Why founders describe what they do, not why it matters
Founders describe what they do because they know it best; buyers decide on why it matters to them. That gap, between the activity you perform and the outcome someone is actually buying, is one of the most common positioning weaknesses I see, and it quietly costs enquiries. Leading with why it matters, and then proving it with what you do, is the fix.
Why do founders default to describing what they do?
Founders default to the what because it is concrete, provable and closest to their daily effort. You know your process, your deliverables and your craft intimately, so they are the easiest things to talk about. The why, the change your work creates for the customer, feels less tangible, so it tends to get left implied rather than said out loud.
Why doesn't describing what you do persuade buyers?
Describing what you do rarely persuades, because buyers do not buy activities; they buy outcomes. A prospect scanning your website is asking one silent question: what changes for me? A list of services answers what you will be busy doing, not what they will get. Until the outcome is explicit, the reader has to translate it themselves, and most will simply move on.
What is the difference between what you do and why it matters?
The difference is cause and effect. What you do is the activity you perform; why it matters is the result the customer experiences and the reason they part with money. Both belong on the page, but the why should lead and the what should prove it. The table below shows the same offers framed each way.
| What you do (the activity) | Why it matters (the outcome bought) |
|---|---|
| "I provide monthly bookkeeping." | "You go into every month knowing exactly what the business can afford." |
| "I design and build websites." | "Your customers understand and trust you within seconds of arriving." |
| "I offer brand and marketing strategy." | "The right clients choose you on sight, and your marketing spend stops leaking." |
| "I run paid advertising campaigns." | "You reach more of the right buyers without wasting budget on the wrong ones." |
Does leading with why mean hiding what you do?
No. Leading with why does not hide the what; it gives it a job. The outcome earns the reader's attention, and the concrete detail of what you do then makes the promise believable. Drop the what entirely and you sound vague; drop the why and you sound merely busy. The order is the whole point: outcome first, evidence second.
How do you turn a "what we do" line into a "why it matters" line?
Start from the customer's end, not yours. Take each thing you do and finish the sentence "which means that…" until you reach a result the customer genuinely cares about. That final clause is your why. For example, "we provide monthly bookkeeping" becomes "you go into every month knowing exactly where you stand, because the numbers are done, on time, every time." The activity is still there; it now carries a reason.
How do you find your "why it matters" if it is not obvious?
Ask your best customers why they stayed, not why they first bought. The reason people remain is usually the real value, and it is rarely the feature you lead with. In my experience the honest answer often surprises the founder, and it is almost always more specific, and more human, than the service description currently sitting on the website.
A quick test you can run today
Read your homepage headline and first paragraph aloud, then ask one question: would a competitor say the same thing? If your description of what you do would fit three rivals unchanged, it is describing the category, not your value. Rewrite it so that the outcome, and the reason it is yours to promise, could not be lifted onto anyone else's site.
Struggling to name your why?
The free Positioning Statement Generator walks you from what you do to a sharp, outcome-led statement in a few minutes. When you want an expert eye on the result, the £45 Positioning Statement Review sharpens it further.
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