#02 Stance đŻ â What your brand stands against matters more than what it stands for
Your strategic enemy. The part of Stance most brands never name.
This is part of The SIGNALâ˘ď¸ series â a series for founders who refuse to perform their way to visibility.
Each week breaks down one part of the S.I.G.N.A.Lâ˘ď¸ system â the method behind sharper positioning, stronger pull, voice with bite, visuals with nerve, and a brand that works harder than your posting schedule.
You are here in the SIGNALâ˘ď¸ series: Stance â âStrategic enemyâ
The goal is not to make you louder.
Itâs to make your brand sharper, more magnetic, and harder to ignore â without turning your whole damn life into content.
In the previous issue of the SIGNALâ˘ď¸ series, I talked about how a Stance has four parts.
What you believe.
What you reject.
What youâd never do.
What you actively fight against.
The fourth part is the one most never built.
And itâs the part that turns a Stance from a worldview into a position.
What a strategic enemy actually is
A strategic enemy is a belief, a norm, or a practice in your industry that you fundamentally disagree with. Itâs the thing your brand exists to challenge. The assumption everyone else accepts that you refuse to.
Your enemy is an idea.
Most brands say what they do. They describe their services. They list their credentials. They use the same category language as everyone else â âempowering women,â âelevating brands,â âyour transformation starts hereâ, and then wonder why nobody stops scrolling.
Hereâs why nobody stops: because thereâs nothing to stop for.
When your brand says the same things as everyone else, in the same way as everyone else, thereâs no friction. No tension. Nothing to agree OR disagree with. And when thereâs nothing to disagree with, thereâs also nothing to deeply agree with. You become beige. Safe. Pleasant⌠InvisibleâŚ
A strategic enemy creates tension. And tension is what makes a brand magnetic.
Think about it like this: if someone asked you what you believe about your industry, youâd probably have a lot to say.
You have opinions. Strong ones, probably. About the advice that gets recycled. About the tactics that donât work. About the way your industry treats the people it claims to serve.
But those opinions? Theyâre stuck in your head. In private conversations. In DMs with your business friends. In the shower, where you have imaginary debates with people who will never hear them.
This isnât about aggression. Itâs about direction.
An enemy tells the market what game you refuse to play.
The brands that pull in your category arenât louder than you. Theyâve named an enemy and built every public-facing piece of their business to push against it. You feel friction when you encounter them. They arenât trying to please the room. Theyâre redrawing it.
You can have clear values and still be invisible. You can have a fully developed worldview and still blend in. What you cannot do is have a real enemy and disappear into the background.
The enemy is what makes a Stance impossible to ignore.
Why founders skip this part
Three reasons, usually overlapping.
The first is fear of repelling people. A real enemy will turn some people off. It will lose followers. It will mean someone in your industry, possibly someone you respect, disagrees with you publicly. Most founders sense this and back away before theyâve articulated the position out loud.
The second is a misreading of what an enemy is. Founders hear âenemyâ and think aggression. They think attack. They imagine themselves becoming the loud, antagonistic brand they donât want to be. That isnât what this is. A strategic enemy is an idea, not a person. Itâs the position your business is structured against. It can be named with composure. The brands that do it well never sound angry. They sound certain.
The third is the most honest one. Identifying a real enemy means committing to it in public. It means putting yourself on the record. It means losing the option to be neutral if it gets uncomfortable. Thatâs a real cost. Itâs why most founders identify the right enemy internally and then water it down before saying it out loud.
The signal gets lost in the softening.
What it costs to skip it
You can do everything else right and still be invisible if this piece is missing.
Sharp visuals. A clean voice. Consistent posting. Real expertise. Genuine values. You can have all of that and still read as competent and forgettable.
Because thereâs nothing for the right reader to be on your side of. Thereâs no friction they can feel. Thereâs no position they can adopt by following you. They can read your work, like it, and never feel called by it.
The brands they end up choosing arenât necessarily better than yours. Theyâve drawn a line. Theyâve named what they refuse to accept. Every person who agrees with that refusal becomes part of their audience.
You havenât given anyone something to agree with yet. Thatâs the gap.
Below the paywall: three field notes on how finding your enemy goes sideways (watering it down, confusing it with a grudge, picking one thatâs commercially irrelevant), the Strategic Enemy Diagnostic inside The SIGNALâ˘ď¸ Workbook (six questions, 20 to 30 minutes, working enemy sentence), and every paid post in the SIGNALâ˘ď¸ series as new pillars unlock the workbook week by week.
Upgrade to paid and find your enemy this week âŹ






