Clarity Map: Compendium

Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page

What It Is

Compendium — Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page.

Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page Discussion | Link

Who It's For

Compendium appears to be a team tool — team leads and managers who need to coordinate work more effectively. The positioning should speak to the team pain, not the individual feature.

The Value Proposition (As Stated)

"Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page"

The tagline is relatively clean — it communicates what Compendium does without obvious red flags. The real test is whether it's differentiated enough that you couldn't swap in a competitor's name and have it still make sense.

Positioning Gaps

  • Missing "why now." Every great launch answers: why does this need to exist today? What changed in the market, technology, or buyer behavior that makes Compendium the right product at the right time? This is usually the weakest part of PH launches.

Competitive Context

Compendium launched in the its category space on ProductHunt. Without direct competitor mentions in the listing, it's hard to place exactly where this sits. That's a positioning red flag — if you can't immediately name 2-3 alternatives (and explain why you're different), neither can your potential users. Every product exists in a competitive frame, even if that frame is "doing it manually."

Quick Wins

  • Sharpen the one-liner. Open a Google Doc, write 10 different taglines in the format: "Compendium helps [WHO] [DO WHAT] so they can [GET WHAT]." Pick the one that's most specific and most differentiated.
  • Add a social proof bar. Even 3 beta users with a quote or logo make a difference. "Trusted by X teams" is more convincing than any feature description. If you don't have logos yet, use specific numbers: "Processed 10,000 requests in beta."
  • Write a "What we're NOT" section. The fastest way to sharpen positioning is to draw clear boundaries. "We're not a full CRM" or "We don't do X" helps people self-select in or out quickly — which is what you want.
  • Add your Twitter/X handle to the PH listing. You're launching publicly but making it hard for people to follow up. Every PH launch should have the maker's Twitter visible for post-launch conversation.
  • Set up a "Why Compendium?" page. A dedicated comparison/alternative page (e.g., "/Compendium vs [Competitor]") is a high-intent SEO play. People searching "[Competitor] alternative" are literally looking for you.

Bottom Line

Compendium has the bones of something interesting, but the positioning needs tightening. Right now it's trying to say too many things at once — and when you try to be everything, you end up being forgettable. Pick the single most compelling angle, lead with it everywhere, and save the feature list for the docs page. In this space, clarity wins.

Originally launched on ProductHunt.

Frequently asked questions

What is Compendium?

Compendium is a SaaS product that launched on ProductHunt. In its own words: "Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page". Keeping your team, agents, and data on one page Discussion | Link

Who is Compendium for?

Compendium appears to be a team tool — team leads and managers who need to coordinate work more effectively. The positioning should speak to the team pain, not the individual feature.

What is the biggest positioning gap for Compendium?

Missing "why now." Every great launch answers: why does this need to exist today? What changed in the market, technology, or buyer behavior that makes Compendium the right product at the right time? This is usually the weakest part of PH launches.

How can Compendium improve its positioning?

Sharpen the one-liner. Open a Google Doc, write 10 different taglines in the format: "Compendium helps [WHO] [DO WHAT] so they can [GET WHAT]." Pick the one that's most specific and most differentiated.

What is the bottom line on Compendium?

Compendium has the bones of something interesting, but the positioning needs tightening. Right now it's trying to say too many things at once — and when you try to be everything, you end up being forgettable. Pick the single most compelling angle, lead with it everywhere, and save the feature list for the docs page. In this space, clarity wins.

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