It is the tenth discussion in a month about how to describe the organization to a donor. The proposal is due in three days.
A senior executive asks:
“So what exactly should we tell partners we are? We need to align on our value proposition.”
Silence.
One person says, “We build capacity.”
Another adds, “We are really a platform.”
A third insists, “No, we are an agent of change.”
Someone suggests, “Maybe we say movement.”
No one is wrong. But the organization has a problem.
Not a communications problem. A positioning problem.
Across sectors, clarity matters. Research summarized in the Marq (formerly Lucidpress) State of Brand Consistency reports indicates organizations themselves associate consistent brand presentation with improved performance and revenue outcomes. Consistency correlates with trust and effectiveness.
https://marq.com/resources/state-of-brand-consistency
So why do organizations still struggle to define a stable value proposition? Four recurring dynamics usually explain it.
1. The image alignment dilemma
The tension between who we are and who we want to be. Organizations often carry two narratives.
The first is reality: what they demonstrably do today.
The second is aspiration: what they hope to become.
Trouble begins when aspiration replaces reality instead of guiding it.
Strong brands are built through coherence and continuity over time, not by changing identity repeatedly. Kevin Lane Keller’s widely used framework emphasizes evaluating brand strength through clarity and consistency from the audience perspective.
https://hbr.org/2000/01/the-brand-report-card
The practical lesson: a value proposition must begin with what is true today, and extend toward what is becoming true, not skip the middle.
2. Reactive positioning
Responding to external cues instead of defining direction. Organizations frequently adjust their identity to match market vocabulary.
One year: platform.
Next year: catalyst.
Soon after: hub or movement.
Externally this reads as uncertainty, not responsiveness.
IBM’s turnaround in the 1990s is often studied because the repositioning followed structural change, not just messaging. The company recorded an annual loss of about US$8.1 billion in 1992 and then reorganized its strategy around services and integrated solutions under new leadership.
https://hbr.org/2000/07/waking-up-ibm-how-a-gang-of-unlikely-rebels-transformed-big-blue
The sequence mattered: operational change first, narrative second. Listening to the market is essential. Rewriting identity every time the market shifts is destabilizing.
3. The internal alignment challenge
Different teams describing different organizations. Positioning problems usually begin inside the organization.
Leadership speaks in transformation language.
Operational teams speak in delivery language.
Fundraising speaks in aspirational language.
Regional teams adapt pragmatically.
Each version is logical locally, but collectively they fragment trust.
Brand frameworks consistently stress that audiences experience one organization, not multiple internal interpretations. Without a single defensible description, stakeholders repeatedly seek clarification instead of committing.
https://hbr.org/2000/01/the-brand-report-card
Alignment is less about inspiration and more about agreement on a sentence everyone will stand behind.
4. Claims moving faster than proof
When language outruns evidence.
Many positioning debates attempt to solve an evidence problem with wording.
If the causal chain from activity to outcome is unclear, language remains unstable.
If attribution is uncertain, messaging becomes contested.
Strategic case studies show that organizations falter when strategic reality and internal understanding diverge. Nokia, which once held over 40 percent global handset market share, ultimately sold its phone business to Microsoft in 2013 after failing to align strategy with market shifts.
https://knowledge.insead.edu/strategy/strategic-decisions-caused-nokias-failure
The lesson is not about slogans. It is about alignment between strategy, evidence, and communication.
Avoiding the workaround cycle
Organizations often respond with workshops, taglines, or rewrites. These help temporarily but rarely solve the issue.
A durable value proposition rests on three disciplines:
- Define what you can defend today
- State where you are heading next
- Build evidence that connects the two
Clarity is not a wording exercise. It is an agreement about what the organization is willing to stand behind — consistently and over time.