Marketing Canvas - Job To Be Done
About the Marketing Canvas Method
This article covers dimension 110 — Job To Be Done, part of the
Customers meta-category. The Marketing Canvas Method structures
marketing strategy across 24 dimensions and 9 strategic archetypes.
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In a nutshell
Job To Be Done (dimension 110) captures the ultimate objective that inspires a customer to hire your product or service. Not a description of what your product does. The reason a customer reaches for it in the first place — the progress they are trying to make in their life.
Theodore Levitt put it plainly in 1960: people don't want a quarter-inch drill. They want a quarter-inch hole. But the Marketing Canvas goes further. The hole is still only the surface. The functional job ("hang a picture") sits beneath an emotional job ("feel proud of my home") and a social job ("be seen as someone with good taste"). All three determine which product wins. Scoring only the functional layer produces a dimension score that flatters and misleads.
In the Marketing Canvas, JTBD is the first dimension in the Customers meta-category — the starting point for everything. Before positioning, before features, before pricing: who are your customers and what are they trying to accomplish?
What JTBD actually is
Customers don't buy products. They hire them to make progress.
That reframing has a sharp implication: the real competition for any product is not other products in the same category. It is every solution the customer could hire for the same job. Spotify competes with podcasts, meditation apps, and audiobooks — because all of them compete for the same job: "help me feel less anxious during my commute." Netflix competes with sleep. Understanding the job reveals the competition that a feature-based analysis never finds.
Jobs change slowly. Solutions change constantly.
This is the strategic insight that makes JTBD durable. A customer's functional job ("get from A to B without owning a car") has existed for decades. The solutions that serve it — taxis, rental cars, Uber, Lime scooters — change with technology. Brands that define themselves by the solution become obsolete when the solution changes. Brands that define themselves by the job remain relevant regardless.
Clayton Christensen, who popularised the framework in Competing Against Luck (2016), put it this way: jobs aren't just about function — they have powerful social and emotional dimensions. A brand that only understands the functional layer of its customer's job is working with a partial map.
Clayton Christensen, professor at Harvard Business School talks about the job to be done.
The three layers of every job
The Marketing Canvas structures JTBD across three scored sub-questions — one per layer. All three must be understood to score the dimension honestly:
Functional job — the tangible, measurable task the customer needs to accomplish. "Get my home clean." "File my tax return." "Track my fitness." This is the layer most companies understand reasonably well. It is necessary but not sufficient.
Emotional personal job — how the customer wants to feel as a result of getting the job done. "Feel safe in my own home." "Feel in control of my finances." "Feel like someone who takes care of themselves." This layer is what differentiates brands in mature categories where functional performance has converged. Two cleaning services that perform identically will be separated by which one makes the customer feel more like the person they want to be.
Emotional social job — how the customer wants to be perceived by others as a result of the purchase. "Be seen as a responsible parent." "Be known as someone who makes smart financial decisions." "Be recognised as someone who takes health seriously." This layer drives premium pricing, word-of-mouth, and tribal loyalty. It is the layer most commonly undiscovered because customers rarely articulate it directly — it has to be observed or inferred.
Job To Be Done
JTBD in the Marketing Canvas
The canonical question
What job is the customer hiring your product to do?
JTBD appears in the Vital 8 of three archetypes — in the highest-stakes roles:
Fatal Brake for A9 (Category Creator): You cannot create a category around a job you haven't named. This is the existential challenge for any company attempting category creation — the job must be defined, named, and taught to the market before any scaling investment makes sense. Green Clean's entire strategic progression hinged on shifting from "eco-cleaning company" (a crowded, undifferentiated category) to "the company that protects your family from indoor toxins" (a job the market hadn't yet named). The 2021 JTBD score of −1 blocked all ALIGN activity until the job was defined. That gate is not a bureaucratic rule — it reflects the reality that you cannot market a job the customer doesn't yet recognise.
Secondary Brake for A4 (Stagnant Leader): Losing touch with the job is the first sign of strategic drift. Leaders stagnate when their product roadmap continues to answer the job their customers used to have rather than the one they have now. Kodak understood the job of "preserve memories" — but only in the film layer. When the job migrated to digital, Kodak's JTBD score quietly turned negative while revenue held. The revenue metric lagged the strategic failure by years.
Secondary Brake for A8 (Niche Expert): A niche expert's authority rests on understanding the customer's job at a depth generalists cannot match. When a niche expert begins to drift toward average-customer thinking — serving the mainstream version of the job rather than the specific, nuanced version their segment actually has — the authority erodes. The niche is lost before the revenue line shows it.
Marketing Canvas by Laurent Bouty - Job To Be Done
The red flag test
The Marketing Canvas applies a single diagnostic sentence to determine whether a JTBD score can reach +2 or above:
Can your team complete the sentence "Customers hire us to help them ___" without mentioning a feature?
If the answer requires a feature — "customers hire us to help them use our proprietary cleaning formula" — the job is not yet defined. The feature is the solution. The job is independent of any particular solution. A score of 0 or below is the honest result until the sentence can be completed in customer language: "customers hire us to help them know their family is safe at home."
This test consistently exposes the gap between a company that sells a product and a company that understands its job. The sentence has to be written in customer language, not marketing copy. "Enable sustainable home care solutions" fails the test. "Help me know my children aren't breathing toxins" passes it.
Statements for self-assessment
Rate your agreement on a scale from −3 (completely disagree) to +3 (completely agree). There is no zero — the Marketing Canvas forces a directional position on every dimension.
