The Positioning Passport takes your background, specialism and ambition and distils them into a sharp professional statement you can use everywhere — LinkedIn, CV, cover letters, interviews.
Most senior professionals describe themselves the way their CV describes them — a chronological list of roles and responsibilities that answers "what have you done?" rather than "who are you for and what do you uniquely solve?" The result is a profile that's comprehensive but not compelling, and a personal pitch that changes every time someone asks.
At Director level and above, positioning is a competitive weapon. The professionals who land the best roles at speed are almost always the ones who've invested in clarity.— who can articulate in a sentence what they stand for, who they serve, and why they're the right choice.
The Positioning Passport generates that statement for you. Based on your seniority, specialism, target sector and key proof points, it produces a positioning statement sharp enough to use verbatim.
Describe your core function, the types of problems you solve, and the environments where you do your best work.
Enter two or three headline achievements that demonstrate your impact at the level you're targeting.
Tell the tool what sector, seniority level and type of organisation you're aiming for next.
Receive a master positioning statement plus context-specific variants for LinkedIn, CV, cover letters and verbal introduction.
A 220-character headline optimised for LinkedIn search and designed to stop a recruiter scrolling.
A 3–4 sentence CV profile that leads with your positioning and grounds it in your strongest proof points.
A first paragraph for outreach messages and cover letters that frames why you're approaching this specific organisation.
A structured 90-second verbal introduction for "tell me about yourself" — confident, specific and memorable.
When a senior professional gets passed over for a role they were objectively qualified for, positioning is almost always the reason. Not skills. Not experience. Positioning. The hiring manager looked at two strong candidates and one felt specific, confident and right for the role — while the other felt general, safe and interchangeable.
Specificity wins. A "technology transformation leader who specialises in cloud migration for regulated financial services" will consistently outperform a "senior technology leader with experience across multiple sectors" in the hiring process. The first candidate tells a story. The second makes the hiring manager do the work of figuring out the story themselves.