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    About

    Provides Jobs-to-be-Done and psychographic research frameworks for brand identity work. Auto-activates during brand positioning, voice development, messaging, and strategy phases...

    SKILL.md

    JTBD & Psychographic Research Frameworks

    Quick reference for Jobs-to-be-Done and psychographic frameworks that inform brand strategy. This skill auto-activates during brand work to ensure audience insights inform every phase.

    "95% of purchasing decisions are made in the subconscious mind." — Gerald Zaltman, Harvard


    The Three Job Types

    Every "job" customers hire a product for has three dimensions:

    Dimension Question Example
    Functional What task are they accomplishing? "Watch content without ads"
    Emotional How do they want to FEEL? "Feel relaxed, avoid boredom"
    Social How do they want to be SEEN? "Recommend shows, feel in-the-know"

    Job Statement Format: "When [situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [outcome]."


    The Four Forces of Progress (Bob Moesta)

    Why customers switch (or don't):

            PROMOTING FORCES
       ┌────────────────────────────┐
       │   PUSH          PULL       │
       │   (Struggles)   (Attraction)│
       ├────────────────────────────┤
       │   HABIT         ANXIETY    │
       │   (Comfort)     (Fear)     │
       └────────────────────────────┘
            BLOCKING FORCES
    

    The Formula: If Push + Pull > Anxiety + Habit, they switch.

    Force Key Question
    PUSH "What frustrates you about your current solution?"
    PULL "What excites you about this alternative?"
    ANXIETY "What worries you about switching?"
    HABIT "What would you miss about your current approach?"

    Limbic Types (Hans-Georg Hausel)

    Three emotional systems drive behavior:

    System Driven By Brand Response
    Stimulance Novelty, fun, exploration Scarcity, newness
    Dominance Status, control, power Exclusivity, prestige
    Balance Security, stability Social proof, familiarity

    Seven Types: Traditionalist, Harmonizer, Open Connoisseur, Hedonist, Adventurer, Performer, Disciplined


    VALS Segments

    Segments by motivation + resources:

    Motivation High Resources Low Resources
    Ideals (knowledge) Thinkers Believers
    Achievement (success) Achievers Strivers
    Self-Expression (variety) Experiencers Makers

    Plus: Innovators (any motivation, high resources) and Survivors (security-focused, low resources)


    HBR Emotional Motivators

    Key drivers of customer value:

    • "Helps me be creative"
    • "Feel revived and refreshed"
    • "Sense of belonging"
    • "Stand out from the crowd"
    • "Feel secure"
    • "Succeed in life"
    • "Be the person I want to be"

    Key Finding: Emotionally connected customers have 306% higher lifetime value.


    Research-to-Strategy Bridge

    How audience insights inform brand decisions:

    Research Finding Informs
    Primary JTBD Brand Promise
    Push Forces Problem Messaging
    Pull Forces Benefit Messaging
    Anxiety Forces Trust Signals
    Emotional Jobs Emotional Territory
    Social Jobs Brand Personality
    Core Values Brand Values
    Limbic Type Visual & Tonal Direction

    When to Apply These Frameworks

    During Positioning

    • Use Four Forces to identify switching dynamics
    • Map emotional territory based on Jobs

    During Voice Development

    • Match tone to Limbic profile
    • Reflect audience's actual language

    During Messaging

    • Address Push forces in problem messaging
    • Highlight Pull forces in benefits
    • Counter Anxiety forces with proof

    During Visual Direction

    • Align aesthetic with Limbic type
    • Reflect social jobs in imagery

    Templates

    See reference/templates.md for:

    • Forces of Progress Canvas
    • Job Story Template
    • Psychographic Profile Summary
    • Research-to-Strategy Bridge

    Deep Methodology

    For comprehensive JTBD interview techniques, detailed framework application, and full output structure, the brand-audience-researcher agent contains 500+ lines of expert methodology.


    Key Principles

    1. Emotional > Functional: Emotional jobs often drive decisions more than functional ones
    2. All Three Dimensions: Never skip emotional and social jobs
    3. Capture the Forces: Understanding push/pull/anxiety/habit is essential for positioning
    4. Use Their Language: Capture actual words people use — gold for brand voice
    5. Be the Only: "Be THE ONLY, not the best." — Marty Neumeier
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