Most weak value propositions share one root cause: they describe what you built instead of what changes for the buyer. "AI-powered workflow automation platform" names a category and a technology, but it never names an outcome or a person. The visitor reads it, feels nothing, and leaves. The fix is almost never better wording — it's a missing variable.
A working value proposition does four jobs at once: it says who it's for, what they get, why it's different, and why anyone should believe you. Templates exist because most first drafts silently drop two of those four — usually the differentiator and the believability. A formula with named slots makes the gaps impossible to ignore, because an empty slot stares back at you.
The pass/fail bar is the five-second stranger test. Show your hero to someone outside your company for five seconds, then ask them to restate what you do and who it's for. If they can't, the structure is broken, not the adjectives. A blank page invites cleverness; a formula forces you to supply the buyer, the outcome, and the differentiator you were quietly hiding.
This article is the value_prop dimension of our audit rubric in practice. It sits next to two adjacent dimensions — clarity (whether the hero reads cleanly) and proof (whether the claim is believable) — and a sharp value prop reinforces both.
Value prop is one of twelve scored dimensions in our 12-dimension methodology — clarity and proof are its closest neighbors, and they rise and fall together.