Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
The Category Trap
When organisations try to outgrow their old category, the market rarely follows a new logo or a louder campaign. Buyers default to familiar comparison sets because their mental shortcuts haven’t been retrained by proof and story. The result is predictable: you get attention, then you get measured on yesterday’s checklist. One high‑profile case is instructive here. Entrepreneur reports that usage and engagement on X fell by roughly 30% between 2023 and 2024 after the Twitter-to-X rebrand, suggesting that identity changes alone don’t rewrite perception.
Compete On Meaning
Escaping the old frame isn’t about denying the category; it’s about rendering it less relevant. That requires defining a present, costly customer problem that only you can resolve, then letting everything—offer design, price architecture, success metrics—line up behind that problem. Put simply, you’re no longer selling what you make; you’re helping buyers avoid risks and realise gains they hadn’t been measuring.
In our experience with leadership teams at this stage, the drag rarely sits in marketing; it sits in meaning, proof, and price. If those three aren’t coherent, the category drags you back, however elegant the creative.
Proof Before Promotion
Before asking the market to reframe you, put evidence where buyers look first. Make the claims testable and the outcomes hard to ignore:
- Pilot with lighthouse customers tied to one measurable outcome they already track.
- Co-sign with partners who carry credibility in the new frame, not just the old channel map.
- Publish a pricing signal that prioritises the outcome you want to anchor, not feature depth.
- Retire legacy discounts and bundles that whisper the old story.
Align The Story
Perception shifts when your people make different choices in the open. That means equipping teams with simple language and reinforcing it through management systems:
- One sentence any leader can repeat that names the new problem and your unique role.
- Three proof points that back the claim—one data, one customer, one partner.
- Manager routines that reward decisions aligned to the new frame, not historical coverage.
- Frontline tools and short stories that travel across regions without translation debates.
A Quiet Test Of Fit
The real signal you’ve escaped the category isn’t a campaign spike; it’s quieter. Sales conversations stop opening with feature gaps. Price realisation improves on the offers tied to the new problem. Talent retells the story unprompted. If those signs show up, you’re reframing, not just refreshing—and that creates room to set terms of comparison rather than accept them. Over time, organisations that compete on meaning earn the right to shape categories, not simply fit inside them.
Sources: