S13 Sample · Positioning brief

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Positioning is a decision, not a tagline.

A positioning brief is the document a team agrees on before a single ad runs. The Cloudwrit brief below is fictional but representative - the shape and discipline are what we ship on a positioning sprint.

Client (fictional): Cloudwrit Engagement: 3-week sprint Last updated: 2026-04-19

1. Context

Cloudwrit is a Seed-plus company with $1.4M ARR, 28 paying customers, and a Series A round targeted for Q4 2026. The product is an AI-assisted legal workflow platform: contract review, due diligence, NDA handling. Customers are mid-market general counsels.

The founding team built the product around a contrarian bet: most legal AI tools are built for solo practitioners; Cloudwrit is built for in-house legal teams with 3 to 15 people. The product reflects that choice throughout (RBAC, team routing, collaborative review, audit trails).

Competitors include Harvey (general legal AI, lawyer-first), Spellbook (contract review, transactional), Ironclad (CLM suite), and internal GPT tools that GCs are cobbling together. None of them is positioned against in-house teams specifically.

Why this brief now

Three signals prompted the sprint:

  1. Win-rate on demoed deals is 28%. Customers who win us say "I needed a team tool, not a lawyer tool." Customers who lose us say "it didn't feel different from the others."
  2. Outbound is generic: "AI for lawyers" is the current hook. It attracts everyone from solo practitioners to BigLaw partners. Reply rates are fine (5.2%) but sales cycle is 94 days.
  3. The Series A story is not crisp yet. Investors ask "who is this for specifically?" and the answer keeps shifting.

2. ICP

We interviewed 14 buyers (9 existing customers, 5 lost deals, 2 churned). The ICP that emerged, ranked:

Primary ICP: "Buying GC"

RoleGeneral Counsel or VP Legal
Company stageSeries B to pre-IPO; 200 to 2,000 employees
Legal team size4 to 15 including paralegals and legal ops
TriggerContract volume exceeded the team's capacity; external counsel bill is a visible line item
Budget$40k to $180k annual, often carved from outside counsel spend
Decision cycle60 to 90 days with procurement; security review is the long pole
Evaluation criteriaTeam ergonomics, audit trail, integration with DocuSign + CLM, privilege preservation, SOC 2
Objection pattern"We already have [incumbent CLM]" - defeated by showing Cloudwrit is complementary, not replacement

Secondary ICP: "Scaling Legal Ops"

RoleHead of Legal Operations or Senior Legal Ops Manager
Company stageSeries C to pre-IPO; 500 to 3,000 employees
TriggerBoard or CFO asked for legal-efficiency metrics; reports are manual
Evaluation criteriaReporting, metric dashboards, workflow configurability, change-management support

Explicit non-ICPs (do not sell to these)

  • Solo practitioners and boutique firms. Price point wrong, team features unused.
  • AmLaw 100 firms. Procurement and IT cycles are 9+ months. Not ready for a Seed-plus company to chase.
  • Startups pre-Series B. No in-house legal function yet. Outbound to them wastes cycles.
  • Insurance legal teams. Different workflow, regulatory constraints we do not support.

3. Unique value proposition

The short version, the one-liner, the expanded paragraph, and the evidence.

"The AI-assisted legal platform built for in-house teams, not solo lawyers."

Expanded UVP

Cloudwrit is the only AI legal platform designed around the realities of an in-house legal team: 4 to 15 people handling hundreds of contracts a quarter, routing work between attorneys and paralegals, preserving privilege across a matrix org, and reporting up to a CFO who wants to see efficiency numbers.

Where tools like Harvey and Spellbook optimize for a single lawyer reviewing a single document, Cloudwrit optimizes for the team: assignment, handoff, audit trail, collaborative redline, and cross-matter search. That matters because the in-house GC's job is not to be a better individual reviewer. It is to run a small legal factory well.