Note on Detailed Track scoring: if averaging sub-question scores produces a mathematical zero, the method rounds to −1. A split score means the dimension is not clearly helping your goal — and "not clearly helping" requires the same investigation as "hurting."
Interpreting your scores
Negative scores (−1 to −3): Your understanding of the customer's job is incomplete, product-defined, or unvalidated by research. The likely result: marketing talks about solutions customers don't recognise as theirs; innovation addresses the wrong problem; competitors who understand the job more deeply will win the customer without a price war.
Positive scores (+1 to +3): You understand what customers are hiring you to do — at all three layers — and that understanding is grounded in research, not assumption. Marketing speaks the customer's language. Product decisions trace back to the job. You can name competitors from completely different categories that serve the same job.
Case study: Green Clean
Green Clean is a fictional eco-friendly residential cleaning service used as the recurring worked example throughout the Marketing Canvas Method.
Score: −2 to −1 (Weak) Green Clean understands the functional job superficially: "get the house clean using eco-friendly products." They have not identified the emotional personal job ("feel confident that my home is genuinely safe, not just superficially tidy") or the emotional social job ("be the kind of parent who makes responsible choices for my family"). Their marketing talks about product ingredients and eco-certifications — solution language, not job language. The team cannot complete the red flag sentence without mentioning a product feature. Customers who share the deeper job don't recognise themselves in Green Clean's messaging. The brand reaches people who already care about eco-cleaning; it doesn't reach the larger group who care about family health and haven't yet connected that job to a cleaning service.
Score: +1 to +2 (Developing) Green Clean has begun to articulate the deeper job: "protect indoor health." The functional layer is clear. The emotional personal layer is partially mapped — customer research has identified that parents are the primary segment and that the dominant emotional driver is "not worrying about what my children are exposed to." The emotional social layer is still assumed rather than researched. Marketing has started shifting from ingredient-led to outcome-led language, but execution is uneven. Some campaigns lead with health; others still lead with eco-credentials. The team can complete the red flag sentence most of the time, though the phrasing varies between team members — a sign the job definition hasn't fully landed internally.
Score: +2 to +3 (Strong) Green Clean's JTBD is precisely defined across all three layers and validated by customer research. Functional: "keep my home free from toxic chemical residues." Emotional personal: "feel confident that the air my children breathe at home is safe." Emotional social: "be a household my neighbours know takes health and environment seriously." The Family Health Report — a monthly transparency dashboard showing toxin load avoided per visit — was designed directly from the emotional personal layer. It addresses the job, not the service feature. Every team member completes the red flag sentence in the same language. Marketing leads with the job. The job definition has been stable for 18 months, even as the product has evolved.
Connected dimensions
JTBD does not operate in isolation. Five dimensions connect most directly:
120 — Aspirations: The job feeds the aspiration. If the job is "protect my family's health," the aspiration is "be a parent who makes responsible choices." The aspiration is the identity version of the job — who the customer wants to become as a result of getting it done.
130 — Pains & Gains: Pains block the job. Gains accelerate it. A precise JTBD definition is the prerequisite for mapping pains and gains usefully — without it, you're cataloguing frictions without knowing which ones matter.
220 — Positioning: Positioning is how you frame the job externally. Green Clean's positioning shift from "eco-friendly cleaning" to "indoor health protection" is a direct translation of the JTBD from internal strategy to external claim. Positioning that doesn't reference the job occupies no mental real estate.
310 — Features: Features must solve the job. Every feature that doesn't serve the customer's job is complexity without value. The JTBD definition is the filter that decides which features matter and which are engineering ambition.
320 — Emotions: The emotional job defines the target feeling. Emotional benefits in the value proposition are the delivery mechanism for the emotional layer of the job. If you don't know the emotional job, you cannot design the right emotional benefit.
Conclusion
Job To Be Done is the first dimension in the Marketing Canvas for a reason. Everything downstream — positioning, features, pricing, experience, stories — only makes sense if it is oriented toward a job the customer actually has.
The strategic error is not failing to understand JTBD in theory. Most marketers can explain the drill-and-hole metaphor. The error is defining the job in product terms rather than customer terms, validating it with internal assumptions rather than customer research, and stopping at the functional layer without mapping the emotional dimensions that determine which brand wins when products perform comparably.
The test is simple: can your team complete the sentence without mentioning a feature? If they can — in consistent, customer-language — the dimension is working. If they can't, everything built on top of it is built on a assumption.
Sources
Theodore Levitt, "Marketing Myopia", Harvard Business Review, 1960 — hbr.org
Clayton Christensen, Taddy Hall, Karen Dillon, David S. Duncan, Competing Against Luck, Harper Business, 2016
Alan Klement, When Coffee and Kale Compete, 2018 — alanklement.com
Tony Ulwick, Jobs to be Done: Theory to Practice, Strategyn Press, 2016 — strategyn.com
Marketing Canvas Method, Appendix E — Dimension 110: Job To Be Done, Laurent Bouty, 2026
About this dimension
Dimension 110 — Job To Be Done is part of the Customers meta-category (100) in the Marketing Canvas Method. The Customers meta-category contains four dimensions: Job To Be Done (110), Aspirations (120), Pains & Gains (130), and Engagement (140).
The Marketing Canvas Method is a complete marketing strategy framework built around 6 meta-categories, 24 dimensions, and 9 strategic archetypes. Learn more at marketingcanvas.net or in the book Marketing Strategy, Programmed by Laurent Bouty.