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We've reviewed 100+ pre-launch landing pages. The same 5 positioning mistakes keep showing up.

We've reviewed 100+ pre-launch landing pages over the last few months — running positioning pressure-tests for founders before they ship outbound. After that volume, the same five mistakes keep showing up regardless of category. SaaS, marketplaces, consumer apps, B2B tools. Same five problems.

If you're about to launch or just launched, worth checking your landing against these.

"Simpler than [incumbent]" is the weakest possible wedge
We see this constantly. "Simpler than HubSpot." "Simpler than Notion." "Simpler than Slack." The pitch is intuitive but structurally fragile because:

Incumbents can ship a lite tier overnight
"Simpler" isn't a switching reason (nobody migrates because the new tool is cleaner)
The category's free tier already beats most "simpler" offerings on features
If your wedge is "simpler," you don't have a wedge yet. You have a feature gap that incumbents tolerate because their actual buyers are different from yours.

ICP described as a workflow, not an identity
"Tool for solo salespeople." "App for content creators." "Software for founders." These aren't ICPs — they're descriptions of activities. Solo salespeople are real estate agents who use Follow Up Boss, insurance agents who use industry CRMs, freelancers who use spreadsheets, or founders who use HubSpot free. They identify by industry, not by "solo salesperson."

Your ICP is who they introduce themselves as at a dinner party. If you can't name that, you're targeting an activity, not a buyer.

Hero copy explains what the product IS, not what the buyer GETS
"AI-powered platform that helps teams collaborate on documents in real-time." Reader thinks: cool, why do I care.

Buyer is scanning for outcome, not technology. "Stop losing two hours every week reconciling document versions" beats the AI-powered platform line every time. Lead with the outcome the buyer recognizes, not the mechanism they don't care about.

Pricing that doesn't tell you who the buyer is
A landing page should let a stranger guess your ICP from pricing alone. $9/mo = indie hackers, solo founders. $49-99/mo = small business owners. $299+/mo = SMB ops/marketing/sales leaders. $1K+/mo = mid-market.

If your pricing is "$9/mo solo, $19/mo team, $99/mo agency" — three different ICPs are at play and your messaging is fighting itself. Pick one tier as the hero, deprioritize the others until you've won the first.

No buried wedge surfaced
This is the deepest one. Most pre-launch founders are sitting on a genuine wedge that's hidden in their own context — their previous job, the specific market they came from, the customer segment they uniquely understand. They lead with the generic version of the product instead.

A founder building a stock portfolio tracker. Generic positioning: "portfolio tracker for long-term investors." Buried wedge that came from their own background: "portfolio tracker for non-US investors holding US stocks" — currency conversion, tax treaty complexity, dividend withholding tracking. Real underserved niche the founder personally understood. Much sharper.

A founder building a housing marketplace across 16 cities at launch. Generic: "international housing platform with local experts." Buried wedge: "for expats in 2 specific neighborhoods they knew personally." Always smaller, always sharper, always defensible.

The reframe: your background IS your wedge. The thing you uniquely know that others don't. Most founders lead with the generic positioning and bury the actual differentiation in "about us."

We're an AI strategy copilot — HiveMind (https://hivemind.myosin.xyz/, code HivemindIH123). Currently in closed beta, code gets you access. Built specifically because ChatGPT gives sycophantic positioning answers and real positioning needs contrarian pressure-test. The framework above is the kind of pattern recognition the tool surfaces.

If you want a free positioning pressure-test on your landing page, drop the link below. We'll go through it with these patterns in mind. Honest read, not marketing affirmation.

Curious which of the 5 you've personally seen most in other people's products. Or which one you're guilty of in your own landing.

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on June 4, 2026
Trending on Indie Hackers
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