Evidence (the things we point to when defending the UVP)

  • Customer quote: "I evaluated five tools. Three were for lawyers, one was a CLM with AI bolted on, and one was Cloudwrit. Cloudwrit was the only one where I could imagine my whole team using it on day one." (Head of Legal, fintech, $80k ACV)
  • Product fact: Native team features are in the core workflow (assignment, approvals, threaded review), not in an admin section.
  • Product fact: Privilege preservation is handled per-matter, not per-user, matching how in-house legal actually works.
  • Adoption metric: 87% of active users in customer accounts are non-lawyers (paralegals, legal ops, in-house counsel). Solo-practitioner-first products bottom out around 20% non-lawyer usage.

4. Messaging hierarchy

One top-level narrative, three supporting pillars, proof points under each. Every piece of marketing maps to one of these.

Top-level narrative

"In-house legal teams are not small law firms. They need their own tool."

Pillar 1: Built for teams, not soloists

  • Native assignment, handoff, and approval workflows
  • Threaded review across attorneys and paralegals
  • Matter-level privilege controls, not per-user
  • Team dashboards and cycle-time metrics

Pillar 2: Fits the stack you already have

  • DocuSign, Ironclad, LinkSquares, Salesforce integrations
  • Complementary to CLM suites, not a replacement
  • Google Drive and Microsoft 365 native
  • Zapier and API-first for long-tail

Pillar 3: Trust that passes procurement

  • SOC 2 Type II certified
  • BAA available for healthcare buyers
  • Data residency options (US, EU)
  • Full audit trail with tamper-evident logging
  • Human review is never optional for high-stakes workflows

5. Anti-messaging (what we do not say)

Anti-messaging is how we keep the positioning crisp. Every item here was tested in messaging interviews and rejected for reasons the team is aligned on.

We do not say Why not
"AI lawyer" Threatens legal buyers, invites unauthorized-practice concerns, and mismatches the actual product (team workflow, not lawyer replacement).
"Replace your outside counsel" False. The product reduces outside counsel spend, it does not replace it. The inflated claim destroys credibility in year-two expansion conversations.
"10x your productivity" Numeric exaggeration without source. Procurement and savvy GCs discount instantly. We cite cycle-time deltas with named customers instead.
"For all legal work" We do contracts, NDAs, and due diligence well. Litigation and IP prosecution are out of scope. Pretending otherwise creates bad fits.
"Revolutionary" / "game-changing" / "paradigm shift" Pattern-match to AI-hype; buyers filter these out. Every case we looked at showed negative signal from this language.
"For lawyers by lawyers" True of incumbents; positions us with them. We are for lawyers, paralegals, and legal ops together.

6. Competitive positioning snapshot

Competitor Their wedge Where we beat them Where they beat us
Harvey Premium AI for AmLaw, partner-level work In-house team workflow, price, integrations with mid-market CLMs Brand with AmLaw, research depth, partner-level tooling
Spellbook Contract redlining inside Word Team features, audit trail, platform breadth (DD, NDAs, not just redline) Word-native flow for teams already deep in Word workflows
Ironclad Enterprise CLM, contract lifecycle management Price, time-to-value, AI review depth on the documents themselves CLM scope, workflow builder, enterprise procurement trust
Internal GPT Free and flexible Audit trail, privilege, integrations, team routing, SOC 2 Zero additional cost for the software itself

7. Rollout plan

What changes on Monday, next month, next quarter.

Timeline What ships Owner
Week 1 Website hero + nav + pricing copy rewritten to the new UVP VP Marketing
Week 2 Sales deck v3; one-pager; objection handling cards for the non-ICPs Head of Sales
Week 3-4 Outbound sequences rewritten. New subject lines A/B tested. SDR lead
Month 2 Content calendar aligned to pillars. First pillar page ("Why in-house legal needs its own stack") ships. Content lead
Month 3 Series A deck reflects positioning. Investor updates use the messaging hierarchy. CEO

8. Success criteria

We will know the positioning is working when:

  • Win rate on demoed deals in the primary ICP moves from 28% to 40%+ within 6 months.
  • Reply rate on cold outbound rises from 5.2% to 8%+.
  • Sales cycle for the primary ICP compresses from 94 days to under 75 days.
  • Non-ICP inbound leads drop (measured by SDR disqualification rate).
  • The founders can pass the "10-second pitch" test with a new investor without reaching for notes.

We will know the positioning is not working if any of the above metrics move backwards two quarters in a row. In that case, we revisit ICP, not just messaging.

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