning framework for cold outreach — five lines, each with a job:
Line 1 — The specific observation
Something true about their situation that signals you understand them. Not a compliment. A real observation that earns attention.
Line 2 — The felt problem
The thing they are actually experiencing, named precisely. Not the technical problem — the one that keeps them up at night.
Line 3 — Your differentiated approach
Not what you do — how you do it differently. The one thing your nearest competitor cannot say.
Line 4 — The proof point
One specific result from a similar company. Specific beats superlative. Numbers beat adjectives.
Line 5 — The low friction question
An invitation to engage, not a request for time. Make it easy to say yes without committing to a call.
Key takeaways
- Positioning is the first step in outbound — not a marketing exercise done after the product is built.
- Position against the felt problem, not the technical problem.
- Build positioning around four questions: who specifically, what felt problem, why now, why you.
- Wrong positioning undermines every other investment in outbound infrastructure and execution.
- One clear repositioning can do more for growth than months of feature development.