Strategy VPR-Align Model For Positioning and Differentiation in Marketing Consulting: An Empirical Framework Linking Value Proposition to Revenue Model
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47941/jpr.3665Keywords:
Marketing Consulting, Positioning, Differentiation, Value Proposition, Revenue Model, Professional Services, PricingAbstract
Purpose: This article examines how value proposition orientation should be aligned with revenue model choice in marketing consulting.
Methodology: The study develops an evidence-coded analytical framework based on twenty sources covering positioning theory, professional-service contracting, fee research, and recent market studies. These sources are coded according to two analytical dimensions: value proposition orientation and revenue archetype. This coding structure is used to identify recurring alignment patterns between consulting promises and pricing logic.
Findings: The findings show that outcome-led and risk-reduction value propositions are most consistently aligned with retainer-based models and, where measurement conditions are sufficiently rigorous, with value-based pricing components. In contrast, capability-led propositions are better suited to fixed-fee or productized models, particularly when consulting methods are modular and standardized. The study also demonstrates that positioning becomes economically persuasive only when the consultancy’s promise is supported by compatible proof structures, contractual logic, and delivery governance.
Unique Contribution to Theory, Policy and Practice: The article makes a practical and conceptual contribution by proposing the VPR-ALIGN Model (Value Proposition–Revenue Alignment). This model explains that differentiation in marketing consulting should be understood not merely as a layer of messaging, but as a structured alignment between the promise made to clients, the evidence used to support that promise, and the mechanism through which the consultancy captures value. For practice, the model offers an applied alignment map for offer architecture, proof building, contracting, and delivery governance. For theory, it advances the understanding of positioning as an economically grounded construct rather than a purely communicative one.
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