Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/demand-leadershipActivate when: 'we have a strong product but keep losing on price', 'customers treat us like a commodity', 'how do we stop being compared to competitors', 'why aren't customers coming to us before they write the RFP', 'we want to define the category before someone else does'. Do NOT activate when: the customer's problem definition is fixed by regulation or physical constraint (e.g., fuel procurement); or the user is pre-product with no customer intelligence yet.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/demand-leadershipThe highest-value market position is not to fulfill demand but to define it — to become the entity whose framing of the problem the customer adopts as their own. Three stages: 1 — Insight Generation ("this vendor understands my problem better than I do") → 2 — Value Reconstruction ("this vendor has redefined how I think about it") → 3 — Scene Creation ("I go to this vendor before I decide, not after").
Stop-rule: Stage 3 = customer asks your opinion before deciding. Cross-skill: use after customer-relationship-ladder + jobs-to-be-done; alongside north-star-metric; instead of first-principles for positioning tasks.
Use when: customers evaluate on price/features; sales driven by customer-initiated RFPs; strong product losing to weaker competitors with stronger "thought leadership"; no distinctive problem framing competitors don't share; new market entry or post-PMF commoditization risk.
Do NOT use when: commodity markets with regulation-fixed problem definitions; pre-Stage-1 companies with no customer intelligence; consumer mass markets (use social-proof + anchoring first).
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Step 1 — Diagnose: Stage 1 if customers contact you with a defined need and you win within their existing evaluation framework. Stage 2 if customers adopt your vocabulary and report thinking differently. Stage 3 if customers share in-progress decisions before they are formalized.
Step 2 — Stage-up Move: 1→2: Find the gap between stated and latent demand; build a falsifiable reframe ("You've been thinking about this as [their frame]. The actual driver is [your frame]."). If competitors can adopt your framing without cost, it is not a reframe. 2→3: Embed your product as the default starting context in one customer workflow — a tool they open first, not a tool they reference.
Step 3 — Measure: Track customer behavior, not content metrics. 1→2 signal: customers use your terminology in their own internal documents. 2→3 signal: customers contact you before defining the problem. Stage 3 sustained: NRR >120% in top accounts.
CURRENT STAGE: [ 1 — Insight Generation ] [ 2 — Value Reconstruction ] [ 3 — Scene Creation ]
Evidence: 1._______________ 2._______________
THE GAP — stated want: _______________ | actual driver: _______________ | gap 1–5: ___
STAGE-UP MOVE — target: ___ | action (60 days): _______________ | success indicator: _______________ | owner: ___ due: ___
SCENE (2→3) — target workflow: _______________ | current role: _______________ | embed move: _______________
STOP-RULE: "When do customers first contact us?" RFP stage → Stage 1. Problem-definition → Stage 2. Pre-problem → Stage 3.
→ Method in Action: McKinsey's Construction of the Trusted Advisor Position (1930s–1960s)
B2B SaaS: 1→2: Reframe "workflow automation" → "decision infrastructure." 2→3: Build a decision-tracking tool customers open before any major decision. Financial Services: 1→2: Reframe investment performance → portfolio construction philosophy. 2→3: Produce a proprietary risk framework clients use in investment committee presentations. Industrial/Deep Tech: 1→2: Reframe "component supplier" → "system integrator with domain expertise." 2→3: Embed your engineering team at the requirements stage, not procurement. → Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "We publish a monthly newsletter — thought leadership." | Stage 2 = customers cite your framing in their own strategic documents, not subscribe to yours. |
| [D] "We've redefined our category in marketing materials." | A category redefinition in your own copy is a claim. Stage 2 requires the customer to adopt the frame. |
| [D] "We won a deal because the customer chose us for expertise." | Winning within the customer's existing evaluation framework is Stage 1. |
| [D] "We have a Customer Advisory Board." | CABs are Stage 1 feedback loops. Stage 3 inverts it — you give input into their decisions. |
| [D] "Customers say we're a strategic partner." | Self-reported partnership is Stage 2 at best. Stage 3 is behavioral: contact before deciding. |
| [D] "We're the category leader by market share." | Market share is a lagging indicator. A large Stage 1 player is not a demand leader. |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.