Look, I don’t care if you call it a client avatar, an ideal client profile (ICP), or a laser-focused positioning statement (LFPS). The name doesn’t matter. What matters is that you’re clear about who you’re trying to help - and how.
I get it. Niching down feels scary. Like you’re closing doors. Like you’re cutting yourself off from opportunity.
But it’s not a trap. It’s not a marriage. It’s a marketing tool.
You’re not committing for life - you’re picking a place to start. Something to aim with. Something to test.
When was the last time you searched LinkedIn for buyers?
What were your search terms? “Looking for fractional CTO”? “CEO”?
How’d that work out?
Positioning lets you focus, speak directly to real problems, and actually stand out.
Positioning isn’t about limiting yourself. It’s about focus. It’s a filter that makes everything else easier:
But here’s the real magic: it triggers what Jonathan Stark calls “rolodex moments.”
At Monday’s open coffee, I asked who knew someone in the horse training business. Every hand shot up. Even if they didn’t know a trainer directly, they knew someone who did.
That’s the power of clear positioning. It makes it dead easy for people to refer you.
Start by working through these questions:
Now you’ve got a list. Great. But how do you pick?
You don’t have to love it. You just have to like it enough to get curious and have a few conversations.
If it’s something you’re curious about and you can get conversations, that’s a great starting point.
Not getting any bites? Switch it up - this isn’t a prescription. You’re just looking for signal, not perfection.
If you’re running more than one experiment, be aware: it’s a pain. Splitting your focus makes everything harder. I recommend picking one at a time if you want real momentum (and don’t want to lose your mind).
But if you do start to feel traction - even a little - stick with it for a while. These things take time. If you switch too soon, you’re always starting over. Let it play out. If it feels like it’s going nowhere, move on.
Treat it like an experiment:
Then ask everyone you’ve worked with:
“Do you know anybody in [target industry]?”
Be specific when asking - trigger that Rolodex moment. You’re not asking to sell to them - just for an introduction. Use networking to extend your network into a space, not just to “stay top of mind.”
Now go do a listening tour. Talk to people in the spaces you’re exploring. Your goal is conversations, not leads.
Don’t be afraid to pick a niche. It’s a marketing filter, not a life sentence. Targeting doesn’t exclude inbound work from outside the niche - it just gives you traction.
You’re trying to trigger:
“Oh, I know someone who does that.”
Not:
“I think I vaguely remember what you do.”
Now, let’s talk about your positioning statement. It’s not a tagline - it’s a tool for you. It guides everything: your content, your networking, where you show up.
Let’s say instead of saying:
“I’m a fractional CTO”
You start with:
“I help early-stage SaaS companies in the travel industry streamline their infrastructure and prepare for rapid scaling.”
It’s a start. But it’s soggy. After some time in the market, you might sharpen it to:
“I help travel tech startups reduce infrastructure costs by 30% within 90 days of rapid scaling.”
That’s specific. Measurable. Easier to refer.
But here’s the key: tailor how you say it based on who you’re talking to. Not everyone knows what “infrastructure” means.
Same offer. Different words.
You don’t have to get it perfect. You just need something clear enough for someone else to remember. And repeat.
Start soggy. Refine as you go. You’re testing. Not branding.
Ready to try a different audience? That’s fine. You’re not stuck with it. It’s for now, not forever.
Positioning is how you focus your energy where it’ll matter most. It’s a wedge. A filter. A way to make everything else simpler.
Not a prison sentence. Just a tool.
Want help sorting through it? I’m not a positioning expert. But I can help you figure out why it matters, what to watch for, and what to do next - and I’m happy to point you toward folks who go deeper.
Here’s an idea:
Visit the web version of this article.
Scroll to the bottom and hit the copy button.
Now open your favorite LLM tool - Claude, ChatGPT, whatever - and give it this prompt:
ok, so here’s an article from a coach for fractionals. can we apply this to me and my fractional business? ask me questions and help me through this.
Paste the article in.
Add your resume if you want. Or the experience section from LinkedIn. Or nothing.
Then work the problem.
Talk with your chat companion about things you’ve done, projects you liked, hobbies, industries you read about but haven’t worked in - whatever.
See what happens.
If you’re spinning your wheels and need traction, book a call and we’ll get you unstuck.
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