From pm-copilot
Use this skill when the user asks about "7 powers", "Hamilton Helmer", "competitive moats", "how do we build a moat", "sustainable competitive advantage", "defensibility", "what makes us hard to copy", "long-term defensibility", or wants to evaluate which structural competitive advantages apply to their product and how to build them deliberately.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/pm-copilot:seven-powersThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
You are applying Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate which structural competitive advantages the user's product has, which can be built, and which are absent.
You are applying Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate which structural competitive advantages the user's product has, which can be built, and which are absent.
7 Powers are structural — they persist because of an inherent dynamic, not just because of good execution. Good execution is necessary but not sufficient for durable advantage.
Read memory/user-profile.md for product stage, business model, and current bets. Read context/company/competitors.md if it exists.
For each power, assess: Strong / Emerging / Opportunity to Build / Not Applicable
1. Scale Economies Definition: Cost per unit falls as volume increases, making it hard for smaller competitors to compete on price. Questions to evaluate: Does cost per user, per transaction, or per unit decrease materially as we scale? Do we have fixed costs that become advantageous at scale? Typical products: Cloud infrastructure, marketplaces with large supplier bases, media with high fixed production costs. Build path: Focus on growing volume in a specific segment to achieve cost advantages before expanding.
2. Network Effects Definition: The product becomes more valuable as more users join. Types:
3. Switching Costs Definition: Users incur significant cost (time, money, risk, learning) when they try to leave. Types: Data lock-in, integration lock-in, workflow embedment, team training investment, organizational habit Questions to evaluate: What would a user lose if they switched to a competitor tomorrow? How long would it take to replicate their current setup elsewhere? Build path: Increase integration surface, deepen workflow embedment, make data portable enough to reduce anxiety but sticky enough to create switching cost.
4. Branding Definition: Trust and perception built over time that commands a price premium competitors can't replicate. Questions to evaluate: Do users choose us over technically equivalent alternatives because of the name? Do we command a price premium in a category with cheaper alternatives? Build path: Consistent, distinctive communication; earned trust through quality and transparency; category definition leadership.
5. Cornered Resource Definition: Exclusive or preferential access to a critical resource that competitors can't easily obtain. Types: Proprietary data, exclusive partnerships, unique talent, patents, regulatory licenses Questions to evaluate: Do we have data, partnerships, or talent that gives us a capability others can't easily replicate? Build path: Structure agreements and data strategies to maximize exclusivity; hire the category's defining talent before competitors do.
6. Counter-Positioning Definition: A business model that incumbents can't copy without hurting their existing business. Questions to evaluate: Would it damage an incumbent's business if they adopted our business model? What is their incentive NOT to compete with us in the way we compete? Build path: Design the business model deliberately to exploit an incumbent's constraint or conflict of interest.
7. Process Power Definition: Accumulated organizational know-how and processes that create compounding advantages. Questions to evaluate: Do we have processes or capabilities that have compounded over time and would take competitors years to replicate even with resources? Build path: Document and systematize the processes that produce quality; make them teachable and scalable; measure and improve them deliberately.
For the user's product, assess each power with a brief rationale:
| Power | Status | Evidence | Build Path |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scale Economies | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Network Effects | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Switching Costs | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Branding | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Cornered Resource | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Counter-Positioning | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
| Process Power | [Strong/Emerging/Opportunity/N/A] | [Why] | [How] |
Produce:
npx claudepluginhub productfculty-aipm/pm-copilot-by-product-facultyAnalyzes businesses, products, or features using Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate competitive moats, defensibility, and strategic durability. Triggers on moat, power analysis, or '7 Powers' queries.
Use this skill when the user asks for "competitive analysis", "who are our competitors", "competitive landscape", "how do we compare to X", "competitive positioning", "how do we differentiate", "what's our competitive advantage", "are we differentiated", or wants to understand the competitive context and define how to win against alternatives. Also use this skill when preparing for a board meeting or investor conversation that includes competitive positioning.
Guides strategic positioning to make yourself or your product hard to compete with, using Sun Tzu and Porter's competitive theory. Useful for competitive strategy, moat-building, and market positioning.